PhotosLocation


torsö Latitude and Longitude:

58°48′06″N 13°49′34″E / 58.80167°N 13.82611°E / 58.80167; 13.82611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Torsö
The bridge from the east side of Lake Vänern to Torsö
Geography
Location Vänern
Coordinates 58°48′06″N 13°49′34″E / 58.80167°N 13.82611°E / 58.80167; 13.82611
Area62.03 km2 (23.95 sq mi) [1]
Administration
County Västra Götaland
Municipality Mariestad

Torsö (Thor's Island [2]) is the biggest island of the lake Vänern, area 62.03 km2. Torsö is located in Mariestad Municipality. Torsö formerly consisted of two islands (Torsö and Fågelö), but around 1930 the water in between was pumped out, and the former lakebed is now used for growing crops.

Torsö has around 550 families living year round, and around thrice that amount during summers. In 1994 a bridge, "Torsöbron", was opened between the mainland and the island. It is around 900 m long.

Due to the size of lake Vänern, the island has a more maritime climate (with milder winters) and more sun hours compared to the mainland. [3]

References

  1. ^ "Statistisk årsbok 2011" (PDF) (in Swedish). Statistics Sweden. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  2. ^ Mats Wahlberg, red (2003). Svenskt ortnamnslexikon. Uppsala: Institutet för språk och folkminnen. Libris 8998039. ISBN  91-7229-020-X
  3. ^ SMHI. "Sveriges landskapsklimat [climate of the Swedish landscapes]" (PDF). SMHI.



torsö Latitude and Longitude:

58°48′06″N 13°49′34″E / 58.80167°N 13.82611°E / 58.80167; 13.82611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Torsö
The bridge from the east side of Lake Vänern to Torsö
Geography
Location Vänern
Coordinates 58°48′06″N 13°49′34″E / 58.80167°N 13.82611°E / 58.80167; 13.82611
Area62.03 km2 (23.95 sq mi) [1]
Administration
County Västra Götaland
Municipality Mariestad

Torsö (Thor's Island [2]) is the biggest island of the lake Vänern, area 62.03 km2. Torsö is located in Mariestad Municipality. Torsö formerly consisted of two islands (Torsö and Fågelö), but around 1930 the water in between was pumped out, and the former lakebed is now used for growing crops.

Torsö has around 550 families living year round, and around thrice that amount during summers. In 1994 a bridge, "Torsöbron", was opened between the mainland and the island. It is around 900 m long.

Due to the size of lake Vänern, the island has a more maritime climate (with milder winters) and more sun hours compared to the mainland. [3]

References

  1. ^ "Statistisk årsbok 2011" (PDF) (in Swedish). Statistics Sweden. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  2. ^ Mats Wahlberg, red (2003). Svenskt ortnamnslexikon. Uppsala: Institutet för språk och folkminnen. Libris 8998039. ISBN  91-7229-020-X
  3. ^ SMHI. "Sveriges landskapsklimat [climate of the Swedish landscapes]" (PDF). SMHI.



Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook