Orava (reservoir)

Orava is a reservoir in northernmost Slovakia, forming the largest lake in Slovakia (35.2 km2). It was created by the construction of a dam between 1941 and 1953 on the former two sources of the Orava river. Several former villages had to be inundated for this purpose, including Hamri, Oszada, and Usztye.[1] Probably the best known of them was Slanica, the birthplace of the Slovak intellectual and cleric Anton Bernolák (Antonius Bernolacius). Today, the reservoir is protected by the Horná Orava Protected Landscape Area.

Orava
Orava
Coordinates49°23′59″N 19°32′44″E
Lake typereservoir
Primary outflowsOrava river
Basin countriesSlovakia
Surface area35.2 km2 (13.6 sq mi)

The average depth of the reservoir is 15 meters. In the northeastern extension of the reservoir is Vtáčí ostrov (Birds' Island), a government ornithological reservation. Species like herons, great cormorants, spoonbills and others inhabit the reservation, which is one of important bird areas of Europe. The wetlands around the reservoir are also regarded to be one of the most important in Europe. The protection of the forests skirting the Orava Reservoir has helped prevent erosion.[2]

The Orava Reservoir
The Orava with the forest on its shore
  1. http://lazarus.elte.hu/hun/maps/1910/arva.jpg
  2. "Orava Reservoir". Tourist Information Center of Orava. Retrieved 9 July 2013.


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