Saltstraumen
Template:Short description Template:Infobox body of water
Template:Native name or Template:Native name<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is a small strait with one of the strongest tidal currents in the world. It is located in Bodø Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located about Template:Convert southeast of the town of Bodø. The narrow channel connects the outer Saltfjorden to the large Skjerstad Fjord between the islands of Straumøya and Knaplundsøya. The Saltstraumen Bridge on Norwegian County Road 17 crosses Saltstraumen.<ref name="snl">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
CurrentEdit
Saltstraumen has one of the strongest tidal currents in the world.<ref>"Er Saltstraumen egentlig verdens sterkeste tidevannsstrøm?" (English: Is Saltstraumen really the worlds strongest tidal current?), from NRK (www.nrk.no), 7 May 2016, Accessed 17 January 2021</ref><ref name="Doyle2012">Template:Cite book</ref> Up to Template:Convert of seawater<ref name="MTP2001">Template:Cite book</ref> forces its way through a Template:Convert long and Template:Convert wide strait every six hours.<ref name="Brown2004">Template:Cite book</ref> Vortices known as whirlpools or maelstroms up to Template:Convert in diameter and Template:Convert in depth are formed when the current is at its strongest. At this point, one source claims that the tidal current can reach Template:Convert.<ref name="Compton2013">Template:Cite book</ref>
Saltstraumen has existed for about two to three thousand years. Before that, the area was different due to post-glacial rebound. The current is created when the tide tries to fill Skjerstad Fjord. The height difference between the sea level and the fjord inside can be up to Template:Convert. When the current turns, there is a period when the strait is navigable.<ref name="Doyle2012" />
The above account of the Saltstraumen is rather different than what The Norwegian Pilot reports.<ref>Den norske los, Bind 5, PDF Versjon 6.4, page 1434.</ref> The Pilot’s description of the normal current is based on the time of the high tide at Bodø. The greatest southbound current occurs about one and a quarter hours before Bodø high tide, when the inflowing current reaches about Template:Convert. The speed of the current has a broad maximum being greater than Template:Convert from three hours before Bodø high tide until half an hour after Bodø high tide. The greatest northbound current occurs about four and a half hours after Bodø high tide, when the outflowing current reaches over Template:Convert. The speed of this current also has a broad maximum being above six knots from two hours and forty minutes after Bodø high tide until five and a half hours before the next Bodø high tide. The behavior of the current may differ from normal due to strong winds or when more fresh water than usual is entering into the fjord from the surrounding mountains.
FishingEdit
Saltstraumen is popular with anglers, due to its abundance of fish such as saithe, cod, wolffish, rose fish, and halibut. Coalfish is a specialty of the area. The largest documented coalfish of Template:Convert was caught in Saltstraumen on a fishing rod.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Eiders are the only birds capable of diving for mussels in the strong stream.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
NameEdit
The first element is the name of the district Salten and the last element is the definite form of straum, meaning "stream" or "water flow". Template:See also
HistoryEdit
The remains of a 10,000-year-old hunter settlement in the area are the oldest known traces of human settlement in Bodø, and also one of the oldest archaeological discoveries in Norway. These hunters lived on the edge of the ice, attracted by the abundance of fish caused by the strong currents.
Media galleryEdit
- Saltstraumen.ogv
Saltstraumen churning, February 2011.
- Salt Stommen Norway From Schoolbook 1837.jpg
Saltstraumen 1837.
- Saltstraumen-60-Kirche-2019-gje.jpg
Saltstraumen church
See alsoEdit
- Maelstrom
- Tidal bore
- Skookumchuck Narrows
- Horizontal Falls, where the tide creates a waterfall with a drop of 5 metres, as the water flows at the maximum rate.