Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/fjords-of-buskerud

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Drammensfjord

Fjord in Eastern Norway

Drammensfjord

Fjord in Eastern Norway

FieldValue
nameDrammensfjorden
imageDrammensfjorden.jpg
captionView of the fjord
locationAkershus and Buskerud, Norway
pushpin_mapAkershus#Buskerud#Norway
pushpin_labelDrammensfjord
pushpin_label_positiontop
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the fjord
basin_countriesNorway
coords
typeFjord
inflowDrammenselva river
outflowYtre Oslofjord
length30 km
citiesDrammen, Svelvik

|max-depth =

Drammensfjord () is a fjord in along the border of Akershus and Buskerud counties in Norway that connects to Ytre Oslofjord on the west side. It stretches about 30 km to the north and northeast. The Drammenselva river discharges into the head of the fjord. The fjord shares its name with the city of Drammen, which is located at the head of the fjord. Drammen Municipality is located on its west and north sides. The land on the east side of the fjord is called Hurumhalvøya or the Hurum peninsula and this is located in Asker Municipality. The peninsula lies between the Drammensfjord and the Oslofjord.

The narrow, shallow Svelvik strait has Norway's shortest ferry crossing.
The Svelvik strait and the sandy Svelvik moraine.
adj=on}} «Pandion» passing through the strait (2010).

The fjord narrows to a strait at Svelvik on the west side and Verket in Asker on the east side. The strait is crossed by an automobile ferry. This narrowing, some 200 m broad and 10 m deep, combined with the large freshwater inflow from the river Drammenselva (one of Norway's largest rivers) and from the river Lierelva, results in the water north of the strait being brackish. On the surface the water is fairly fresh, resulting in bathing areas that are free of jellyfish, while deeper the water has a higher salt concentration, with saltwater fish such as cod, pollock, flounder, and mackerel.

The ocean tide going through the strait is one of Norway's strongest currents. The outflow can reach speeds of 5 kn. The strait is known the Selvikstrømmen (the Svelvik current). Large ships can only sail in daylight and the largest only when assisted by tugboats. The strait has been made wider and deeper to accommodate traffic. Dead coral reefs are also found at depths of about 10–20 m below sea level in the fjord. The maximum depth of the fjord northwards of the strait, reaching 117 m.

For a number of decades the Drammensfjord was heavily polluted. The sewage and industrial discharges by industries in the city of Drammen have been corrected so that the water is now much cleaner. Salmon and sea trout are again found in both the fjord and the Drammenselva river.

In historic times the Drammensfjord was known by the Old Norse name Dramn or Drofn, meaning hazy waters. In the Norse sagas. Snorre Sturlason tells that Saint Olav hid himself from Canute the Great at a fjord which was called Dramn. At that time the water stood about 4-5 m higher and the fjord reached up to Hokksund. This area is still rebounding from the enormous weight of the glacial ice (isostatic rebound), "growing out of the sea" several millimetres a year, especially near the inner part of the long fjords, where the ice cover was thickest. This is a slow process, thus the sea covered substantial areas of what is today dry land for thousands of years following the end of the last ice age. During the Viking Age, the Drammensfjorden north of the Svelvik Strait was regarded as a lake and the Svelvik Strait was regarded as the mouth of the Drammenselva river.

References

References

  1. Bowman, Martin W.. (2014). "Deep Sea Hunters: RAF Coastal Command and the War against the U-Boats and the German Navy 1939–1945". Pen & Sword Aviation.
  2. (2003). "Characterisation and Engineering Properties of Natural Soils". A. A. Balkema.
  3. (2024-02-20). "Drammensfjorden". [[Kunnskapsforlaget]].
  4. "Drammensfjorden".
  5. Ramsdal, Roald. (2016-09-22). "Tåler denne turbinen seks uker i en av Norges sterkeste tidevannstrømmer?". [[Teknisk Ukeblad]].
  6. (1995). "Svelvik 1945-1995". Svelvik kommune.
  7. (1991). "Miljøsikkerhet i innseilingsleder: utredning fra en arbeidsgruppe opprettet av Fiskeridepartementet : avgitt 13. juni 1990". Statens forvaltningstjeneste, Seksjon Statens trykning.
  8. Jean-Hansen, Viggo. (2000). "Nyttekostnadsanalyse for mudring av Svelvikstrømmen inn til Drammen havn". Transportøkonomisk institutt.
  9. Sturlason, Snorre. "Snorre Sturlason, The Heimskringla: A History of the Norse Kings, vol. 1 [1220]".
  10. Pedersen, Tord. (1961). "Drammen". Drammen kommune.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Drammensfjord — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report