,
Norway]] Fjord, "Fiordo Calvo"]]
Geologically, a
fjord ( or ) is a long, narrow
inlet with steep sides or cliffs, created in a valley carved by
glacial activity.
Formation
A fjord is formed when a glacier cuts a U-shaped valley by
abrasion of the surrounding bedrock. Glacial melting is accompanied by rebound 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 below
sea level. Fjords generally have a
sill or rise at their mouth caused by the previous glacier's
terminal moraine, in many cases causing 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.
in Hordaland, Norway.]] fjords]]
Fjord features and variations
Coral reefs
As late as 2000, some
coral reefs were discovered along the bottoms of the Norwegian fjords. 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.
New Zealand's fjords are also host to deep sea 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.
Skerries
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. The term skerry is derived from the
Old Norse sker, which means a rock in the sea.
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 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 .
Etymology
. Note: The part of the map showing the northern fjords has a considerably smaller scale. Blurred costlines =
skerries]]
With
Indo European origin (
*prtús from
*por- or
*per) in the
verb fara (travelling/ferrying), the Norse
noun substantive
fjǫrðr means a "
lake-like"
waterbody used for passage and ferrying.
The Scandinavian fjord, Proto-Scandinavian *ferþuz, is the origin for similar European words: Icelandic fjörður, Swedish fjärd (for Baltic waterbodies), Scottish firth. The Danish even use fjord for shallow lagoons as well as minor bodies of water cut into land; compare Scottish loch. The Germans call the narrow long bays of Schleswig-Holstein Förde but the Norwegian bays Fjord. The word is also related to English ford (in German Furt, Low German Ford or Vörde, in Dutch names voorde, cf. Vilvoorde), Greek poros, and Latin portus. Fjord/firth/Förde as well as ford/Furt/Vörde/voorde refer to a Germanic verb for to travel: Swedish fara, Dutch varen, German fahren; English to fare has lost that meaning. The one geographic object is a waterbody that allows the traveller to enter the land by boat, the other one is the shallow site in a waterbody that allows the traveller to cross the water on foot, horse or wheels.
As a loanword from Norwegian, it is one of the few words in the English language to start with the digraph fj, although the word was for a long time normally rendered fiord, a spelling preserved in place names such as Grise Fiord, but now generally only current in New Zealand English.
Scandinavian usage
Use of the word fjord (including the eastern Scandinavian form
fjärd) is more general in the Scandinavian languages than in English. 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, 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 (for instance
Mjøsa [commonly referred to as
fjorden],
Randsfjorden and
Tyrifjorden) and sometimes even to rivers (in local usage, for instance in
Flå in
Hallingdal, the Hallingdal river is referred to as
fjorden). In east Sweden, the name
fjärd is used in a synonymous manner 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 the
Finnish language, a word
vuono is used although there is only one fjord in Finland.
The German use of the word Förde 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 "Förden" and some "fjords" on the east side of 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.
False fjords
bay in Croatia is sometimes called a fjord, but is actually 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.
The Bay of Kotor in Montenegro has been suggested by some to be a fjord, but is in fact a drowned river canyon or ria. Similarly the Lim bay in Istria, Croatia, is sometimes called "Lim fjord" although it is not actually a fjord carved by glacial erosion but instead a ria dug by the river Pazinčica. The Croats call it Limski kanal, which does not translate precisely to the English equivalent either.
In the Danish language any inlet is called a fjord, but none of the "fjords" of Denmark may be considered a fjord in the geological sense. Limfjord in English terminology is a channel, since it separates the North Jutlandic Island (Vendsyssel-Thy) from the rest of Jutland. 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.
While the long fjord-like bays of the New England coast are sometimes referred to as "fjards", the only glacially formed fjord-like feature in New England is Somes Sound in Maine.
The fjords in Finnmark (Norway), which are fjords in the Scandinavian sense of the term, are considered by some to be false fjords. Although glacially formed, most Finnmark fjords lack the classic hallmark 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.
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.
Freshwater fjords
slope of the
Alps:blue figures = water surface in meters above sea level,brown figures = ground of the lakes in meters above (+) or below (-) sea level]]
Some Norwegian freshwater lakes that have formed in long glacially carved valleys with terminal
moraines blocking the outlet follow the Norwegian naming convention; they are named fjords. 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 Baie Fine, located on the northeastern coast of
Georgian Bay of
Lake Huron in
Ontario.
Western Brook Pond, in
Newfoundland's Gros Morne National Park, 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. Such lakes are sometimes called "fjord lakes".
Okanagan Lake was the first North American lake to be so described, in 1962. The bedrock there has been eroded up to
below sea level, which is below the surrounding regional topography. 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. Another area notable for fjord lakes is northern
Italy and southern
Switzerland:
Lake Como and its neighbours.
Locations
in
Norway, the third longest fjord in the world]]
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 Europe, the west coast of North America from
Puget Sound to Alaska, the southwest coast of New Zealand, and the west coast of
South America and to south-western, in
Chile Tasmania. In Tasmania, there are many small fjords with mountains surrounding reaching 1,000 m in southern districts, though these are not glaciated they are often covered in snow, sometimes in summer. These fjords have formed by past glaciers ripping through to the sea.
Principal glaciated regions
West coast of Europe
*Faroe Islands
*Westfjords of Iceland
*Eastfjords of Iceland
* Norway, including Svalbard
*Kola Bay in Russia
West coast of New Zealand
*Fiordland, in the southwest of the South Island
Northwest Coast of North America
*The 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
Chile
*Zona Austral and the Los Lagos Region, Chile
Northeast Coast of North America
* Labrador: Saglek Fjord, Nachvak Fjord, Hebron Fjord
Other glaciated regions
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 (There are three examples of glacial fjords in Ireland: Lough Swilly, Carlingford Lough and Killary Harbour)
* Scotland (where called firths, the Scots language cognate of fjord; lochs or sea lochs)
* the Gullmaren on the west coast of Sweden
North America
* Canada:
** Newfoundland: Facheux Bay and Bonne Bay in Gros Morne National Park
** Quebec's Saguenay River valley
** the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, particularly:
***Ellesmere Island
***Baffin Island
* Greenland
** Scoresby Sund, the largest fjords in the world
** Søndre Strømfjord or Kangerlussuaq
** Disko Island
** Ilulissat Icefjord, the most productive ice fjord in the world.
* United States
**Somes Sound, Acadia National Park, Maine
**Hudson River
***most clearly seen at the New Jersey Palisades
**Hood Canal, western Washington State
Arctic
*Arctic islands
in South Georgia Island.]]
Antarctica
*South Georgia (UK)
*Kerguelen Islands (France)
*particularly the Antarctic Peninsula
Sub-Antarctic islands
Extreme fjords
The longest fjords in the world are:
#
Scoresby Sund in Greenland—
#
Greely Fiord/
Tanquary Fiord in Canada—
#
Sognefjord in Norway—
Deep fjords include:
# Skelton Inlet in Antarctica—
# Sognefjord in Norway— (the mountains then rise to up to )
# Messier Channel in Chile—
References
External links
Use of whales to probe Arctic fjord's secrets
Fiordland's Marine Reserves
Saguenay River - The Canadian Atlas Online
Category:Glaciology
Category:Lakes
Category:Coastal and oceanic landforms
Category:Glacial landforms