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Lake Bohinj

 
Wikipedia: Lake Bohinj
Lake Bohinj
Lake Bohinj -
Location Bohinj municipality, Triglav National Park
Coordinates 46°16′N 13°48′E / 46.267°N 13.8°E / 46.267; 13.8Coordinates: 46°16′N 13°48′E / 46.267°N 13.8°E / 46.267; 13.8
Primary inflows Savica River
Primary outflows Sava Bohinjka
Catchment area 107 km2 (41 sq mi)
Basin countries Slovenia
Max. length 4.350 km (2.703 mi)
Max. width 1 km (0.62 mi)
Surface area 3.3 km2 (1.3 sq mi)
Average depth 30 m (98 ft)
Max. depth 45 m (150 ft)
Water volume 99,700,000 m3 (3.52×109 cu ft)
Residence time 0.3 to 0.5 years [1]
Surface elevation 526 m (1,730 ft)
References [1]

Lake Bohinj (Slovene: Bohinjsko jezero) is the largest permanent lake in Slovenia.[2] Lake Bohinj is located in the Bohinj municipality in the north-west of the country, and is inside Triglav National Park.

Lake Bohinj is 4.2 km long and 1 km at its maximum width.[3] It is a glacial lake dammed by a moraine.

The largest of the streams that flow into the lake, the Savica River ("little Sava"),[4] is fed from Črno jezero (Black Lake), the largest lake in the Triglav Lakes Valley.

The outflow is the Jezernica which merges with the Mostnica to form the Sava Bohinjka (which in turn merges with Sava Dolinka to become the Sava).

The area is associated[clarification needed] with the legendary "Goldhorn (Zlatorog)", a white chamois with golden horns. A statue of the creature stands beside the lake.

Notes

The statue of Zlatorog with the lake behind it
  1. ^ a b Lake Bohinj in Alpine lakes. Survey between land and waterPDF (52.1 MB) , page 43
  2. ^ Lake Cerknica, an intermittent lake, is larger than Lake Bohinj during its flood seasons, but disappears entirely during dry seasons.
  3. ^ Royal Geographical Society (1856) "Wocheiner-See" A Gazetteer of the World: or, Dictionary of geographical knowledge, compiled from the most recent authorities, and forming a complete body of modern geography -- physical, political, statistical, historical, and ethnographical A. Fullarton, Edinburgh, Scotland, p. 529, OCLC 20348227; note that Lake Bohinj was formerly known in English by its Austrian name of the Wocheiner See, or sometimes Lake Wocheiner
  4. ^ Baedeker, Karl (1879) "Terglou: The Valley of the Wocheiner Save" The Eastern Alps: Including the Bavarian Highlands, the Tyrol, Salzkammergut, Styria, and Carinthia (4th ed.) Dulau and Co., London, p. 353, OCLC 4018143


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