Förden and East Jutland Fjorde


The eastern coast of the Jutland Peninsula, consisting of Danish Jutland and German Schleswig-Holstein features a type of narrow bay called Förde in German and fjord in Danish. These bays are of glacial origin, but the glacial mechanics were different from those of Norwegian Fjords and also from those of Swedish and Finnish Fjards. Inlets more similar to these are also found on the peninsulas of the Green bay and Georgian bay, and on Manitoulin island, and eastern Long island.
The words Förde, fjord and fjard are of the same origin as the English word firth, but today there are differences in the meaning between firth and fjord in general.

Geology

When the area of the present Baltic Sea was covered by an ice sheet during the Weichselian glaciation, about 20,000 to 70,000 years ago, the edge of the ice moved on land as tongues of glaciers; these carved out channels. When the ice retreated it created a large lake. The water level rose and the channels were filled by water. The material removed formed moraine hills near the sides and ends of the channels.
Some of these Förden and fjorde are believed not to have been carved out by the ice directly, but to have been washed out by flows of water below the ice. Alternatively they have been interpreted as 'beheaded' river channels preserved beside a tideless sea.

List

The present day firths of this region includes:

Denmark

Border

Germany

  • Schlei, in Danish Slien: Length 40 – 42 km. The narrowest German Förde.
  • Eckernförde Bay, in German Eckernförder Bucht, in Danish Egernførde Bugt: The component -förde in the name of the city has been considered by some authors to reference a ford and by others to a fjord.
  • Kieler Förde: Geologically larger than nominally, as a part of the large Kiel Bay belongs geographically to Kieler Förde.
  • The lake Hemmelsdorfer See is a former Förde.Traveförde is now partly filled up by sand. The residual part is called Pötenitzer Wiek and connects to the sea only by the estuary of the Trave river.

Literature

  • Kurt-Dietmar Schmidtke: Die Entstehung Schleswig-Holsteins, Neumünster, 3rd edition 1995,
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