Lake Avram Iancu-Ocnița Explained

Lake Avram Iancu-Ocnița
Location:Ocna Sibiului, Sibiu County, Transylvania, Romania
Coordinates:45.8747°N 24.0666°W
Type:Salt lake
Area:10143m2
Max-Depth:160m (530feet)
Salinity:170-260 g/l
Pushpin Map:Romania
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of the lake in Romania.

Lake Avram Iancu-Ocnița (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Lacul Avram Iancu-Ocnița) is a natural salt lake in the town of Ocna Sibiului, Sibiu County, Transylvania, Romania. It is one of the many lakes of the Ocna Sibiului mine, a large salt mine which has one of the largest salt reserves in Romania. The lake is the result of the lakes Avram Iancu and Ocnița merging into a single lake.[1]

Name

The old Avram Iancu Lake is named after Avram Iancu, a Transylvanian Romanian lawyer who played an important role in the local chapter of the Austrian Empire Revolutions of 1848–1849. The lake was also called Ocna Pustie (meaning the bare mine)

The name of the other lake, Ocnița, means small mine, after the Romanian word ocnă, meaning (salt) mine. It was named so because of the salt mine that created it, which was smaller than the mine of its neighbor lake, Avram Iancu.

History

Lake Avram Iancu (Ocna Pustie) was formed on the "Fodina Maior" ("Grosse Grube") saline, exploited in a bell system through two wells up to a depth of 160 m.

Lake Ocnița was formed on the basis of the "Fodina Minor" ("Kleine Grube"), exploited in a bell system up to a depth of 136 m, through two wells, and abandoned in 1817 due to water infiltration.[2]

Information

Lakes of the salt mine

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ocna Sibiului - atunci si acum. 12 June 2017.
  2. Web site: Lacuri Naturale - Ocna Sibiului. www.ocna-sibiu.ro. 12 June 2017. 11 June 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170611183505/http://www.ocna-sibiu.ro/info/despre-ocna-sibiului-lacuri-naturale.html. dead.
  3. Web site: Despre Ocna Sibiului Romania - Prezentare, imagini, informatii turistice si detalii despre statiunea Ocna Sibiului. DirectBooking.ro. DirectBooking.ro. 12 June 2017.