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Fjord

In physical geography, a fjord or fiord (/ˈfjɔːrd, fˈɔːrd/ [1]) is a long, narrow sea inlet with steep sides or cliffs, created by a glacier.[2] Fjords exist on the coasts of Antarctica, the Arctic, and surrounded landmasses of the northern and southern hemispheres.[3] Norway's coastline is estimated to be 29,000 km (18,000 mi) long with its nearly 1,200 fjords, but only 2,500 km (1,600 mi) long excluding the fjords.[4][5]

Geirangerfjord, Norway

Formation edit

 
A glacier in eastern Greenland flowing through a fjord carved by the movement of ice
 
Illustration of how a fjord is created
 
Sørfjorden (Hardanger) with Sandvinvatnet and Odda Valley can be clearly seen as continuation of the fjord. Odda sits on the isthmus. Folgefonna on the right hand.

A true fjord is formed when a glacier cuts a U-shaped valley by ice segregation and abrasion of the surrounding bedrock.[6] According to the standard model, glaciers formed in pre-glacial valleys with a gently sloping valley floor. The work of the glacier then left an overdeepened U-shaped valley that ends abruptly at a valley or trough end. Such valleys are fjords when flooded by the ocean. Thresholds above sea level create freshwater lakes.[7] Glacial melting is accompanied by the rebounding of Earth's crust as the ice load and eroded sediment is removed (also called isostasy or glacial rebound). In some cases, this rebound is faster than sea level rise. Most fjords are deeper than the adjacent sea; Sognefjord, Norway, reaches as much as 1,300 m (4,265 ft) below sea level. Fjords generally have a sill or shoal (bedrock) at their mouth caused by the previous glacier's reduced erosion rate and terminal moraine.[8] In many cases this sill causes extreme currents and large saltwater rapids (see skookumchuck). Saltstraumen in Norway is often described as the world's strongest tidal current. These characteristics distinguish fjords from rias (e.g. the Bay of Kotor), which are drowned valleys flooded by the rising sea. Drammensfjorden is cut almost in two by the Svelvik "ridge", a sandy moraine that was below sea level when it was covered by ice, but after the post-glacial rebound reaches 60 m (200 ft) above the fjord.[9]

Jens Esmark in the 19th century introduced the theory that fjords are or have been created by glaciers and that large parts of Northern Europe had been covered by thick ice in prehistory.[10] Thresholds at the mouths and overdeepening of fjords compared to the ocean are the strongest evidence of glacial origin,[11] and these thresholds are mostly rocky. Thresholds are related to sounds and low land where the ice could spread out and therefore have less erosive force. John Walter Gregory argued that fjords are of tectonic origin and that glaciers had a negligible role in their formation. Gregory's views were rejected by subsequent research and publications. In the case of Hardangerfjord the fractures of the Caledonian fold has guided the erosion by glaciers, while there is no clear relation between the direction of Sognefjord and the fold pattern.[10] This relationship between fractures and direction of fjords is also observed in Lyngen.[12] Preglacial, tertiary rivers presumably eroded the surface and created valleys that later guided the glacial flow and erosion of the bedrock. This may in particular have been the case in Western Norway where the tertiary uplift of the landmass amplified eroding forces of rivers.[10]

Confluence of tributary fjords led to excavation of the deepest fjord basins. Near the very coast, the typical West Norwegian glacier spread out (presumably through sounds and low valleys) and lost their concentration and reduced the glaciers' power to erode leaving bedrock thresholds. Bolstadfjorden is 160 m (520 ft) deep with a threshold of only 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in),[10][7] while the 1,300 m (4,300 ft) deep Sognefjorden has a threshold around 100 to 200 m (330 to 660 ft) deep.[13][14] Hardangerfjord is made up of several basins separated by thresholds: The deepest basin Samlafjorden between Jonaneset (Jondal) and Ålvik with a distinct threshold at Vikingneset in Kvam.[10]

 
Muldalsfossen waterfall drops several hundred meters from the Muldalen hanging valley to Tafjorden.

Hanging valleys are common along glaciated fjords and U-shaped valleys. A hanging valley is a tributary valley that is higher than the main valley and was created by tributary glacier flows into a glacier of larger volume. The shallower valley appears to be 'hanging' above the main valley or a fjord. Often, waterfalls form at or near the outlet of the upper valley.[15] Small waterfalls within these fjords are also used as freshwater resources. Hanging valleys also occur underwater in fjord systems. The branches of Sognefjord are for instance much shallower than the main fjord. The mouth of Fjærlandsfjord is about 400 m (1,300 ft) deep while the main fjord is 1,200 m (3,900 ft) nearby. The mouth of Ikjefjord is only 50 meters deep while the main fjord is around 1,300 m (4,300 ft) at the same point.[11]

Features and variations edit

 
Distribution of ice (white) in Europe during the last glacial period

Hydrology edit

During the winter season, there is usually little inflow of freshwater. Surface water and deeper water (down to 100 m or 330 ft or more) are mixed during winter because of the steady cooling of the surface and wind. In the deep fjords, there is still fresh water from the summer with less density than the saltier water along the coast. Offshore wind, common in the fjord areas during winter, sets up a current on the surface from the inner to the outer parts. This current on the surface in turn pulls dense salt water from the coast across the fjord threshold and into the deepest parts of the fjord.[16] Bolstadfjorden has a threshold of only 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) and strong inflow of freshwater from Vosso river creates a brackish surface that blocks circulation of the deep fjord. The deeper, salt layers of Bolstadfjorden are deprived of oxygen and the seabed is covered with organic material. The shallow threshold also creates a strong tidal current.[7]

During the summer season, there is usually a large inflow of river water in the inner areas. This freshwater gets mixed with saltwater creating a layer of brackish water with a slightly higher surface than the ocean which in turn sets up a current from the river mouths towards the ocean. This current is gradually more salty towards the coast and right under the surface current there is a reverse current of saltier water from the coast. In the deeper parts of the fjord the cold water remaining from winter is still and separated from the atmosphere by the brackish top layer. This deep water is ventilated by mixing with the upper layer causing it to warm and freshen over the summer.[17] In fjords with a shallow threshold or low levels of mixing this deep water is not replaced every year and low oxygen concentration makes the deep water unsuitable for fish and animals. In the most extreme cases, there is a constant barrier of freshwater on the surface and the fjord freezes over such that there is no oxygen below the surface. Drammensfjorden is one example.[16] The mixing in fjords predominantly results from the propagation of an internal tide from the entrance sill or internal seiching.[18]

The Gaupnefjorden branch of Sognefjorden is strongly affected by freshwater as a glacial river flows in. Velfjorden has little inflow of freshwater.[19]

Coral reefs edit

In 2000, some coral reefs were discovered along the bottoms of the Norwegian fjords.[20] These reefs were found in fjords from the north of Norway to the south. The marine life on the reefs is believed to be one of the most important reasons why the Norwegian coastline is such a generous fishing ground. Since this discovery is fairly new, little research has been done. The reefs are host to thousands of lifeforms such as plankton, coral, anemones, fish, several species of shark, and many more. Most are specially adapted to life under the greater pressure of the water column above it, and the total darkness of the deep sea.[21]

New Zealand's fjords are also host to deep-water corals, but a surface layer of dark fresh water allows these corals to grow in much shallower water than usual. An underwater observatory in Milford Sound allows tourists to view them without diving.[22]

Skerries edit

In some places near the seaward margins of areas with fjords, the ice-scoured channels are so numerous and varied in direction that the rocky coast is divided into thousands of island blocks, some large and mountainous while others are merely rocky points or rock reefs, menacing navigation. These are called skerries.[21] The term skerry is derived from the Old Norse sker, which means a rock in the sea.[23]

Skerries most commonly formed at the outlet of fjords where submerged glacially formed valleys perpendicular to the coast join with other cross valleys in a complex array. The island fringe of Norway is such a group of skerries (called a skjærgård); many of the cross fjords are so arranged that they parallel the coast and provide a protected channel behind an almost unbroken succession of mountainous islands and skerries. By this channel, one can travel through a protected passage almost the entire 1,601 km (995 mi) route from Stavanger to North Cape, Norway. The Blindleia is a skerry-protected waterway that starts near Kristiansand in southern Norway and continues past Lillesand. The Swedish coast along Bohuslän is likewise skerry guarded. The Inside Passage provides a similar route from Seattle, Washington, and Vancouver, British Columbia, to Skagway, Alaska. Yet another such skerry-protected passage extends from the Straits of Magellan north for 800 km (500 mi).

Phytoplankton edit

Fjords provide unique environmental conditions for phytoplankton communities. In polar fjords, glacier and ice sheet outflow add cold, fresh meltwater along with transported sediment into the body of water. Nutrients provided by this outflow can significantly enhance phytoplankton growth. For example, in some fjords of the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), nutrient enrichment from meltwater drives diatom blooms, a highly productive group of phytoplankton that enable such fjords to be valuable feeding grounds for other species.[24] It is possible that as climate change reduces long-term meltwater output, nutrient dynamics within such fjords will shift to favor less productive species, destabilizing the food web ecology of fjord systems.

In addition to nutrient flux, sediment carried by flowing glaciers can become suspended in the water column, increasing turbidity and reducing light penetration into greater depths of the fjord. This effect can limit the available light for photosynthesis in deeper areas of the water mass, reducing phytoplankton abundance beneath the surface.[25]

Overall, phytoplankton abundance and species composition within fjords is highly seasonal, varying as a result of seasonal light availability and water properties that depend on glacial melt and the formation of sea ice. The study of phytoplankton communities within fjords is an active area of research, supported by groups such as FjordPhyto, a citizen science initiative to study phytoplankton samples collected by local residents, tourists, and boaters of all backgrounds.

Epishelf lakes edit

An epishelf lake forms when meltwater is trapped behind a floating ice shelf and the freshwater floats on the denser saltwater below. Its surface may freeze forming an isolated ecosystem.

Etymology edit

 
Important fjords and lakes in Norway. Note: The part of the map showing the northern fjords has a considerably smaller scale. Blurred coastlines = skerries

The word fjord is borrowed from Norwegian, where it is pronounced [ˈfjuːr], [ˈfjøːr], [ˈfjuːɽ] or [ˈfjøːɽ] in various dialects and has a more general meaning, referring in many cases to any long, narrow body of water, inlet or channel (for example, see Oslofjord).

The Norwegian word is inherited from Old Norse fjǫrðr, a noun which refers to a 'lake-like' body of water used for passage and ferrying and is closely related to the noun ferð "travelling, ferrying, journey".[26][27] Both words go back to Indo-European *pértus "crossing", from the root *per- "cross". The words fare and ferry are of the same origin.[28][29]

The Scandinavian fjord, Proto-Scandinavian *ferþuz, is the origin for similar Germanic words: Icelandic fjörður, Faroese fjørður, Swedish fjärd (for Baltic waterbodies), Scots firth (for marine waterbodies, mainly in Scotland and northern England).[27][29] The Norse noun fjǫrðr was adopted in German as Förde, used for the narrow long bays of Schleswig-Holstein, and in English as firth "fjord, river mouth". The English word ford (compare German Furt, Low German Ford or Vörde, in Dutch names voorde such as Vilvoorde, Ancient Greek πόρος, poros, and Latin portus) is assumed to originate from Germanic *ferþu- and Indo-European root *pertu- meaning "crossing point". Fjord/firth/Förde as well as ford/Furt/Vörde/voorde refer to a Germanic noun for a travel: North Germanic ferd or färd and of the verb to travel, Dutch varen, German fahren; English to fare.[30]

As a loanword from Norwegian,[26] it is one of the few words in the English language to start with the sequence fj.[31] The word was for a long time normally spelled fiord,[32] a spelling preserved in place names such as Grise Fiord. The fiord spelling mostly remains only in New Zealand English, as in the place name Fiordland.[33]

Scandinavian usage edit

 
Fjord à Christiania, by Claude Monet (1895).
 
Holandsfjorden with Svartisen glacier in Nordland.

The use of the word fjord in Norwegian, Danish and Swedish is more general than in English and in international scientific terminology. In Scandinavia, fjord is used for a narrow inlet of the sea in Norway, Denmark and western Sweden, but this is not its only application. In Norway and Iceland, the usage is closest to the Old Norse, with fjord used for both a firth and for a long, narrow inlet. In eastern Norway, the term is also applied to long narrow freshwater lakes (Randsfjorden and Tyrifjorden) and sometimes even to rivers (for instance in Flå in Hallingdal, the Hallingdal river is referred to as fjorden). In southeast Sweden, the name fjard fjärd is a subdivision of the term 'fjord' used for bays, bights and narrow inlets on the Swedish Baltic Sea coast, and in most Swedish lakes. This latter term is also used for bodies of water off the coast of Finland where Finland Swedish is spoken. In Danish, the word may even apply to shallow lagoons. In modern Icelandic, fjörður is still used with the broader meaning of firth or inlet. In Faroese fjørður is used both about inlets and about broader sounds, whereas a narrower sound is called sund. In the Finnish language, a word vuono is used although there is only one fjord in Finland.

In old Norse genitive was fjarðar whereas dative was firði. The dative form has become common place names like Førde (for instance Førde), Fyrde or Førre (for instance Førre).[34]

The German use of the word Föhrde for long narrow bays on their Baltic Sea coastline, indicates a common Germanic origin of the word. The landscape consists mainly of moraine heaps. The Föhrden and some "fjords" on the east side of Jutland, Denmark are also of glacial origin. But while the glaciers digging "real" fjords moved from the mountains to the sea, in Denmark and Germany they were tongues of a huge glacier covering the basin of which is now the Baltic Sea. See Förden and East Jutland Fjorde.

Whereas fjord names mostly describe bays (though not always geological fjords), straits in the same regions typically are named Sund, in Scandinavian languages as well as in German. The word is related to "to sunder" in the meaning of "to separate". So the use of Sound to name fjords in North America and New Zealand differs from the European meaning of that word.

The name of Wexford in Ireland is originally derived from Veisafjǫrðr ("inlet of the mud flats") in Old Norse, as used by the Viking settlers—though the inlet at that place in modern terms is an estuary, not a fjord. Similarly the name of Milford (now Milford Haven) in Wales is derived from Melrfjǫrðr ("sandbank fjord/inlet"),[35] though the inlet on which it is located is actually a ria.

Before or in the early phase of Old Norse angr was another common noun for fjords and other inlets of the ocean. This word has survived only as a suffix in names of some Scandinavian fjords and has in same cases also been transferred to adjacent settlements or surrounding areas for instance Hardanger, Stavanger and Geiranger.[36][37]

Differences in definitions edit

 
The Lim bay in Croatia is commonly called a fjord but is scientifically a ria.

The differences in usage between the English and the Scandinavian languages have contributed to confusion in the use of the term fjord. Bodies of water that are clearly fjords in Scandinavian languages are not considered fjords in English; similarly bodies of water that would clearly not be fjords in the Scandinavian sense have been named or suggested to be fjords. Examples of this confused usage follow.

In the Danish language some inlets are called a fjord, but are, according to the English language definition, technically not a fjord. For example, Roskilde Fjord. Limfjord in English terminology is a sound, since it separates the North Jutlandic Island (Vendsyssel-Thy) from the rest of Jutland. However, the Limfjord once was a fjord until the sea broke through from the west. Ringkøbing Fjord on the western coast of Jutland is a lagoon. The long narrow fjords of Denmark's Baltic Sea coast like the German Förden were dug by ice moving from the sea upon land, while fjords in the geological sense were dug by ice moving from the mountains down to the sea. However, some definitions of a fjord is: "A long narrow inlet consisting of only one inlet created by glacial activity". Examples of Danish fjords are: Kolding Fjord, Vejle Fjord and Mariager Fjord.

The fjords in Finnmark (Norway), which are fjords in the Scandinavian sense of the term, are not universally considered to be fjords by the scientific community.[38] Although glacially formed, most Finnmark fjords lack the steep-sided valleys of the more southerly Norwegian fjords since the glacial pack was deep enough to cover even the high grounds when they were formed. The Oslofjord on the other hand is a rift valley, and not glacially formed.

The indigenous Māori people of New Zealand see a fjord as a kind of sea (Māori: tai) that runs by a bluff (matapari, altogether tai matapari "bluff sea").[39]

"Fjords" not created by glaciers edit

The term "fjord" is sometimes applied to steep-sided inlets which were not created by glaciers. Most such inlets are drowned river canyons or rias. Examples include:

Freshwater fjords edit

 
Eidfjord village beneath the high terrace, the original ice-age delta. The river has carved a gorge through the terrace.

Some Norwegian freshwater lakes that have formed in long glacially carved valleys with sill thresholds, ice front deltas or terminal moraines blocking the outlet follow the Norwegian naming convention; they are frequently named fjords. Ice front deltas developed when the ice front was relatively stable for long time during the melting of the ice shield. The resulting landform is an isthmus between the lake and the saltwater fjord, in Norwegian called "eid" as in placename Eidfjord or Nordfjordeid. The post-glacial rebound changed these deltas into terraces up to the level of the original sea level. In Eidfjord, Eio has dug through the original delta and left a 110 m (360 ft) terrace while lake is only 19 m (62 ft) above sea level.[43][44] Such deposits are valuable sources of high-quality building materials (sand and gravel) for houses and infrastructure.[45] Eidfjord village sits on the eid or isthmus between Eidfjordvatnet lake and Eidfjorden branch of Hardangerfjord.[46] Nordfjordeid is the isthmus with a village between Hornindalsvatnet lake and Nordfjord.[47][48] Such lakes are also denoted fjord valley lakes by geologists.[49]

One of Norway's largest is Tyrifjorden at 63 m (207 ft) above sea level and an average depth at 97 m (318 ft) most of the lake is under sea level. Norway's largest lake, Mjøsa, is also referred to as "the fjord" by locals.[44] Another example is the freshwater fjord Movatnet (Mo lake) that until 1743 was separated from Romarheimsfjorden by an isthmus and connected by a short river. During a flood in November 1743, the river bed eroded and sea water could flow into the lake at high tide. Eventually, Movatnet became a saltwater fjord and renamed Mofjorden (Mofjorden [no]).[50] Like fjords, freshwater lakes are often deep. For instance Hornindalsvatnet is at least 500 m (1,600 ft) deep and water takes an average of 16 years to flow through the lake.[51] Such lakes created by glacial action are also called fjord lakes or moraine-dammed lakes.[52]

Some of these lakes were salt after the ice age but later cut off from the ocean during the post-glacial rebound.[19] At the end of the ice age Eastern Norway was about 200 m (660 ft) lower (the marine limit). When the ice cap receded and allowed the ocean to fill valleys and lowlands, and lakes like Mjøsa and Tyrifjorden were part of the ocean while Drammen valley was a narrow fjord. At the time of the Vikings Drammensfjord was still four or five m (13 or 16 ft) higher than today and reached the town of Hokksund, while parts of what is now the city of Drammen was under water.[53] After the ice age the ocean was about 150 m (490 ft) at Notodden. The ocean stretched like a fjord through Heddalsvatnet all the way to Hjartdal. Post-glacial rebound eventually separated Heddalsvatnet from the ocean and turned it into a freshwater lake.[54][55] In neolithic times Heddalsvatnet was still a saltwater fjord connected to the ocean, and was cut off from the ocean around 1500 BC.[56]

Some freshwater fjords such as Slidrefjord are above the marine limit.

Like freshwater fjords, the continuation of fjords on land are in the same way denoted as fjord-valleys. For instance Flåmsdal (Flåm valley) and Måbødalen.[10][57][58]

 
Årdalstangen village on the small isthmus between Årdalsvatnet lake (behind) and Årdalsfjorden branch of Sognefjorden (front)

Outside of Norway, the three western arms of New Zealand's Lake Te Anau are named North Fiord, Middle Fiord and South Fiord. Another freshwater "fjord" in a larger lake is Western Brook Pond, in Newfoundland's Gros Morne National Park; it is also often described as a fjord, but is actually a freshwater lake cut off from the sea, so is not a fjord in the English sense of the term. Locally they refer to it as a "landlocked fjord". Such lakes are sometimes called "fjord lakes". Okanagan Lake was the first North American lake to be so described, in 1962.[59] The bedrock there has been eroded up to 650 m (2,133 ft) below sea level, which is 2,000 m (6,562 ft) below the surrounding regional topography.[60] Fjord lakes are common on the inland lea of the Coast Mountains and Cascade Range; notable ones include Lake Chelan, Seton Lake, Chilko Lake, and Atlin Lake. Kootenay Lake, Slocan Lake and others in the basin of the Columbia River are also fjord-like in nature, and created by glaciation in the same way. Along the British Columbia Coast, a notable fjord-lake is Owikeno Lake, which is a freshwater extension of Rivers Inlet. Quesnel Lake, located in central British Columbia, is claimed to be the deepest fjord formed lake on Earth.

Great Lakes edit

A family of freshwater fjords are the embayments of the North American Great Lakes. Baie Fine is located on the northwestern coast of Georgian Bay of Lake Huron in Ontario, and Huron Bay is located on the southern shore of Lake Superior in Michigan.

Locations edit

 
Sognefjord in Norway, the longest fjord in Norway,[27] is a popular tourist attraction
 
Eyjafjörður in north Iceland, Akureyri can be seen to the far right
 
Killary Harbour, western Ireland
 
New Zealand's Milford Sound
 
Glacier in a fjord at Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska
 
Tysfjord in Norway north of the Arctic Circle is located in the boreal zone
 
The entrance to Larsen Harbour, a sub-embayment of Drygalski Fjord in South Georgia Island
 
The calving end of Inostrantsev Glacier at Inostrantsev Fjord, Novaya Zemlya.

The principal mountainous regions where fjords have formed are in the higher middle latitudes and the high latitudes reaching to 80°N (Svalbard, Greenland), where, during the glacial period, many valley glaciers descended to the then-lower sea level. The fjords develop best in mountain ranges against which the prevailing westerly marine winds are orographically lifted over the mountainous regions, resulting in abundant snowfall to feed the glaciers. Hence coasts having the most pronounced fjords include the west coast of Norway, the west coast of North America from Puget Sound to Alaska, the southwest coast of New Zealand, and the west and to south-western coasts of South America, chiefly in Chile.

Principal fjord regions edit

Other glaciated or formerly glaciated regions edit

Other regions have fjords, but many of these are less pronounced due to more limited exposure to westerly winds and less pronounced relief. Areas include:

 
Snow-covered mountains stand out in contrast to the dark water Efjorden fjord and Stefjorden, Tysfjorden and Ofotfjorden fjords in the distance.

Extreme fjords edit

The longest fjords in the world are:

  1. Nansen Sound/Greely Fiord/Tanquary Fiord in Canada—420 km (261 mi) [62]
  2. Chatham Strait/Lynn Canal in United States—403 km (250 mi)[63]
  3. Scoresby Sund in Greenland—382 km (237 mi)[64][65]
  4. Concepción Channel-Puerto Simpson in Chile—245 km (152 mi)
  5. Sognefjord in Norway—204 km (127 mi)[66]
  6. Independence Fjord in Greenland—200 km (124 mi)
  7. Matochkin Shar, Novaya Zemlya, Russia—125 km (78 mi) (a strait with a fjord structure)[67]

Deep fjords include:

  1. Skelton Inlet in Antarctica—1,933 m (6,342 ft)
  2. Sognefjord in Norway—1,308 m (4,291 ft)[68][66] (the mountains then rise to up to 1,500 m (4,921 ft) and more, Hurrungane reaches 2,400 m (7,874 ft))[69]
  3. Messier Channel in Tortel, Chile—1,358 m (4,455 ft)[70][71]
  4. Baker Channel in Tortel, Chile—1,251 m (4,104 ft)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "fjord". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  2. ^ . Norway Today. 2016-05-08. Archived from the original on 2017-12-25. Retrieved 2017-12-30.
  3. ^ Syvitsky, James P. M.; Burrell, David C.; Skei, Jens M. (1987). Fjords: Processes and Products. New York: Springer. pp. 46–49. ISBN 0-387-96342-1. The NE coast, from Victoria Fjord to the Scoresby Sund fjord complex ..., has approximately 60 major fjords, some of them the world's largest and deepest. ... The SE coast, from Scoresby Sund to Kap Farvel ..., has approximately 100 fjords.
  4. ^ "Geografiske forhold (Geography of Norway)". Statistics Norway. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  5. ^ Gregory, J. W. (1913). The Nature and Origin of Fiords. London: John Murray.
  6. ^ Murton, Julian B.; Peterson, Rorik; Ozouf, Jean-Claude (17 November 2006). "Bedrock Fracture by Ice Segregation in Cold Regions". Science. 314 (5802): 1127–1129. Bibcode:2006Sci...314.1127M. doi:10.1126/science.1132127. PMID 17110573. S2CID 37639112.
  7. ^ a b c Aarseth, I., Nesje, A., & Fredin, O. (2014). West Norwegian fjords. Geological Society of Norway (NGF), Trondheim, 2014. ISBN 978-82-92-39491-5
  8. ^ Alley, R.B.; D. E. Dawson; G. J. Larson; E. B. Evenson; G. S. Baker (14 August 2003). "Stabilizing feedbacks in glacier-bed erosion". Nature. Nature PublishingGroup. 424 (6950): 758–760. Bibcode:2003Natur.424..758A. doi:10.1038/nature01839. PMID 12917679. S2CID 4319448.
  9. ^ Jørgensen, Per: Kvartærgeologi. Landbruksforlaget, 1995.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Holtedahl, H. (1967). Notes on the formation of fjords and fjord-valleys. Geografiska Annaler. Series A. Physical Geography, 49(2/4): 188-203.
  11. ^ a b Nesje, Atle; Whillans, Ian M. (1 February 1994). "Erosion of Sognefjord, Norway". Geomorphology. 9 (1): 33–45. Bibcode:1994Geomo...9...33N. doi:10.1016/0169-555X(94)90029-9. ISSN 0169-555X. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
  12. ^ Randall, B. A. O. (1961). On the relationship of valley and fjord directions to the fracture pattern of Lyngen, Troms N. Norway. Geografiska Annaler, 43(3/4), 336-338.
  13. ^ Geografisk leksikon, edited by Waldemar Brøgger. Oslo: Cappelen, 1963.
  14. ^ "Sognefjorden". 15 August 2021.
  15. ^ "Glossary of Glacier Terminology". U.S. Geological Survey. May 28, 2004. Retrieved 2007-05-24.
  16. ^ a b Skreslet, Stig (1980). Fjordene og kyststrømmen. Åndalsnes: Møre og Romsdal naturvern. pp. 48–54. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  17. ^ J.H. Simpson and T.P. Rippeth (1993). The Clyde Sea - a model of seasonal stratification and mixing. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 37, 129-144
  18. ^ Arneborg, L., Janzen, C., Liljebladh, B., Rippeth, T., Simpson, J. H. & Stigebrandt, A. (2004). Spatial variability of diapycnal mixing and turbulent dissipation rates in a stagnant fjord basin. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 34(7), 1679-1691
  19. ^ a b . Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre. Archived from the original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  20. ^ Institute of Marine Research: Coral reefs in Norway 2008-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ a b . National Geographic. Archived from the original on October 5, 2012. Retrieved April 24, 2015.
  22. ^ Paddy Ryan. Fiords – Underwater rock walls and basins, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Updated 21 September 2007. Accessed 2008-04-18.
  23. ^ Moore 1890, p. 277.
  24. ^ Mascioni, Martina; Almandoz, Gastón O.; Ekern, Lindsey; Pan, B. Jack; Vernet, Maria (2021-12-01). "Microplanktonic diatom assemblages dominated the primary production but not the biomass in an Antarctic fjord". Journal of Marine Systems. 224: 103624. Bibcode:2021JMS...22403624M. doi:10.1016/j.jmarsys.2021.103624. ISSN 0924-7963.
  25. ^ Kang, Sung-Ho; Kim, Yea-Dong; Kang, Jae-Shin; Yoo, Kyu-Cheul; Yoon, Ho-Il; Lee, Won-Cheol (2003). "Monitoring on the Marine Environment and Phytoplankton of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard, Arctic". Ocean and Polar Research. 25 (2): 213–226. doi:10.4217/OPR.2003.25.2.213. ISSN 1598-141X.
  26. ^ a b Nesje, A. (2009). Fjords of Norway: Complex Origin of a Scenic Landscape. In Geomorphological Landscapes of the World (pp. 223-234). Springer, Dordrecht.
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  29. ^ a b Migon, P. (Ed.). (2010). Geomorphological landscapes of the world. Springer Science & Business Media, p. 223.
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  31. ^ fjeld is another
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  33. ^ Ryan, Paddy (12 June 2016). "Fiords". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  34. ^ Rygh, O. (1898). Norske Gaardnavne: Oplysninger samlede til Brug ved Matrikelens Revision. Kristiania: Fabritius.
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  37. ^ Helle, Knut (1975). Stavanger: fra våg til by. Stavanger: Stabenfeldt. ISBN 8253201893.
  38. ^ Bird, E.C.F. (2008) Coastal Geomorphology: An Introduction, 2nd ed. John Wiley and Sons Ltd. West Sussex, England. ISBN 978-0-470-51729-1
  39. ^ "New Zealand Geographic Features". New Zealand Geographic Board Ngā Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa. Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand.
  40. ^ "The hardship posting to end all hardship postings". BBC. 25 October 2014.
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  42. ^ Da F Klein, Antonio Henrique; Short, Andrew D (19 July 2016). Brazilian Beach Systems. Springer. p. 389. ISBN 9783319303949. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
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  45. ^ Ramberg, I. B. (Ed.). (2008). The making of a land: geology of Norway. Geological Society of London.
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  47. ^ Tveit, Olav Jakob (1998). Indre Nordfjord. Oslo: Lunde. ISBN 8252031609.
  48. ^ Indre Nordfjord: geologi og landskap. Oppstryn: Jostedalsbreen nasjonalparksenter, 1995.
  49. ^ Bogen, J. (1983). Morphology and sedimentology of deltas in fjord and fjord valley lakes. Sedimentary Geology, 36(2-4), 245-267.
  50. ^ Bygdebok for Modalen og Eksingedalen. Bind 2. Sogenemnda, 1990.
  51. ^ NVE Atlas. Vassdrag – Innsjødatabase – Dybdekart 2015-06-26 at the Wayback Machine (National lakes database). Norges vassdrags- og energidirektorat (Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate). Accessed 13 June 2015
  52. ^ Strøm, Kaare (1959). Innsjøenes verden. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget.
  53. ^ Johansen, Øystein Klock (1994). Fra fangstmann til viking. Hokksund: Øvre Eiker kommune.
  54. ^ Telemark. Oslo: Gyldendal. 1975. ISBN 8205068445.
  55. ^ Norge sett fra luften. Oslo: Det Beste. 1980. ISBN 8270100935.
  56. ^ Mikkelsen, Egil (1989). Fra jeger til bonde: utviklingen av jordbrukssamfunn i Telemark i steinalder og bronsealder. Oslo: Universitetets oldsaksamling. ISBN 8271810790.
  57. ^ Hansen, L., Eilertsen, R. S., Solberg, I. L., Sveian, H., & Rokoengen, K. (2007). Facies characteristics, morphology and depositional models of clay-slide deposits in terraced fjord valleys, Norway. Sedimentary Geology, 202(4), 710-729.
  58. ^ Lidmar-Bergström, K., Ollier, C. D., & Sulebak, J. R. (2000). Landforms and uplift history of southern Norway. Global and Planetary Change, 24(3), 211-231.
  59. ^ Nasmith, Hugh (1962). "Late glacial history and surficial deposits of the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia". Victoria, BC, Canada: BC Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  60. ^ Eyles, Nicholas; Mullins, Henry T.; Hine, Albert C. (1990). "Thick and fast: Sedimentation in a Pleistocene fiord lake of British Columbia, Canada". Geology. 18 (11): 1153–1157. Bibcode:1990Geo....18.1153E. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1990)018<1153:TAFSIA>2.3.CO;2.
  61. ^ . The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
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  67. ^ Alexander P. Lisitzin, Sea-Ice and Iceberg Sedimentation in the Ocean: Recent and Past, p. 449.
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  71. ^ Piret, Loic; Bertrand, Sebastien; Vandekerkhove, Elke; Harada, Naomi; Moffat, Carlos; Rivera, Andres (2017-09-09). "Gridded bathymetry of the Baker-Martinez fjord complex (Chile, 48°S) v1". Figshare. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.5285521.v3. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Bibliography edit

  • Moore, Arthur William (1890). The Surnames & Place-Names of the Isle of Man. E. Stock. p. 2. ISBN 978-1110309573. Retrieved April 24, 2015. surnames and place-names of isle of man.

External links edit

  • Use of whales to probe Arctic fjord's secrets
  • Fiordland's Marine Reserves Department of Conservation
  • Nextstopnorway – Listing of Norwegian fjords
  • Saguenay River – The Canadian Atlas Online 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine

fjord, this, article, about, landform, other, uses, disambiguation, physical, geography, fjord, fiord, ɔːr, ɔːr, long, narrow, inlet, with, steep, sides, cliffs, created, glacier, exist, coasts, antarctica, arctic, surrounded, landmasses, northern, southern, h. This article is about the landform For other uses see Fjord disambiguation In physical geography a fjord or fiord ˈ f j ɔːr d f iː ˈ ɔːr d 1 is a long narrow sea inlet with steep sides or cliffs created by a glacier 2 Fjords exist on the coasts of Antarctica the Arctic and surrounded landmasses of the northern and southern hemispheres 3 Norway s coastline is estimated to be 29 000 km 18 000 mi long with its nearly 1 200 fjords but only 2 500 km 1 600 mi long excluding the fjords 4 5 Geirangerfjord Norway Contents 1 Formation 2 Features and variations 2 1 Hydrology 2 2 Coral reefs 2 3 Skerries 2 4 Phytoplankton 2 5 Epishelf lakes 3 Etymology 3 1 Scandinavian usage 4 Differences in definitions 4 1 Fjords not created by glaciers 5 Freshwater fjords 5 1 Great Lakes 6 Locations 6 1 Principal fjord regions 6 2 Other glaciated or formerly glaciated regions 6 3 Extreme fjords 7 See also 8 Notes 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksFormation edit nbsp A glacier in eastern Greenland flowing through a fjord carved by the movement of ice nbsp Illustration of how a fjord is created nbsp Sorfjorden Hardanger with Sandvinvatnet and Odda Valley can be clearly seen as continuation of the fjord Odda sits on the isthmus Folgefonna on the right hand A true fjord is formed when a glacier cuts a U shaped valley by ice segregation and abrasion of the surrounding bedrock 6 According to the standard model glaciers formed in pre glacial valleys with a gently sloping valley floor The work of the glacier then left an overdeepened U shaped valley that ends abruptly at a valley or trough end Such valleys are fjords when flooded by the ocean Thresholds above sea level create freshwater lakes 7 Glacial melting is accompanied by the rebounding of Earth s crust as the ice load and eroded sediment is removed also called isostasy or glacial rebound In some cases this rebound is faster than sea level rise Most fjords are deeper than the adjacent sea Sognefjord Norway reaches as much as 1 300 m 4 265 ft below sea level Fjords generally have a sill or shoal bedrock at their mouth caused by the previous glacier s reduced erosion rate and terminal moraine 8 In many cases this sill causes extreme currents and large saltwater rapids see skookumchuck Saltstraumen in Norway is often described as the world s strongest tidal current These characteristics distinguish fjords from rias e g the Bay of Kotor which are drowned valleys flooded by the rising sea Drammensfjorden is cut almost in two by the Svelvik ridge a sandy moraine that was below sea level when it was covered by ice but after the post glacial rebound reaches 60 m 200 ft above the fjord 9 Jens Esmark in the 19th century introduced the theory that fjords are or have been created by glaciers and that large parts of Northern Europe had been covered by thick ice in prehistory 10 Thresholds at the mouths and overdeepening of fjords compared to the ocean are the strongest evidence of glacial origin 11 and these thresholds are mostly rocky Thresholds are related to sounds and low land where the ice could spread out and therefore have less erosive force John Walter Gregory argued that fjords are of tectonic origin and that glaciers had a negligible role in their formation Gregory s views were rejected by subsequent research and publications In the case of Hardangerfjord the fractures of the Caledonian fold has guided the erosion by glaciers while there is no clear relation between the direction of Sognefjord and the fold pattern 10 This relationship between fractures and direction of fjords is also observed in Lyngen 12 Preglacial tertiary rivers presumably eroded the surface and created valleys that later guided the glacial flow and erosion of the bedrock This may in particular have been the case in Western Norway where the tertiary uplift of the landmass amplified eroding forces of rivers 10 Confluence of tributary fjords led to excavation of the deepest fjord basins Near the very coast the typical West Norwegian glacier spread out presumably through sounds and low valleys and lost their concentration and reduced the glaciers power to erode leaving bedrock thresholds Bolstadfjorden is 160 m 520 ft deep with a threshold of only 1 5 m 4 ft 11 in 10 7 while the 1 300 m 4 300 ft deep Sognefjorden has a threshold around 100 to 200 m 330 to 660 ft deep 13 14 Hardangerfjord is made up of several basins separated by thresholds The deepest basin Samlafjorden between Jonaneset Jondal and Alvik with a distinct threshold at Vikingneset in Kvam 10 nbsp Muldalsfossen waterfall drops several hundred meters from the Muldalen hanging valley to Tafjorden Hanging valleys are common along glaciated fjords and U shaped valleys A hanging valley is a tributary valley that is higher than the main valley and was created by tributary glacier flows into a glacier of larger volume The shallower valley appears to be hanging above the main valley or a fjord Often waterfalls form at or near the outlet of the upper valley 15 Small waterfalls within these fjords are also used as freshwater resources Hanging valleys also occur underwater in fjord systems The branches of Sognefjord are for instance much shallower than the main fjord The mouth of Fjaerlandsfjord is about 400 m 1 300 ft deep while the main fjord is 1 200 m 3 900 ft nearby The mouth of Ikjefjord is only 50 meters deep while the main fjord is around 1 300 m 4 300 ft at the same point 11 Features and variations edit nbsp Distribution of ice white in Europe during the last glacial periodHydrology edit During the winter season there is usually little inflow of freshwater Surface water and deeper water down to 100 m or 330 ft or more are mixed during winter because of the steady cooling of the surface and wind In the deep fjords there is still fresh water from the summer with less density than the saltier water along the coast Offshore wind common in the fjord areas during winter sets up a current on the surface from the inner to the outer parts This current on the surface in turn pulls dense salt water from the coast across the fjord threshold and into the deepest parts of the fjord 16 Bolstadfjorden has a threshold of only 1 5 m 4 ft 11 in and strong inflow of freshwater from Vosso river creates a brackish surface that blocks circulation of the deep fjord The deeper salt layers of Bolstadfjorden are deprived of oxygen and the seabed is covered with organic material The shallow threshold also creates a strong tidal current 7 During the summer season there is usually a large inflow of river water in the inner areas This freshwater gets mixed with saltwater creating a layer of brackish water with a slightly higher surface than the ocean which in turn sets up a current from the river mouths towards the ocean This current is gradually more salty towards the coast and right under the surface current there is a reverse current of saltier water from the coast In the deeper parts of the fjord the cold water remaining from winter is still and separated from the atmosphere by the brackish top layer This deep water is ventilated by mixing with the upper layer causing it to warm and freshen over the summer 17 In fjords with a shallow threshold or low levels of mixing this deep water is not replaced every year and low oxygen concentration makes the deep water unsuitable for fish and animals In the most extreme cases there is a constant barrier of freshwater on the surface and the fjord freezes over such that there is no oxygen below the surface Drammensfjorden is one example 16 The mixing in fjords predominantly results from the propagation of an internal tide from the entrance sill or internal seiching 18 The Gaupnefjorden branch of Sognefjorden is strongly affected by freshwater as a glacial river flows in Velfjorden has little inflow of freshwater 19 Coral reefs edit In 2000 some coral reefs were discovered along the bottoms of the Norwegian fjords 20 These reefs were found in fjords from the north of Norway to the south The marine life on the reefs is believed to be one of the most important reasons why the Norwegian coastline is such a generous fishing ground Since this discovery is fairly new little research has been done The reefs are host to thousands of lifeforms such as plankton coral anemones fish several species of shark and many more Most are specially adapted to life under the greater pressure of the water column above it and the total darkness of the deep sea 21 New Zealand s fjords are also host to deep water corals but a surface layer of dark fresh water allows these corals to grow in much shallower water than usual An underwater observatory in Milford Sound allows tourists to view them without diving 22 Skerries edit In some places near the seaward margins of areas with fjords the ice scoured channels are so numerous and varied in direction that the rocky coast is divided into thousands of island blocks some large and mountainous while others are merely rocky points or rock reefs menacing navigation These are called skerries 21 The term skerry is derived from the Old Norse sker which means a rock in the sea 23 Skerries most commonly formed at the outlet of fjords where submerged glacially formed valleys perpendicular to the coast join with other cross valleys in a complex array The island fringe of Norway is such a group of skerries called a skjaergard many of the cross fjords are so arranged that they parallel the coast and provide a protected channel behind an almost unbroken succession of mountainous islands and skerries By this channel one can travel through a protected passage almost the entire 1 601 km 995 mi route from Stavanger to North Cape Norway The Blindleia is a skerry protected waterway that starts near Kristiansand in southern Norway and continues past Lillesand The Swedish coast along Bohuslan is likewise skerry guarded The Inside Passage provides a similar route from Seattle Washington and Vancouver British Columbia to Skagway Alaska Yet another such skerry protected passage extends from the Straits of Magellan north for 800 km 500 mi Phytoplankton edit Fjords provide unique environmental conditions for phytoplankton communities In polar fjords glacier and ice sheet outflow add cold fresh meltwater along with transported sediment into the body of water Nutrients provided by this outflow can significantly enhance phytoplankton growth For example in some fjords of the West Antarctic Peninsula WAP nutrient enrichment from meltwater drives diatom blooms a highly productive group of phytoplankton that enable such fjords to be valuable feeding grounds for other species 24 It is possible that as climate change reduces long term meltwater output nutrient dynamics within such fjords will shift to favor less productive species destabilizing the food web ecology of fjord systems In addition to nutrient flux sediment carried by flowing glaciers can become suspended in the water column increasing turbidity and reducing light penetration into greater depths of the fjord This effect can limit the available light for photosynthesis in deeper areas of the water mass reducing phytoplankton abundance beneath the surface 25 Overall phytoplankton abundance and species composition within fjords is highly seasonal varying as a result of seasonal light availability and water properties that depend on glacial melt and the formation of sea ice The study of phytoplankton communities within fjords is an active area of research supported by groups such as FjordPhyto a citizen science initiative to study phytoplankton samples collected by local residents tourists and boaters of all backgrounds Epishelf lakes edit An epishelf lake forms when meltwater is trapped behind a floating ice shelf and the freshwater floats on the denser saltwater below Its surface may freeze forming an isolated ecosystem nbsp Hardangerfjord in Hordaland NorwayEtymology edit nbsp Important fjords and lakes in Norway Note The part of the map showing the northern fjords has a considerably smaller scale Blurred coastlines skerriesThe word fjord is borrowed from Norwegian where it is pronounced ˈfjuːr ˈfjoːr ˈfjuːɽ or ˈfjoːɽ in various dialects and has a more general meaning referring in many cases to any long narrow body of water inlet or channel for example see Oslofjord The Norwegian word is inherited from Old Norse fjǫrdr a noun which refers to a lake like body of water used for passage and ferrying and is closely related to the noun ferd travelling ferrying journey 26 27 Both words go back to Indo European pertus crossing from the root per cross The words fare and ferry are of the same origin 28 29 The Scandinavian fjord Proto Scandinavian ferthuz is the origin for similar Germanic words Icelandic fjordur Faroese fjordur Swedish fjard for Baltic waterbodies Scots firth for marine waterbodies mainly in Scotland and northern England 27 29 The Norse noun fjǫrdr was adopted in German as Forde used for the narrow long bays of Schleswig Holstein and in English as firth fjord river mouth The English word ford compare German Furt Low German Ford or Vorde in Dutch names voorde such as Vilvoorde Ancient Greek poros poros and Latin portus is assumed to originate from Germanic ferthu and Indo European root pertu meaning crossing point Fjord firth Forde as well as ford Furt Vorde voorde refer to a Germanic noun for a travel North Germanic ferd or fard and of the verb to travel Dutch varen German fahren English to fare 30 As a loanword from Norwegian 26 it is one of the few words in the English language to start with the sequence fj 31 The word was for a long time normally spelled fiord 32 a spelling preserved in place names such as Grise Fiord The fiord spelling mostly remains only in New Zealand English as in the place name Fiordland 33 Scandinavian usage edit nbsp Fjord a Christiania by Claude Monet 1895 nbsp Holandsfjorden with Svartisen glacier in Nordland See also Forden and East Jutland Fjorde The use of the word fjord in Norwegian Danish and Swedish is more general than in English and in international scientific terminology In Scandinavia fjord is used for a narrow inlet of the sea in Norway Denmark and western Sweden but this is not its only application In Norway and Iceland the usage is closest to the Old Norse with fjord used for both a firth and for a long narrow inlet In eastern Norway the term is also applied to long narrow freshwater lakes Randsfjorden and Tyrifjorden and sometimes even to rivers for instance in Fla in Hallingdal the Hallingdal river is referred to as fjorden In southeast Sweden the name fjard fjard is a subdivision of the term fjord used for bays bights and narrow inlets on the Swedish Baltic Sea coast and in most Swedish lakes This latter term is also used for bodies of water off the coast of Finland where Finland Swedish is spoken In Danish the word may even apply to shallow lagoons In modern Icelandic fjordur is still used with the broader meaning of firth or inlet In Faroese fjordur is used both about inlets and about broader sounds whereas a narrower sound is called sund In the Finnish language a word vuono is used although there is only one fjord in Finland In old Norse genitive was fjardar whereas dative was firdi The dative form has become common place names like Forde for instance Forde Fyrde or Forre for instance Forre 34 The German use of the word Fohrde for long narrow bays on their Baltic Sea coastline indicates a common Germanic origin of the word The landscape consists mainly of moraine heaps The Fohrden and some fjords on the east side of Jutland Denmark are also of glacial origin But while the glaciers digging real fjords moved from the mountains to the sea in Denmark and Germany they were tongues of a huge glacier covering the basin of which is now the Baltic Sea See Forden and East Jutland Fjorde Whereas fjord names mostly describe bays though not always geological fjords straits in the same regions typically are named Sund in Scandinavian languages as well as in German The word is related to to sunder in the meaning of to separate So the use of Sound to name fjords in North America and New Zealand differs from the European meaning of that word The name of Wexford in Ireland is originally derived from Veisafjǫrdr inlet of the mud flats in Old Norse as used by the Viking settlers though the inlet at that place in modern terms is an estuary not a fjord Similarly the name of Milford now Milford Haven in Wales is derived from Melrfjǫrdr sandbank fjord inlet 35 though the inlet on which it is located is actually a ria Before or in the early phase of Old Norse angr was another common noun for fjords and other inlets of the ocean This word has survived only as a suffix in names of some Scandinavian fjords and has in same cases also been transferred to adjacent settlements or surrounding areas for instance Hardanger Stavanger and Geiranger 36 37 Differences in definitions edit nbsp The Lim bay in Croatia is commonly called a fjord but is scientifically a ria The differences in usage between the English and the Scandinavian languages have contributed to confusion in the use of the term fjord Bodies of water that are clearly fjords in Scandinavian languages are not considered fjords in English similarly bodies of water that would clearly not be fjords in the Scandinavian sense have been named or suggested to be fjords Examples of this confused usage follow In the Danish language some inlets are called a fjord but are according to the English language definition technically not a fjord For example Roskilde Fjord Limfjord in English terminology is a sound since it separates the North Jutlandic Island Vendsyssel Thy from the rest of Jutland However the Limfjord once was a fjord until the sea broke through from the west Ringkobing Fjord on the western coast of Jutland is a lagoon The long narrow fjords of Denmark s Baltic Sea coast like the German Forden were dug by ice moving from the sea upon land while fjords in the geological sense were dug by ice moving from the mountains down to the sea However some definitions of a fjord is A long narrow inlet consisting of only one inlet created by glacial activity Examples of Danish fjords are Kolding Fjord Vejle Fjord and Mariager Fjord The fjords in Finnmark Norway which are fjords in the Scandinavian sense of the term are not universally considered to be fjords by the scientific community 38 Although glacially formed most Finnmark fjords lack the steep sided valleys of the more southerly Norwegian fjords since the glacial pack was deep enough to cover even the high grounds when they were formed The Oslofjord on the other hand is a rift valley and not glacially formed The indigenous Maori people of New Zealand see a fjord as a kind of sea Maori tai that runs by a bluff matapari altogether tai matapari bluff sea 39 Fjords not created by glaciers edit The term fjord is sometimes applied to steep sided inlets which were not created by glaciers Most such inlets are drowned river canyons or rias Examples include In Acapulco Mexico the calanques narrow rocky inlets on the western side of the city where the famous cliff divers perform daily are described in the city s tourist literature as being fjords The Fiordo di Furore in Italy is a ria Golfo Dulce in Puntarenas Costa Rica Like the Saco de Mamangua below it is sometimes described as a tropical fjord The Khor ash Sham in the Musandam Peninsula in Oman and other khors or inlets in the deeply indented coast of Musandam are often described as fjords They were formed by the subduction of the Arabian tectonic plate beneath the Eurasian plate 40 Bay of Kotor in Montenegro the Lim bay in Istria Croatia is sometimes called Lim fjord although it is a ria dug by the river Pazincica The Croats call it Limski kanal which does not translate precisely to the English equivalent either Milford Haven Waterway in Pembrokeshire Wales This inlet is a ria The place name is derived from Old Norse Melrfjordr meaning sandbank fjord Port Davey in Tasmania Australia is popularly believed to be a fjord but is now thought to be part of a drowned river valley system 41 Saco De Mamangua in Rio de Janeiro Brazil 42 Colloquially labeled the world s only tropical fjord Freshwater fjords edit nbsp Eidfjord village beneath the high terrace the original ice age delta The river has carved a gorge through the terrace Some Norwegian freshwater lakes that have formed in long glacially carved valleys with sill thresholds ice front deltas or terminal moraines blocking the outlet follow the Norwegian naming convention they are frequently named fjords Ice front deltas developed when the ice front was relatively stable for long time during the melting of the ice shield The resulting landform is an isthmus between the lake and the saltwater fjord in Norwegian called eid as in placename Eidfjord or Nordfjordeid The post glacial rebound changed these deltas into terraces up to the level of the original sea level In Eidfjord Eio has dug through the original delta and left a 110 m 360 ft terrace while lake is only 19 m 62 ft above sea level 43 44 Such deposits are valuable sources of high quality building materials sand and gravel for houses and infrastructure 45 Eidfjord village sits on the eid or isthmus between Eidfjordvatnet lake and Eidfjorden branch of Hardangerfjord 46 Nordfjordeid is the isthmus with a village between Hornindalsvatnet lake and Nordfjord 47 48 Such lakes are also denoted fjord valley lakes by geologists 49 One of Norway s largest is Tyrifjorden at 63 m 207 ft above sea level and an average depth at 97 m 318 ft most of the lake is under sea level Norway s largest lake Mjosa is also referred to as the fjord by locals 44 Another example is the freshwater fjord Movatnet Mo lake that until 1743 was separated from Romarheimsfjorden by an isthmus and connected by a short river During a flood in November 1743 the river bed eroded and sea water could flow into the lake at high tide Eventually Movatnet became a saltwater fjord and renamed Mofjorden Mofjorden no 50 Like fjords freshwater lakes are often deep For instance Hornindalsvatnet is at least 500 m 1 600 ft deep and water takes an average of 16 years to flow through the lake 51 Such lakes created by glacial action are also called fjord lakes or moraine dammed lakes 52 Some of these lakes were salt after the ice age but later cut off from the ocean during the post glacial rebound 19 At the end of the ice age Eastern Norway was about 200 m 660 ft lower the marine limit When the ice cap receded and allowed the ocean to fill valleys and lowlands and lakes like Mjosa and Tyrifjorden were part of the ocean while Drammen valley was a narrow fjord At the time of the Vikings Drammensfjord was still four or five m 13 or 16 ft higher than today and reached the town of Hokksund while parts of what is now the city of Drammen was under water 53 After the ice age the ocean was about 150 m 490 ft at Notodden The ocean stretched like a fjord through Heddalsvatnet all the way to Hjartdal Post glacial rebound eventually separated Heddalsvatnet from the ocean and turned it into a freshwater lake 54 55 In neolithic times Heddalsvatnet was still a saltwater fjord connected to the ocean and was cut off from the ocean around 1500 BC 56 Some freshwater fjords such as Slidrefjord are above the marine limit Like freshwater fjords the continuation of fjords on land are in the same way denoted as fjord valleys For instance Flamsdal Flam valley and Mabodalen 10 57 58 nbsp Ardalstangen village on the small isthmus between Ardalsvatnet lake behind and Ardalsfjorden branch of Sognefjorden front Outside of Norway the three western arms of New Zealand s Lake Te Anau are named North Fiord Middle Fiord and South Fiord Another freshwater fjord in a larger lake is Western Brook Pond in Newfoundland s Gros Morne National Park it is also often described as a fjord but is actually a freshwater lake cut off from the sea so is not a fjord in the English sense of the term Locally they refer to it as a landlocked fjord Such lakes are sometimes called fjord lakes Okanagan Lake was the first North American lake to be so described in 1962 59 The bedrock there has been eroded up to 650 m 2 133 ft below sea level which is 2 000 m 6 562 ft below the surrounding regional topography 60 Fjord lakes are common on the inland lea of the Coast Mountains and Cascade Range notable ones include Lake Chelan Seton Lake Chilko Lake and Atlin Lake Kootenay Lake Slocan Lake and others in the basin of the Columbia River are also fjord like in nature and created by glaciation in the same way Along the British Columbia Coast a notable fjord lake is Owikeno Lake which is a freshwater extension of Rivers Inlet Quesnel Lake located in central British Columbia is claimed to be the deepest fjord formed lake on Earth Great Lakes editA family of freshwater fjords are the embayments of the North American Great Lakes Baie Fine is located on the northwestern coast of Georgian Bay of Lake Huron in Ontario and Huron Bay is located on the southern shore of Lake Superior in Michigan Locations edit nbsp Sognefjord in Norway the longest fjord in Norway 27 is a popular tourist attraction nbsp Eyjafjordur in north Iceland Akureyri can be seen to the far right nbsp Killary Harbour western Ireland nbsp New Zealand s Milford Sound nbsp Glacier in a fjord at Kenai Fjords National Park Alaska nbsp Tysfjord in Norway north of the Arctic Circle is located in the boreal zone nbsp The entrance to Larsen Harbour a sub embayment of Drygalski Fjord in South Georgia Island nbsp The calving end of Inostrantsev Glacier at Inostrantsev Fjord Novaya Zemlya The principal mountainous regions where fjords have formed are in the higher middle latitudes and the high latitudes reaching to 80 N Svalbard Greenland where during the glacial period many valley glaciers descended to the then lower sea level The fjords develop best in mountain ranges against which the prevailing westerly marine winds are orographically lifted over the mountainous regions resulting in abundant snowfall to feed the glaciers Hence coasts having the most pronounced fjords include the west coast of Norway the west coast of North America from Puget Sound to Alaska the southwest coast of New Zealand and the west and to south western coasts of South America chiefly in Chile Principal fjord regions edit West coast of Europe Faroe Islands Westfjords of Iceland Eastern Region of Iceland West Highlands of Scotland Norway the whole coast including Svalbard Kola Peninsula in Russia West coast of New Zealand Fiordland in the southwest of the South Island Northwest coast of North America Coast of Alaska United States Lynn Canal Glacier Bay etc British Columbia Coast Canada from the Alaskan Border along the Portland Canal to Indian Arm Kingcome Inlet is a typical West Coast fjord Hood Canal in Washington United States and various of the arms of Puget Sound Northeast coast of North America Labrador Saglek Fjord Nachvak Fjord Hebron Fjord The east coast of Ungava Bay Baffin Island Ellesmere Island Greenland Kangerlussuaq Ilulissat Icefjord Scoresby Sund Disko Island Southwest coast of South America Fjords and channels of Chile Isla de los Estados ArgentinaOther glaciated or formerly glaciated regions edit Other regions have fjords but many of these are less pronounced due to more limited exposure to westerly winds and less pronounced relief Areas include Europe Ireland Lough Swilly Carlingford Lough Killary Harbour Russia see also List of fjords of Russia Chukchi Peninsula Kola Peninsula Scotland where they are called firths the Scots language cognate of fjord lochs or sea lochs Notable examples are Loch Long Loch Fyne Scotland s longest fjord at 65 km Loch Etive Sweden Gullmarsfjorden in Bohuslan Sweden North America Canada the west and south coasts of Newfoundland particularly Facheux Bay Bonne Bay in Gros Morne National Park Aviron Bay La Hune Bay Bay de Vieux White Bear Bay Baie d Espoir La Poile Bay Bay Le Moine the Canadian Arctic Archipelago Quebec Saguenay Fjord 61 United States Somes Sound Acadia National Park Maine Hudson River most clearly seen at The Palisades Puget Sound South America Argentina Isla de los Estados Arctic Arctic islands Novaya Zemlya Severnaya Zemlya Antarctica South Georgia UK Kerguelen Islands France particularly the Antarctic Peninsula Sub Antarctic islands nbsp Snow covered mountains stand out in contrast to the dark water Efjorden fjord and Stefjorden Tysfjorden and Ofotfjorden fjords in the distance Extreme fjords edit The longest fjords in the world are Nansen Sound Greely Fiord Tanquary Fiord in Canada 420 km 261 mi 62 Chatham Strait Lynn Canal in United States 403 km 250 mi 63 Scoresby Sund in Greenland 382 km 237 mi 64 65 Concepcion Channel Puerto Simpson in Chile 245 km 152 mi Sognefjord in Norway 204 km 127 mi 66 Independence Fjord in Greenland 200 km 124 mi Matochkin Shar Novaya Zemlya Russia 125 km 78 mi a strait with a fjord structure 67 Deep fjords include Skelton Inlet in Antarctica 1 933 m 6 342 ft Sognefjord in Norway 1 308 m 4 291 ft 68 66 the mountains then rise to up to 1 500 m 4 921 ft and more Hurrungane reaches 2 400 m 7 874 ft 69 Messier Channel in Tortel Chile 1 358 m 4 455 ft 70 71 Baker Channel in Tortel Chile 1 251 m 4 104 ft See also editFirth Forden and East Jutland Fjorde Fjard RiaPortals nbsp Water nbsp Environment nbsp GeologyNotes edit fjord Merriam Webster com Dictionary What is a Fjord and how is it formed Norway Today 2016 05 08 Archived from the original on 2017 12 25 Retrieved 2017 12 30 Syvitsky James P M Burrell David C Skei Jens M 1987 Fjords Processes and Products New York Springer pp 46 49 ISBN 0 387 96342 1 The NE coast from Victoria Fjord to the Scoresby Sund fjord complex has approximately 60 major fjords some of them the world s largest and deepest The SE coast from Scoresby Sund to Kap Farvel has approximately 100 fjords Geografiske forhold Geography of Norway Statistics Norway Retrieved 24 March 2016 Gregory J W 1913 The Nature and Origin of Fiords London John Murray Murton Julian B Peterson Rorik Ozouf Jean Claude 17 November 2006 Bedrock Fracture by Ice Segregation in Cold Regions Science 314 5802 1127 1129 Bibcode 2006Sci 314 1127M doi 10 1126 science 1132127 PMID 17110573 S2CID 37639112 a b c Aarseth I Nesje A amp Fredin O 2014 West Norwegian fjords Geological Society of Norway NGF Trondheim 2014 ISBN 978 82 92 39491 5 Alley R B D E Dawson G J Larson E B Evenson G S Baker 14 August 2003 Stabilizing feedbacks in glacier bed erosion Nature Nature PublishingGroup 424 6950 758 760 Bibcode 2003Natur 424 758A doi 10 1038 nature01839 PMID 12917679 S2CID 4319448 Jorgensen Per Kvartaergeologi Landbruksforlaget 1995 a b c d e f Holtedahl H 1967 Notes on the formation of fjords and fjord valleys Geografiska Annaler Series A Physical Geography 49 2 4 188 203 a b Nesje Atle Whillans Ian M 1 February 1994 Erosion of Sognefjord Norway Geomorphology 9 1 33 45 Bibcode 1994Geomo 9 33N doi 10 1016 0169 555X 94 90029 9 ISSN 0169 555X Retrieved 20 September 2021 Randall B A O 1961 On the relationship of valley and fjord directions to the fracture pattern of Lyngen Troms N Norway Geografiska Annaler 43 3 4 336 338 Geografisk leksikon edited by Waldemar Brogger Oslo Cappelen 1963 Sognefjorden 15 August 2021 Glossary of Glacier Terminology U S Geological Survey May 28 2004 Retrieved 2007 05 24 a b Skreslet Stig 1980 Fjordene og kyststrommen Andalsnes More og Romsdal naturvern pp 48 54 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help J H Simpson and T P Rippeth 1993 The Clyde Sea a model of seasonal stratification and mixing Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science 37 129 144 Arneborg L Janzen C Liljebladh B Rippeth T Simpson J H amp Stigebrandt A 2004 Spatial variability of diapycnal mixing and turbulent dissipation rates in a stagnant fjord basin Journal of Physical Oceanography 34 7 1679 1691 a b Fjord Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre Archived from the original on 3 February 2016 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Institute of Marine Research Coral reefs in Norway Archived 2008 10 11 at the Wayback Machine a b Fjord National Geographic Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Retrieved April 24 2015 Paddy Ryan Fiords Underwater rock walls and basins Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Updated 21 September 2007 Accessed 2008 04 18 Moore 1890 p 277 Mascioni Martina Almandoz Gaston O Ekern Lindsey Pan B Jack Vernet Maria 2021 12 01 Microplanktonic diatom assemblages dominated the primary production but not the biomass in an Antarctic fjord Journal of Marine Systems 224 103624 Bibcode 2021JMS 22403624M doi 10 1016 j jmarsys 2021 103624 ISSN 0924 7963 Kang Sung Ho Kim Yea Dong Kang Jae Shin Yoo Kyu Cheul Yoon Ho Il Lee Won Cheol 2003 Monitoring on the Marine Environment and Phytoplankton of Kongsfjorden Svalbard Arctic Ocean and Polar Research 25 2 213 226 doi 10 4217 OPR 2003 25 2 213 ISSN 1598 141X a b Nesje A 2009 Fjords of Norway Complex Origin of a Scenic Landscape In Geomorphological Landscapes of the World pp 223 234 Springer Dordrecht a b c Lilleoren Karianne 2021 fjord Store norske leksikon Retrieved 11 December 2021 Helleland Botolv 1975 Norske stedsnavn stadnamn Oslo Grondahl ISBN 8250401042 a b Migon P Ed 2010 Geomorphological landscapes of the world Springer Science amp Business Media p 223 de Caprona Yann 2014 Norsk etymologisk ordbok Kagge ISBN 978 8 2489 1054 1 fjeld is another Fowler H W 10 September 2009 1926 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage The Classic First Edition The Classic First Edition OUP Oxford p 181 ISBN 978 0 19 953534 7 The OED gives precedence to fi The other spelling is apparently used in English to help the ignorant to call it fyord as instead of helping it only puzzles them it should be abandoned Ryan Paddy 12 June 2016 Fiords Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 3 March 2022 Rygh O 1898 Norske Gaardnavne Oplysninger samlede til Brug ved Matrikelens Revision Kristiania Fabritius Morgan Richard Owen Hywel Wyn 2022 Dictionary of the Place Names of Wales Y Lolfa ISBN 9781800992399 Retrieved 29 September 2023 Rygh O 1896 Norske Fjordnavne Kristiania Aschehoug Helle Knut 1975 Stavanger fra vag til by Stavanger Stabenfeldt ISBN 8253201893 Bird E C F 2008 Coastal Geomorphology An Introduction 2nd ed John Wiley and Sons Ltd West Sussex England ISBN 978 0 470 51729 1 New Zealand Geographic Features New Zealand Geographic Board Nga Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa Toitu Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand The hardship posting to end all hardship postings BBC 25 October 2014 Barker W E Ahmad Naseer Re examination of the fjord theory of Port Davey Tasmania 1959 PDF Retrieved 29 September 2023 Da F Klein Antonio Henrique Short Andrew D 19 July 2016 Brazilian Beach Systems Springer p 389 ISBN 9783319303949 Retrieved 1 March 2023 Geografi landskap ressursar menneske miljo Oslo Cappelen 1999 ISBN 8202173078 a b Gustav Indrebo 1924 Norske innsjonavn Upplands fylke Skrifter Videnskabsselskapet i Kristiania Historisk filosofisk klasse Ramberg I B Ed 2008 The making of a land geology of Norway Geological Society of London Brekke Nils Georg Skaar Ronny B and Nord Svein 1993 Kulturhistorisk Vegbok Hordaland Nord4 Tveit Olav Jakob 1998 Indre Nordfjord Oslo Lunde ISBN 8252031609 Indre Nordfjord geologi og landskap Oppstryn Jostedalsbreen nasjonalparksenter 1995 Bogen J 1983 Morphology and sedimentology of deltas in fjord and fjord valley lakes Sedimentary Geology 36 2 4 245 267 Bygdebok for Modalen og Eksingedalen Bind 2 Sogenemnda 1990 NVE Atlas Vassdrag Innsjodatabase Dybdekart Archived 2015 06 26 at the Wayback Machine National lakes database Norges vassdrags og energidirektorat Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate Accessed 13 June 2015 Strom Kaare 1959 Innsjoenes verden Oslo Universitetsforlaget Johansen Oystein Klock 1994 Fra fangstmann til viking Hokksund Ovre Eiker kommune Telemark Oslo Gyldendal 1975 ISBN 8205068445 Norge sett fra luften Oslo Det Beste 1980 ISBN 8270100935 Mikkelsen Egil 1989 Fra jeger til bonde utviklingen av jordbrukssamfunn i Telemark i steinalder og bronsealder Oslo Universitetets oldsaksamling ISBN 8271810790 Hansen L Eilertsen R S Solberg I L Sveian H amp Rokoengen K 2007 Facies characteristics morphology and depositional models of clay slide deposits in terraced fjord valleys Norway Sedimentary Geology 202 4 710 729 Lidmar Bergstrom K Ollier C D amp Sulebak J R 2000 Landforms and uplift history of southern Norway Global and Planetary Change 24 3 211 231 Nasmith Hugh 1962 Late glacial history and surficial deposits of the Okanagan Valley British Columbia Victoria BC Canada BC Ministry of Energy Mines and Petroleum Resources a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Eyles Nicholas Mullins Henry T Hine Albert C 1990 Thick and fast Sedimentation in a Pleistocene fiord lake of British Columbia Canada Geology 18 11 1153 1157 Bibcode 1990Geo 18 1153E doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1990 018 lt 1153 TAFSIA gt 2 3 CO 2 Saguenay River The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 22 August 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2012 Ford Wm L Hattersley Smith G 1965 On The Oceanography Of The Nansen Sound Fiord System Arctic Institute of North America p 159 Martin Lawrence Williams F E 1924 An Ice Eroded Fiord The Mode of Origin of Lynn Canal Alaska Geographical Review 14 4 576 96 JSTOR 208300 via JSTOR Sandell Hanne Tuborg Sandell Birger 1991 Archaeology and Environment in the Scoresby Sund Fjord Museum Tusculanum Press p 7 ISBN 87 635 1208 4 Migon Piotr ed 2010 Geomorphological Landscapes of the World Springer p 227 ISBN 978 90 481 3054 2 a b Oi Ornulf 1987 Norges sjoatlas fra svenskegrensen til Sognefjorden Oslo Nautisk forlag i samarbeid med Statens kartverk Norges sjokartverk pp 225 244 ISBN 8290335024 Alexander P Lisitzin Sea Ice and Iceberg Sedimentation in the Ocean Recent and Past p 449 Store norske leksikon Sognefjorden in Norwegian Retrieved 2010 09 04 Andersen Bjorn G 2000 Istider i Norge Landskap formet av istidenes breer Oslo Universitetsforlaget p 30 ISBN 9788200451341 The Deepest Fjords in The World WorldAtlas 2018 11 26 Retrieved 2022 05 26 Piret Loic Bertrand Sebastien Vandekerkhove Elke Harada Naomi Moffat Carlos Rivera Andres 2017 09 09 Gridded bathymetry of the Baker Martinez fjord complex Chile 48 S v1 Figshare doi 10 6084 m9 figshare 5285521 v3 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bibliography edit Moore Arthur William 1890 The Surnames amp Place Names of the Isle of Man E Stock p 2 ISBN 978 1110309573 Retrieved April 24 2015 surnames and place names of isle of man External links edit nbsp Look up fjord in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fjord nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fjord Use of whales to probe Arctic fjord s secrets Fiordland s Marine Reserves Department of Conservation Nextstopnorway Listing of Norwegian fjords Saguenay River The Canadian Atlas Online Archived 2011 06 07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fjord amp oldid 1193111040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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