Lake Geneva Explained

Lake Geneva
Native Name:
  • French: Léman
  • German: Genfersee
  • Italian: Lago Lemano
  • Romansh: Lai da Genevra
Location:Switzerland, France
Lake Type:Glacial lake
Inflow:Rhône, Dranse
Outflow:Rhône
Catchment:7975km2
Basin Countries:Switzerland, France
Depth:153.4m (503.3feet)
Max-Depth:310m (1,020feet)
Volume:89abbr=unitNaNabbr=unit
Residence Time:11.4 years
Islands:Île de Peilz, Château de Chillon, Île de Salagnon, Île de la Harpe, Île Rousseau, Île de Choisi
Cities:Geneva (CH), Lausanne (CH), Évian (F), Montreux (CH), Thonon (F), Vevey (CH) (see list)
Pushpin Map:France Rhône-Alpes#Canton of Vaud#Canton of Valais#Switzerland#France#Alps
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Embedded:
Wikidata:yes
Zoom:9

Lake Geneva (French: Léman in French pronounced as /lemɑ̃/, French: lac Léman in French pronounced as /lak lemɑ̃/, rarely French: lac de Genève in French pronounced as /lak də ʒ(ə)nɛv/; Italian: Lago Lemano;[1] German: Genfersee pronounced as /de/; Romansh: Lai da Genevra) is a deep lake on the north side of the Alps, shared between Switzerland and France. It is one of the largest lakes in Western Europe and the largest on the course of the Rhône. Sixty percent of the lake belongs to Switzerland (the cantons of Vaud, Geneva and Valais) and forty percent to France (the department of Haute-Savoie).

Name

While the exact origins of the name are unknown, the name Latin: Lacus Lemanus was in use during the time of Julius Caesar.[2] Latin: Lemannus comes from Ancient Greek Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Liménos Límnē (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Λιμένος Λίμνη) meaning "port's lake". It became Lacus Lausonius, although this name was also used for a town or district on the lake, Lacus Losanetes, and then the French: Lac de Lausanne in the Middle Ages. Following the rise of Geneva it became French: Lac de Genève[3] (translated into English as Lake Geneva), but French: Le Léman was the common name on all local maps[4] [5] and is the customary name in the French language. In contemporary English, the name Lake Geneva has become predominant.[2]

Geography

Lake Geneva is divided into three parts because of its different types of formation (sedimentation, tectonic folding, glacial erosion):[1]

  1. French: Haut Lac, the eastern part from the Rhône estuary to the line of MeillerieRivaz
  2. French: Grand Lac, the largest and deepest basin with the lake's largest width
  3. French: Petit Lac, the most south-west, narrower, and less-deep part from YvoirePromenthoux next Prangins to the exit in Geneva

According to the Swiss Federal Office of Topography, Swisstopo, French: Lac de Genève designates that part of the French: Petit Lac which lies within the cantonal borders of Geneva (excluding the cantonal exclave Céligny), so about from VersoixHermance to the Rhône outflow in Geneva.[6]

The Chablais Alps border is its southern shore, and the western Bernese Alps lie over its eastern side. The high summits of Grand Combin and Mont Blanc are visible from some places.

The lake lies on the course of the Rhône. The river has its source at the Rhône Glacier near the Grimsel Pass to the east of the lake and flows down through the canton of Valais, entering the lake between Villeneuve and Le Bouveret, before flowing slowly towards its egress at Geneva. Other tributaries are La Dranse, L'Aubonne, La Morges, La Venoge, La Vuachère, and La Veveyse.

Lake Geneva is the largest body of water in Switzerland, and greatly exceeds in size all others that are connected with the main valleys of the Alps. It is in the shape of a crescent, with the horns pointing south, the northern shore being and the southern shore in length. The crescent form was more regular in a recent geological period, when the lake extended to Bex, about south of Villeneuve. The detritus of the Rhône has filled up this portion of the bed of the lake, and it appears that within the historical period, the waters extended about beyond the present eastern margin of the lake. The greatest depth of the lake, in the broad portion between Évian-les-Bains and Lausanne, where it is just in width, has been measured as, putting the bottom of the lake at above sea level. The lake's surface is the lowest point of the cantons of Valais and Vaud.[7] The culminating point of the lake's drainage basin is Monte Rosa at 4,634 metres above sea level.[8]

The beauty of the shores of the lake and of the sites of many of the places near its banks has long been celebrated. However, it is only from the eastern end of the lake, between Vevey and Villeneuve, that the scenery assumes an Alpine character. On the south side, the mountains of Savoy and Valais are for the most part rugged and sombre, while those of the northern shore fall in gentle vine-covered slopes, thickly set with villages and castles.[7]

The snowy peaks of the Mont Blanc Massif are shut out from the western end of the lake by the Voirons mountain, and from its eastern end by the bolder summits of the Grammont, Cornettes de Bise, and Dent d'Oche, but are seen from Geneva, and between Nyon and Morges. From Vevey to Bex, where the lake originally extended, the shores are enclosed by comparatively high and bold mountains, and the vista terminates in the grand portal of the defile of St. Maurice, cleft to a depth of nearly between the opposite peaks of the Dents du Midi and the Dent de Morcles.[7]

The shore between Nyon and Lausanne is called French: La Côte because it is flatter. Between Lausanne and Vevey it is called Lavaux and is famous for its hilly vineyards.[9] [10]

The average surface elevation of above sea level is controlled by the in Geneva.[11]

Climate

Due to climate change, the average temperature of deep water (more than 300NaN deep) increased from 4.4C in 1963 to 5.5C in 2016 (an increase of 1.1NaN in 53 years), while the average temperature of surface water (5spell=inNaNspell=in deep) increased from 10.9C in 1970 to 12.9C in 2016 (up 2C-change in 46 years).[12]

Bise

Lake Geneva (and particularly the lakeside parts of the city of Geneva) can be affected by the cold Bise, a northeasterly wind. This can lead to severe icing in winter.[13] The strength of the Bise wind can be determined by the difference in air pressure between Geneva and Güttingen in canton of Thurgau. The Bise arises when the air pressure in Güttingen is higher than in Geneva.[14]

Environment

In 563, according to the writings of Gregory of Tours and Marius Aventicensis, a tsunami wave swept along the lake, destroying the fort of Tauredunum and other settlements, and causing numerous deaths in Geneva. Simulations indicate that this Tauredunum event was most likely caused by a massive landslide near the Rhône delta, which caused a wave 8m (26feet) high to reach Geneva within 70 minutes.[15] [16] [17] In 888, the town was part of the new Kingdom of Burgundy, and, with it, was absorbed into the Holy Roman Empire in 1033.

In the late 1960s, pollution made it dangerous to swim at some beaches of the lake; indeed, visibility underwater was near zero.[18] [19] By the 1980s, intense environmental pollution (eutrophication) had almost wiped out all the fish. Endemic whitefish species Coregonus fera was last recorded in the lake in 1920 and is now extinct. Although the name fera is still used for the only coregonid present in the lake, this is not the original species but the introduced C. palaea. Today, pollution levels have been dramatically cut back, and it is again considered safe to swim in the lake.[20] [21] Major leisure activities practiced include sailing, wind surfing, boating (including water skiing and wake-boarding), rowing, scuba diving, and bathing.

A total of four submarines have plied the depths of Lake Geneva.[22] In 1964, Jacques Piccard launched a tourist-oriented submarine, the Auguste Piccard (named for his explorer father), for the Swiss National Exhibition, meant to honor the Expo 64 theme of accomplishments by Swiss engineers and industry.[23] After operating through to 1965 in Lake Geneva, Piccard used the vessel for scientific exploration in other parts of the world.[23] Piccard later built the F.-A. Forel, launched in Lake Geneva in 1978 and used primarily for scientific research until it was retired in 2005.[23] In 2011, in a collaborative operation led by, two Mir submersibles were used for ten weeks to conduct extensive scientific research in Lake Geneva.[22]

On a scientific footnote, in 1827, Lake Geneva was the site for the first measurement of the speed of sound in (fresh) water.[24] French mathematician Jacques Charles François Sturm and Swiss physicist Daniel Collodon used two moored boats, separated by a measured distance, as the transmitting and receiving platforms for the sounds of exploding gunpowder. The loud airborne sound coupled into the lake, establishing a loud underwater sound that could be measured at a distance. The flash of the exploding gunpowder provided the visual starting cue for the timepiece, and the underwater explosion sound striking a bell provided the finish cue.

The lake is rich in wildlife, especially birds: both the common buzzard and the red kite breed here in considerable numbers.

Sport events

Yacht racing is a popular sport, and high-performance catamarans have been developed specifically for the lake.[25] The design of the Alinghi 5, the defender of the 2010 America's Cup, was influenced by those racing catamarans.[25] The best-known event, the (not to be confused with other events having the same name) runs from Geneva to the end of the lake and back.[26]

The French: [[Tour du Lac]] rowing event also takes place on Lake Geneva. Competitors row once around the entire lake, making this 160km (100miles) event the longest non-stop rowing regatta in the world.

Several competitions for swimmers are organised yearly, including the crossing of the lake from Lausanne to Evian (13km),[27] from Chillon Castle to Geneva (70km),[28] from Montreux to Clarens (1.8 km),[29] in Geneva (1.8 km),[30] all in summer, and the French: [[Winter_swimming#Switzerland|Coupe de Noël]], 125m in Geneva in December.[31]

Towns and villages

List of towns and villages on Lake Geneva
Starting from the entry of Rhône River on the east end, with the southern shore to the left.
Southern shoreNorthern shore
Haut Lacvalign=top Canton of Valais (VS):

Haute-Savoie

Canton of Vaud (VD):
Grand Lacvalign=top Haute-Savoie VD:
Petit Lac(* Lac de Genève,
see also Geography)
valign=top Haute-Savoie:

Canton of Geneva (GE):

valign=top VD:

GE:

Notable residents

Edmund Ludlow, famous as one who had signed the death warrant of English King Charles I, was granted on 16 April 1662 protection in and continued to live at Vevey until his death in 1692.[32] Mary and Percy Shelley and Lord Byron holidayed by the lake and wrote ghost stories, one of which became the basis for the novel Frankenstein.[33] The Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Sisi) was stabbed to death on the quayside in Geneva in September 1898. Vladimir Lenin rented a little "chalet" at the French bank, near Geneva.[34] Actor Charlie Chaplin spent his final years and died in Vevey (there is a memorial statue of him along the promenade; his home at Corsier-sur-Vevey is now a museum of his life and career). Actors Noël Coward, James Mason, Sir Peter Ustinov, Richard Burton, and Audrey Hepburn all lived in villages on the shores of or in view of the lake. David Bowie moved to a chalet to the north of Lake Geneva in 1976, which inspired him to take up painting and informed the first stages of the "Berlin Trilogy". Pop singer Phil Collins lives in a home overlooking the lake.[35] Rock band Queen owned and operated Mountain Recording Studios (which is still in use today) in Montreux, and a statue of lead singer Freddie Mercury, who also owned a second home in Montreux, stands on the northern shore of the lake. Writer Vladimir Nabokov also took residence in Montreux, where he died in 1977. Former Formula 1 driver Michael Schumacher lives with his family in a home overlooking the lake.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 03 - Suisse sud-ouest . Federal Office of Topography, swisstopo, Swiss Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport . Swiss National Map 1:200 000 - Switzerland on four sheets . 2009 . 12 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140411032047/http://www.swisstopo.admin.ch/internet/swisstopo/en/home/products/maps/national/200.html . 11 April 2014 . dead.
  2. Web site: 2016-11-28 . What you call Lake Geneva really does matter, according to a poll . 2020-10-28 . Le News . en-US.
  3. Book: fr . Voyage pittoresque au lac de Genève ou Léman . Orell, Fussli et compagnie . 1820 . 2019-07-28.
  4. Web site: Le Léman . map.geo.admin.ch . . 13 October 2021 . fr.
  5. Web site: Le Léman . . . French . 13 October 2021.
  6. Web site: 270 - Genève . Federal Office of Topography, swisstopo, Swiss Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport . Swiss National Map 1:50 000 - Switzerland on 78 maps . 2011 . 12 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131112214941/http://www.swisstopo.admin.ch/internet/swisstopo/en/home/products/maps/national/50.html . 12 November 2013 . dead.
  7. [John Ball (naturalist)|John Ball]
  8. . 1:25,000 topographic map . 27 July 2014.
  9. News: Switzerland mastering the art of wine making . Cuckoo . Paul . 26 October 2007 . India Times . 24 June 2009 . The Economic Times.
  10. News: European Breaks: Three suns, one grape, a lot of flavour . Mourby . Adrian . 19 August 2007 . The Independent . 24 June 2009.
  11. http://www.rhone-geneve.ch/sousindicateur.php?ID_indicateur=9&ID_domaine=2&ID_sousindicateur=40&typecat= Seujet / Lac Léman
  12. http://www.cipel.org/publications/lettre-leman-lecture/ La lettre du Léman
  13. News: La bise va se calmer après une journée chaotique, mais plusieurs écoles vont rester fermées . . 17 January 2017 . Geneva . fr . 2018-02-25.
  14. Web site: Bisendiagramm . MeteoGroup Schweiz AG . Appenzell, Switzerland . 2018-02-25.
  15. Kremer . K. . Simpson . G. . Girardclos . S. P. . 10.1038/ngeo1618 . Giant Lake Geneva tsunami in AD 563 . Nature Geoscience . 5 . 11 . 756–757 . 2012 . 2012NatGe...5..756K.
  16. News: Tsunamis on Lake Geneva: Lake monsters . 29 October 2012 . . 28 October 2012.
  17. Ancient tsunami devastated Lake Geneva shoreline . 28 October 2012 . . 5 November 2012 . 10.1038/nature.2012.11670 . Marshall . Jessica . 130238584.
  18. Web site: Convention concerning protection of the waters of Lake Geneva against pollution. . 16 November 1962 . United Nations Treaty Collection . 24 June 2009.
  19. Book: Bergier, Jean-François . Dictionnaire historique de la Suisse . Editions Gilles Attinger, Hauterive . 2008 . 7 . 978-2-88256-197-8 . fr . 25 June 2009 . 28 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160328172322/http://www.hls-dhs-dss.ch/textes/f/F8657.php . dead.
  20. Web site: Baisse du Phosphore dans le Léman . 9 May 2007 . Commission Internationale pour la Protection du Léman (CIPEL) . fr . 26 June 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090105220206/http://www.cipel.org/sp/IMG/pdf/Phosphore-2007.pdf . 5 January 2009 . dead.
  21. Monna . F. . Domnik J. . Loiseau J.-L. . Pardos M. . Arpagaus P. . 1999 . Origin and evolution of Pb in sediments of Lake Geneva (Switzerland-France). Establishing a stable Pb record . Environmental Science & Technology . American Chemical Society . Washington, DC . 33 . 17 . 2850–2857 . 0013-936X . 10.1021/es9902468 . 1999EnST...33.2850M.
  22. News: A la découverte du Léman . Dubuis . Etienne . . fr . 10 June 2011 . 1 November 2014.
  23. News: Ces submersibles qui ont plongé dans le Léman . Dubuis . Etienne . . fr . 10 June 2011 . 18 April 2019.
  24. Book: Guichonnet, Paul . Nature et histoire du Léman: le guide du Léman . Editions Cabedita . Divonne-Les-Bains . 2002 . 235 . 9782882951205 . fr.
  25. Web site: alinghi.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20100208154714/http://www.alinghi.com/en/news/news/index.php?idIndex=200 . dead . 8 February 2010.
  26. Web site: boldor.ch . https://web.archive.org/web/20120616030525/http://boldor.ch/boldor/ch/FR-CH/index.cfm . dead . 16 June 2012.
  27. Web site: 13 km à la nage sur le Léman, entre Lausanne et Evian ! . rcf.fr.
  28. Web site: LGSA Signature swim . www.lakegenevaswimmingassociation.com.
  29. Web site: Commune de Montreux - Traversée à la nage Montreux-Clarens . www.montreux.ch . 13 January 2020 . 1 October 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201001062539/https://www.montreux.ch/agenda/agenda-detail/article/traversee-a-la-nage-montreux-clarens-1/ . dead.
  30. News: La traversée du lac à la nage réussit sa première édition . Thierry . Mertenat . 31 July 2016 . www.tdg.ch . TDG.
  31. News: Près de 2500 courageux à la Coupe de Noël . 15 December 2019 . Tribune de Genève.
  32. Macaulay, History of England, Vol 1, Page 400, J H Dent 1953.
  33. Book: Sunstein, Emily W. . Mary Shelley: Romance and Reality . Johns Hopkins University Press . Baltimore . 1989 . 1991 . 478 . 0-8018-4218-2 . registration .
  34. News: The summit: The Russians make their entrance . The NY Times . 19 November 1985 . 30 May 2011.
  35. News: Fed-up Swiss taxpayers call time on concessions for wealthy foreigners . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1543808/Fed-up-Swiss-taxpayers-call-time-on-concessions-for-wealthy-foreigners.html . 12 January 2022 . subscription . live . Michner . Joerg . 25 February 2007 . Telegraph.co.uk . 24 June 2009.