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Mälaren

Mälaren (UK: /ˈmɛlərɛn/ MEL-ər-en, US: /ˈmlɑːrən/ MAY-lar-ən,[1][2][3] Swedish: [ˈmɛ̂ːlarɛn] (listen) or [ˈmɛ̂ːlaɳ]),[4] historically referred to as Lake Malar in English, is the third-largest freshwater lake in Sweden (after Vänern and Vättern). Its area is 1,140 km2 and its greatest depth is 64 m. Mälaren spans 120 kilometers from east to west. The lake drains, from south-west to north-east, into the Baltic Sea through its natural outlets Norrström and Söderström (as it flows around Stadsholmen island) and through the artificial Södertälje Canal and Hammarbyleden waterway. The easternmost bay of Mälaren, in central Stockholm, is called Riddarfjärden. The lake is located in Svealand and bounded by the provinces of Uppland, Södermanland and Västmanland. The two largest islands in Mälaren are Selaön (91 km2) and Svartsjölandet (79 km2). Mälaren is low-lying and mostly relatively shallow.

Mälaren
Lake Mälaren at dusk
Mälaren
LocationSweden
Coordinates59°30′N 17°12′E / 59.500°N 17.200°E / 59.500; 17.200Coordinates: 59°30′N 17°12′E / 59.500°N 17.200°E / 59.500; 17.200
Basin countriesSweden
Surface area1,140 km2 (440 sq mi)
Average depth13 m (43 ft)
Max. depth64 m (210 ft)
Water volume14 km3 (11,000,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface elevation3 metres (9.8 ft)
IslandsSelaön, Svartsjölandet (see list)

Being a quite narrow and shallow lake, Mälaren has bridge crossings between Eskilstuna and Västerås with two crossings on the western end at Kvicksund and three separate bridges between Strängnäs and Enköping in the central part of the lake. On the eastern end, the entirety of Ekerö Municipality is set on islands within Mälaren. That urban area also has a bridge connection to the mainland in Stockholm along with bridges between various islands in the municipality.

The Viking Age settlements Birka on the island of Björkö and Hovgården on the neighbouring island Adelsö have been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993, as has Drottningholm Palace on the island of Lovön. The barrow of Björn Ironside is on the island of Munsö, within the lake.

The barrow of Björn Ironside (Björn Järnsidas hög) on the island of Munsö, in lake Mälaren, Sweden. The barrow is crowned by a stone containing the fragmented Uppland Runic Inscription 13.

Etymology

The etymological origin of the name Mälaren stems from the Old Norse word mælir appearing in historical records in the 1320s and meaning gravel.[5] The lake was previously known as Lǫgrinn, which is Old Norse for "The Lake".[6]

Geology

 
Mälaren details, with Stockholm urban area to the right in pink.

By the end of the last ice age about 11,000 years ago, much of northern Europe and North America was covered by ice sheets up to 3 km thick. At the end of the ice age when the glaciers retreated, the removal of the weight from the depressed land led to a post-glacial rebound. Initially the rebound was rapid, proceeding at about 7.5 cm/year. This phase lasted for about 2,000 years, and took place as the ice was being unloaded. Once deglaciation was complete, uplift slowed to about 2.5 cm/year, and decreased exponentially after that. Today, typical uplift rates are of the order of 1 cm/year or less, and studies suggest that rebound will continue for about another 10,000 years. The total uplift from the end of deglaciation can be up to 400 m.[citation needed]

In the Viking Age Mälaren was still a bay of the Baltic Sea,[7][8] and seagoing vessels could sail up it far into the interior of Sweden. Birka was conveniently near the trade routes through the Södertälje Canal. Due to the post-glacial rebound, Södertälje canal and the mouth of Riddarfjärden bay had become so shallow by about the year 1200 that ships had to unload their cargoes near the entrances, and progressively the bay became a lake.[9] The decline of Birka and the subsequent foundation of Stockholm at the choke point of Riddarfjärden were in part due to the post-glacial rebound changing the topography of the Mälaren basin. The lake's surface currently averages 0.7 meters above sea level.

Mythology

According to Norse mythology as contained in the thirteenth-century Icelandic work Prose Edda, the lake was created by the goddess Gefjon when she tricked Gylfi, the Swedish king of Gylfaginning. Gylfi promised Gefjon as much land as four oxen could plough in a day and a night, but she used oxen from the land of the giants, and moreover uprooted the land and dragged it into the sea, where it became the island of Zealand. Snorra Edda says that 'the inlets in the lake correspond to the headlands in Zealand';[10] since modern maps show this to be more true of Lake Vänern, the myth has been suggested to have been originally about Vänern, not Mälaren.[11]

Geography

A selection, in alphabetical order:

Major islands Major sections from west to east Major cities and municipalities bordering the lake
  • Galten
  • Blacken
  • Långtarmen
  • Freden
  • Västeråsfjärden
  • Granfjärden
  • Oknöfjärden
  • Gripsholmsfjärden
  • Prästfjärden
  • Björkfjärden
  • Ekoln
  • Gorran & Skarven
  • Östra Mälaren

Ecology

The most common nesting birds on the skerries of Mälaren are also the most common in the Baltic Sea. After a survey in 2005, the ten most common species were found to be common tern, herring gull, black-headed gull, common gull, mallard, tufted duck, Canada goose, common goldeneye, lesser black-backed gull and common sandpiper. White-tailed eagle, greylag goose, barnacle goose, black-throated diver, red-breasted merganser and gadwall are less common, and some of these latter are endangered in the Mälaren area. Since 1994 a subspecies of great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis, has nested there as well. A 2005 survey tallied 23 breeding colonies with 2178 nests, of which the largest colony had 235 nests. Most experts believe the great cormorant population has peaked and will stabilize at around 2000 nests.[12]

One of the characteristic species is the osprey which has one of its strongest presences in Lake Mälaren. The osprey nests in almost all bays of the lake.[12]

The Zebra mussel is considered an invasive species and is causing some problems in Lake Mälaren.

Lake Mälaren has 33 species of naturally occurring fish species, which makes it Sweden’s most diverse lake in regard to fish. Other species have been introduced to the environment, including the common carp and the rainbow trout. The rainbow trout in particular is known to compete with indigenous fish for habitat and food, as they have a faster growth rate and predate on local species. However, they are not considered to have made a significant impact.[13]

Crayfish

Crayfish are of large cultural and economic importance in Sweden, with crayfish parties being a longtime annual tradition for many Swedes.

Lake Mälaren was the first lake in Sweden to be affected by the crayfish plague (A. astaci Schicora) when infected crayfish imported from Finland were introduced to the lake with the intention of human consumption. The plague spread quickly through the lake, exacerbated by boat traffic, which decimated the indigenous noble crayfish (A. astacus) population and caused severe economic losses to the local fishing industry. From Mälaren, the plague spread rapidly to all freshwater bodies in Sweden.

After multiple recurrent outbreaks and failed attempts to restore populations of the noble crayfish, Swedish authorities introduced the North American signal crayfish (P. leniusculus) to L. Mälaren, a species that is resistant to the plague. Since 1969, Mälaren has been continuously stocked with signal crayfish.[13] However, it was later discovered that signal crayfish were often carriers of crayfish plague. In addition, while populations of noble crayfish and signal crayfish have been known coexist, their larger size, faster growth rate, and aggressiveness often allows them to dominate populations of noble crayfish. This, in addition to habitat degradation,[14] has led to a significant decrease in noble crayfish populations in L. Mälaren.

Signal crayfish have been largely successful in Sweden and rapidly expanded as a replacement population to noble crayfish. Stocking this species is now prohibited within multiple lakes in Sweden in order to protect noble crayfish population. In the Stockholm municipality, which includes L. Mälaren, signal crayfish are now illegal to import, move, or farm.[15] There have been efforts to encourage farming of noble crayfish populations instead.[16] However, illegal farming of signal crayfish continues to be a problem due to greater public demand for the larger signal crayfish.[17]

Mapping

From the mid 17th century onwards, multiple expeditions to measure and map L. Mälaren were undertaken. The lake was strategically and economically important, and there was a lack of a reliable map to navigate it. However, L. Mälaren’s many islands and bays made it an extensive and laborious task to measure.

In 1687, King Charles XI of Sweden commissioned cartographer Carl Gripenhielm to map Lake Mälaren and its surrounding provinces.[18] From 2 August 1688 to 17 September 1688 Gripenhielm conducted the bulk of his expedition, and he would complete the map in 1689, known in Swedish as Gripenhielm's Mälarkarta. The Mälarkarta is unique in that it is surrounded by a frame of 96 small, realistic gouache paintings of cities, castles, mansions, and fairways around Lake Mälaren. The map is hand drawn on regal paper, and measures 3.46 x 2.14 meters. It has been kept in the National Library of Sweden since 1884. Due to its larger size, it was initially hung in the large viewing room, however in 1931 it was moved to a more secluded wall in a corridor to the map department. Heavy handed preservation techniques have led to some degradation on the illustrations. Since 1961, the map hangs in an area that the public does not have access to.

Gripenheim’s Mälarkarta was valid until 1739 when a new, more accurate map of L. Mälaren was completed by the then surveyor and cartographer Jacob Nordencreutz.

Trivia

  • Mälardrottningen (Lake Mälar Queen) is a poetic name for Stockholm well known in Swedish literature.
  • Utter Inn, an underwater hotel designed by the artist Mikael Genberg, is in the lake.
  • The area around the lake hosted the cycling events at the 1912 Summer Olympics.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mälaren". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved April 14, 2019.
  2. ^ (US) and "Mälaren". Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[permanent dead link][dead link]
  3. ^ "Mälaren". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved April 14, 2019.
  4. ^ Jöran Sahlgren; Gösta Bergman (1979). Svenska ortnamn med uttalsuppgifter (in Swedish). p. 17.
  5. ^ ”Mälaren”. Nationalencyklopedin. Accessed 4 November 2016.
  6. ^ Grimes, Heilan Yvette. The Norse Myths. P.285, 286
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-20. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  8. ^ Friman, Helena, Söderström, Göran. (2008). Stockholm: en historia i kartor och bilder.
  9. ^ Om Mälaren
  10. ^ Anthony Faulkes (ed. and trans), Snorri Sturluson: Edda (London: Everyman, 1987), p. 7.
  11. ^ Heimir Pálsson, 'Tertium vero datur: A study of the text of DG 11 4to', p. 44 http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-126249.
  12. ^ a b Länsstyrelsen i Stockholms län 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine - Rapport 2006:02: Mälarens Fåglar (pdf, in Swedish)
  13. ^ a b Josefsson, M.; Andersson, B. (December 2001). "The environmental consequences of alien species in the Swedish lakes Mälaren, Hjälmaren, Vänern and Vättern". Ambio. 30 (8): 514–521. doi:10.1579/0044-7447-30.8.514. ISSN 0044-7447. PMID 11878025. S2CID 2171081.
  14. ^ Capinha, César; Larson, Eric R.; Tricarico, Elena; Olden, Julian D.; Gherardi, Francesca (August 2013). "Effects of climate change, invasive species, and disease on the distribution of native European crayfishes". Conservation Biology. 27 (4): 731–740. doi:10.1111/cobi.12043. ISSN 1523-1739. PMID 23531056. S2CID 25775481.
  15. ^ "Kräftfiske - Stockholms stad". parker.stockholm (in Swedish). Retrieved 2022-10-13.
  16. ^ "Noble Crayfish farming in Sweden". SLU.SE. Retrieved 2022-10-13.
  17. ^ Bohman, P.; Degerman, E.; Edsman, L.; Sers, B. (2011). "Exponential increase of signal crayfish in running waters in Sweden – due to illegal introductions?". Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems (401): 23. doi:10.1051/kmae/2011040. ISSN 1961-9502.
  18. ^ Landell, Nils-Erik (1992). Stockholmskartor. [Stockholm]: Rabén & Sjögren. ISBN 91-29-61681-6. OCLC 165391840.
  19. ^ 1912 Summer Olympics official report. p. 224.

External links

  • - Guide to Mälaren (mostly in Swedish but a lot of maps and some English text)
  • Castles around Mälaren

mälaren, ɑːr, swedish, ˈmɛ, ːlarɛn, listen, ˈmɛ, ːlaɳ, historically, referred, lake, malar, english, third, largest, freshwater, lake, sweden, after, vänern, vättern, area, greatest, depth, spans, kilometers, from, east, west, lake, drains, from, south, west, . Malaren UK ˈ m ɛ l er ɛ n MEL er en US ˈ m eɪ l ɑːr e n MAY lar en 1 2 3 Swedish ˈmɛ ːlarɛn listen or ˈmɛ ːlaɳ 4 historically referred to as Lake Malar in English is the third largest freshwater lake in Sweden after Vanern and Vattern Its area is 1 140 km2 and its greatest depth is 64 m Malaren spans 120 kilometers from east to west The lake drains from south west to north east into the Baltic Sea through its natural outlets Norrstrom and Soderstrom as it flows around Stadsholmen island and through the artificial Sodertalje Canal and Hammarbyleden waterway The easternmost bay of Malaren in central Stockholm is called Riddarfjarden The lake is located in Svealand and bounded by the provinces of Uppland Sodermanland and Vastmanland The two largest islands in Malaren are Selaon 91 km2 and Svartsjolandet 79 km2 Malaren is low lying and mostly relatively shallow MalarenLake Malaren at duskMalarenLocationSwedenCoordinates59 30 N 17 12 E 59 500 N 17 200 E 59 500 17 200 Coordinates 59 30 N 17 12 E 59 500 N 17 200 E 59 500 17 200Basin countriesSwedenSurface area1 140 km2 440 sq mi Average depth13 m 43 ft Max depth64 m 210 ft Water volume14 km3 11 000 000 acre ft Surface elevation3 metres 9 8 ft IslandsSelaon Svartsjolandet see list Being a quite narrow and shallow lake Malaren has bridge crossings between Eskilstuna and Vasteras with two crossings on the western end at Kvicksund and three separate bridges between Strangnas and Enkoping in the central part of the lake On the eastern end the entirety of Ekero Municipality is set on islands within Malaren That urban area also has a bridge connection to the mainland in Stockholm along with bridges between various islands in the municipality The Viking Age settlements Birka on the island of Bjorko and Hovgarden on the neighbouring island Adelso have been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993 as has Drottningholm Palace on the island of Lovon The barrow of Bjorn Ironside is on the island of Munso within the lake The barrow of Bjorn Ironside Bjorn Jarnsidas hog on the island of Munso in lake Malaren Sweden The barrow is crowned by a stone containing the fragmented Uppland Runic Inscription 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geology 3 Mythology 4 Geography 5 Ecology 5 1 Crayfish 6 Mapping 7 Trivia 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymology EditThe etymological origin of the name Malaren stems from the Old Norse word maelir appearing in historical records in the 1320s and meaning gravel 5 The lake was previously known as Lǫgrinn which is Old Norse for The Lake 6 Geology EditSee also Central Swedish lowland Malaren details with Stockholm urban area to the right in pink By the end of the last ice age about 11 000 years ago much of northern Europe and North America was covered by ice sheets up to 3 km thick At the end of the ice age when the glaciers retreated the removal of the weight from the depressed land led to a post glacial rebound Initially the rebound was rapid proceeding at about 7 5 cm year This phase lasted for about 2 000 years and took place as the ice was being unloaded Once deglaciation was complete uplift slowed to about 2 5 cm year and decreased exponentially after that Today typical uplift rates are of the order of 1 cm year or less and studies suggest that rebound will continue for about another 10 000 years The total uplift from the end of deglaciation can be up to 400 m citation needed In the Viking Age Malaren was still a bay of the Baltic Sea 7 8 and seagoing vessels could sail up it far into the interior of Sweden Birka was conveniently near the trade routes through the Sodertalje Canal Due to the post glacial rebound Sodertalje canal and the mouth of Riddarfjarden bay had become so shallow by about the year 1200 that ships had to unload their cargoes near the entrances and progressively the bay became a lake 9 The decline of Birka and the subsequent foundation of Stockholm at the choke point of Riddarfjarden were in part due to the post glacial rebound changing the topography of the Malaren basin The lake s surface currently averages 0 7 meters above sea level Mythology EditAccording to Norse mythology as contained in the thirteenth century Icelandic work Prose Edda the lake was created by the goddess Gefjon when she tricked Gylfi the Swedish king of Gylfaginning Gylfi promised Gefjon as much land as four oxen could plough in a day and a night but she used oxen from the land of the giants and moreover uprooted the land and dragged it into the sea where it became the island of Zealand Snorra Edda says that the inlets in the lake correspond to the headlands in Zealand 10 since modern maps show this to be more true of Lake Vanern the myth has been suggested to have been originally about Vanern not Malaren 11 Geography EditA selection in alphabetical order Major islands Major sections from west to east Major cities and municipalities bordering the lakeAdelso Aspon Bjorko Ekeron Helgo Kungsholmen Stockholm Kuron Lilla Essingen Stockholm Lovon Munson Ridon Vastmanland Ridon Sodermanland Selaon Stora Essingen Stockholm Svartsjolandet Tosteron Galten Blacken Langtarmen Freden Vasterasfjarden Granfjarden Oknofjarden Gripsholmsfjarden Prastfjarden Bjorkfjarden Ekoln Gorran amp Skarven Ostra Malaren Balsta Koping Kungsangen Kungsor Mariefred Stockholm Strangnas Sodertalje Torshalla Uppsala VasterasEcology EditThe most common nesting birds on the skerries of Malaren are also the most common in the Baltic Sea After a survey in 2005 the ten most common species were found to be common tern herring gull black headed gull common gull mallard tufted duck Canada goose common goldeneye lesser black backed gull and common sandpiper White tailed eagle greylag goose barnacle goose black throated diver red breasted merganser and gadwall are less common and some of these latter are endangered in the Malaren area Since 1994 a subspecies of great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo sinensis has nested there as well A 2005 survey tallied 23 breeding colonies with 2178 nests of which the largest colony had 235 nests Most experts believe the great cormorant population has peaked and will stabilize at around 2000 nests 12 One of the characteristic species is the osprey which has one of its strongest presences in Lake Malaren The osprey nests in almost all bays of the lake 12 The Zebra mussel is considered an invasive species and is causing some problems in Lake Malaren Lake Malaren has 33 species of naturally occurring fish species which makes it Sweden s most diverse lake in regard to fish Other species have been introduced to the environment including the common carp and the rainbow trout The rainbow trout in particular is known to compete with indigenous fish for habitat and food as they have a faster growth rate and predate on local species However they are not considered to have made a significant impact 13 Crayfish Edit Crayfish are of large cultural and economic importance in Sweden with crayfish parties being a longtime annual tradition for many Swedes Lake Malaren was the first lake in Sweden to be affected by the crayfish plague A astaci Schicora when infected crayfish imported from Finland were introduced to the lake with the intention of human consumption The plague spread quickly through the lake exacerbated by boat traffic which decimated the indigenous noble crayfish A astacus population and caused severe economic losses to the local fishing industry From Malaren the plague spread rapidly to all freshwater bodies in Sweden After multiple recurrent outbreaks and failed attempts to restore populations of the noble crayfish Swedish authorities introduced the North American signal crayfish P leniusculus to L Malaren a species that is resistant to the plague Since 1969 Malaren has been continuously stocked with signal crayfish 13 However it was later discovered that signal crayfish were often carriers of crayfish plague In addition while populations of noble crayfish and signal crayfish have been known coexist their larger size faster growth rate and aggressiveness often allows them to dominate populations of noble crayfish This in addition to habitat degradation 14 has led to a significant decrease in noble crayfish populations in L Malaren Signal crayfish have been largely successful in Sweden and rapidly expanded as a replacement population to noble crayfish Stocking this species is now prohibited within multiple lakes in Sweden in order to protect noble crayfish population In the Stockholm municipality which includes L Malaren signal crayfish are now illegal to import move or farm 15 There have been efforts to encourage farming of noble crayfish populations instead 16 However illegal farming of signal crayfish continues to be a problem due to greater public demand for the larger signal crayfish 17 Mapping EditFrom the mid 17th century onwards multiple expeditions to measure and map L Malaren were undertaken The lake was strategically and economically important and there was a lack of a reliable map to navigate it However L Malaren s many islands and bays made it an extensive and laborious task to measure In 1687 King Charles XI of Sweden commissioned cartographer Carl Gripenhielm to map Lake Malaren and its surrounding provinces 18 From 2 August 1688 to 17 September 1688 Gripenhielm conducted the bulk of his expedition and he would complete the map in 1689 known in Swedish as Gripenhielm s Malarkarta The Malarkarta is unique in that it is surrounded by a frame of 96 small realistic gouache paintings of cities castles mansions and fairways around Lake Malaren The map is hand drawn on regal paper and measures 3 46 x 2 14 meters It has been kept in the National Library of Sweden since 1884 Due to its larger size it was initially hung in the large viewing room however in 1931 it was moved to a more secluded wall in a corridor to the map department Heavy handed preservation techniques have led to some degradation on the illustrations Since 1961 the map hangs in an area that the public does not have access to Gripenheim s Malarkarta was valid until 1739 when a new more accurate map of L Malaren was completed by the then surveyor and cartographer Jacob Nordencreutz Trivia EditMalardrottningen Lake Malar Queen is a poetic name for Stockholm well known in Swedish literature Utter Inn an underwater hotel designed by the artist Mikael Genberg is in the lake The area around the lake hosted the cycling events at the 1912 Summer Olympics 19 See also EditMalaren Valley Malardalen List of lakes of Sweden Geography of Stockholm Almarestaket KanaanbadetReferences Edit Malaren The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved April 14 2019 Malaren US and Malaren Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press permanent dead link dead link Malaren Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved April 14 2019 Joran Sahlgren Gosta Bergman 1979 Svenska ortnamn med uttalsuppgifter in Swedish p 17 Malaren Nationalencyklopedin Accessed 4 November 2016 Grimes Heilan Yvette The Norse Myths P 285 286 Landhojning och bebyggelse i nordligaste Uppland PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 10 20 Retrieved 2017 10 09 Friman Helena Soderstrom Goran 2008 Stockholm en historia i kartor och bilder Om Malaren Anthony Faulkes ed and trans Snorri Sturluson Edda London Everyman 1987 p 7 Heimir Palsson Tertium vero datur A study of the text of DG 11 4to p 44 http urn kb se resolve urn urn nbn se uu diva 126249 a b Lansstyrelsen i Stockholms lan Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Rapport 2006 02 Malarens Faglar pdf in Swedish a b Josefsson M Andersson B December 2001 The environmental consequences of alien species in the Swedish lakes Malaren Hjalmaren Vanern and Vattern Ambio 30 8 514 521 doi 10 1579 0044 7447 30 8 514 ISSN 0044 7447 PMID 11878025 S2CID 2171081 Capinha Cesar Larson Eric R Tricarico Elena Olden Julian D Gherardi Francesca August 2013 Effects of climate change invasive species and disease on the distribution of native European crayfishes Conservation Biology 27 4 731 740 doi 10 1111 cobi 12043 ISSN 1523 1739 PMID 23531056 S2CID 25775481 Kraftfiske Stockholms stad parker stockholm in Swedish Retrieved 2022 10 13 Noble Crayfish farming in Sweden SLU SE Retrieved 2022 10 13 Bohman P Degerman E Edsman L Sers B 2011 Exponential increase of signal crayfish in running waters in Sweden due to illegal introductions Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems 401 23 doi 10 1051 kmae 2011040 ISSN 1961 9502 Landell Nils Erik 1992 Stockholmskartor Stockholm Raben amp Sjogren ISBN 91 29 61681 6 OCLC 165391840 1912 Summer Olympics official report p 224 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Malaren Wikisource has the text of the 1879 American Cyclopaedia article Maelar Malarguiden Guide to Malaren mostly in Swedish but a lot of maps and some English text Castles around Malaren Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malaren amp oldid 1143450945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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