Kjeungskjær Lighthouse Explained

Kjeungskjær Lighthouse
Kjeungskjær fyr
Coordinates:63.7269°N 9.5306°W
Location:Trøndelag, Norway
Yearbuilt:1880
Automated:1987
Foundation:Stone
Construction:Stone
Shape:Octagonal tower
Marking:Red
Lens:Fresnel lens
Intensity:14,400 candela
Range:Red: 5.9nmi
Green: 5.6nmi
White: 8nmi
Characteristic:Oc WRG 6s
Country:Norway
Countrynumber:472900

The Kjeungskjær Lighthouse (Norwegian: Kjeungskjær fyr) is a coastal lighthouse in the municipality of Ørland in Trøndelag county, Norway. The lighthouse is located on a tiny island at the mouth of the Bjugnfjorden about west of the village of Uthaug and south of the village of Nes in Bjugn municipality.

Description

The lighthouse was built in 1880 and automated in 1987. Prior to being automated, the lighthouse keeper and his family lived on the lower floors of the building.[1]

The 17.5m (57.4feet) tall lighthouse is made of stone with an octagonal-shaped tower that is painted red. The 14,400-candela light sits at the top at an elevation of above sea level. The white, red, or green light (depending on direction), occulting once every 6 seconds. There is a fresnel lens that has been in use since 1906. It can be seen for up to 8nmi. The lighthouse is lit every year from July 21 until May 16. It is dark during the late spring and early summer months due to the midnight sun.[2] [3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Kjeungskjær fyr. Tor. Wisting. 2018-02-24. 2009-02-14. Store norske leksikon. Kunnskapsforlaget. Norwegian.
  2. 19 July 2011. 2018-02-24.
  3. Book: 2018. Norske Fyrliste. PDF. Kystverket. Norwegian Coastal Administration. Norwegian. 9788245015959. 2018-02-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612143229/http://153.44.6.20/fyrlister/Fyrliste_HeleLandet.pdf. 2018-06-12. dead.