Byglandsfjorden

Coordinates: 58°42′06″N 7°47′59″E / 58.7016°N 07.7996°E / 58.7016; 07.7996
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Byglandsfjorden
View of the Byglandsfjorden
Byglandsfjorden is located in Agder
Byglandsfjorden
Byglandsfjorden
Location of the lake
Byglandsfjorden is located in Norway
Byglandsfjorden
Byglandsfjorden
Byglandsfjorden (Norway)
LocationBygland and Evje og Hornnes, Agder
Coordinates58°42′06″N 7°47′59″E / 58.7016°N 07.7996°E / 58.7016; 07.7996
Primary inflowsÅraksfjorden
Primary outflowsOtra river
Catchment areaOtra watershed
Basin countriesNorway
Max. length34 kilometres (21 mi)
Max. width2.7 kilometres (1.7 mi)
Surface area32.79 km2 (12.66 sq mi)
Shore length187.57 kilometres (54.41 mi)
Surface elevation203 metres (666 ft)
SettlementsByglandsfjord
ReferencesNVE
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Byglandsfjorden is a lake in Agder county, Norway. The 32.79-square-kilometre (12.66 sq mi) lake lies on the river Otra, primarily in the municipality of Bygland, but the far southern tip of the lake extends into the neighboring municipality of Evje og Hornnes. The river flows out of the lake Åraksfjorden to the north and into the Byglandsfjorden through a narrow channel, and the southern end of the Byglandsfjorden is marked by a dam along the river. The villages of Byglandsfjord, Grendi, Longerak, Lauvdal, and Bygland are all located on the eastern shore of the lake along the Norwegian National Road 9. The western shore of the lake is much more sparsely populated, with County Road 304 following that shoreline.[1]

The SS Bjoren is a wood-fueled steamboat that travels on the Byglandsfjorden in the summers between the villages of Ose (on the Åraksfjorden), Bygland, and Byglandsfjord. Prior to the opening of the roads along the shoreline, steamboat travel was the main method of transportation for those travelling north through Setesdal.

There is a special relict species of salmon that live in Byglandsfjorden, called bleke. This species of salmon only occurs right there. These are salmon which are not wandering, they spend their entire lives in freshwater.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Store norske leksikon. "Byglandsfjorden" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2010-04-20.
  2. ^ "Bleka i Byglandsfjorden" (PDF) (in Norwegian). Norwegian Directorate for Nature Management. 2009.