Kermajärvi

Kermajärvi

As seen from Pääskyvuori 100 metres above the lake level
Location Heinävesi, Southern Savonia
Coordinates 62°27′N 028°42′E / 62.450°N 28.700°E / 62.450; 28.700Coordinates: 62°27′N 028°42′E / 62.450°N 28.700°E / 62.450; 28.700
Primary inflows Karvio Rapids, from Varisvesi (Kallavesi)
Primary outflows Kerma Rapids, to Enonvesi
Catchment area Vuoksi
Basin countries Finland
Max. length 29 km (18 mi)
Surface area 85.57 km2 (33.04 sq mi)
Average depth 10.12 m (33.2 ft)
Max. depth 56.07 m (184.0 ft)
Water volume 0.866 km3 (702,000 acre·ft)
Shore length1 452.55 km (281.20 mi)
Surface elevation 80.1 m (263 ft)
Frozen December–April
Islands Hentulansaari, Kurjenvarvas, Puumalansaari
Settlements Heinävesi
References [1]
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Kermajärvi (literally Finn. kerma for cream, järvi for lake) is a medium-sized lake in the Vuoksi main catchment area. It is located in the region of Southern Savonia in Heinävesi. It is the country's 53rd largest lake with an area of 85.57 square kilometres (33.04 sq mi)[1] and consists of a wide open lake with plenty of islands in both northwest and southeast parts of it and several long, narrow bays in both ends.

The lake gets its water from Varisvesi of Kallavesi by Karvio Rapids and flows through Kerma and Vihovuonne Rapids to Ruokovesi which flows through Pilppa Rapids to Haukivesi of Saimaa. Kermajärvi is the main lake of Heinävesi Route, one of the two routes which Lake Kallavesi flows through to Saimaa (the other being Leppävirta Route). All the four rapids can be evaded with canals built around the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries named after the adjacent rapids. Farthest extension of the lake from northwest to southeast is some 29 kilometres (18 mi). The northwest-southeast form shows the orientation of the moving Glacier in the latest Ice Age.

Heinävesi parish village is located on the southern shore of the lake.

A big part of the lake is protected in Natura 2000 conservation program (code FI0500011).[2][3]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/4/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.