Lake Päijänne
Lake in central Finland / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Lake Päijänne (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈpæi̯jænːe]) is the second largest lake in Finland (1,080 km2 (266,874 acres)). The lake drains into the Gulf of Finland via the Kymi River. The major islands are from north to south Vuoritsalo, Muuratsalo, Onkisalo, Judinsalo, Edessalo, Taivassalo, Haukkasalo, Vehkasalo, Mustassalo, Virmailansaari and Salonsaari. The largest island is Virmailansaari. The word saari means an island. Salo once meant a great island, nowadays it means a great forest area.
Päijänne | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 61°35′N 025°30′E |
Primary outflows | Kymi River |
Basin countries | Finland |
Max. length | 120 km (75 mi) |
Surface area | 1,070–1,082.89 km2 (413.13–418.11 sq mi)[1][2] |
Average depth | 16.2–18 m (53–59 ft)[1] |
Max. depth | 95.3 m (313 ft)[1] |
Water volume | 18.1 km3 (4.3 cu mi)[1] |
Residence time | 2.5 years |
Surface elevation | 78.3 m (257 ft)[2] |
Islands | 1886 (Virmailansaari, Salonsaari, Judinsalo, Onkisalo, Paatsalo, Muuratsalo, Haukkasalo, Vuoritsalo, Mustassalo, Edessalo, Taivassalo) |
Settlements | Asikkala, Jyväskylä, Korpilahti, Kuhmoinen, Luhanka, Muurame, Padasjoki, Sysmä |
References | [2][1] |
The largest city on the shores of Päijänne is Jyväskylä in the North. The city of Lahti is connected to Päijänne through Lake Vesijärvi and Vääksy canal.
An underground aqueduct, Päijänne Water Tunnel, connects the lake to Vantaa, providing the Greater Helsinki area with water. The deepest point in any lake in Finland is located in Päijänne (95.3 m or 313 ft).
The name of Lake Päijänne comes possibly from a Pre-Finno-Ugric substrate language.[3]