Makkaur Lighthouse Explained

Makkaur Lighthouse
Makkaur fyr
Mapframe-Zoom:6
Mapframe-Marker:lighthouse
Mapframe-Caption:Location of the lighthouse
Coordinates:70.7066°N 30.0787°W
Location:Finnmark, Norway
Yearbuilt:1901 (first)
1928 (second)
Yearlit:1946 current
Automated:2005
Construction:concrete tower
Shape:square tower with balcony and lantern
Marking:white tower, red lantern
Intensity:1,232,000 candela
Range:17.6nmi
Characteristic:Fl (2) W 20s.
Racon:M
Country:Norway
Countrynumber:966500

Makkaur Lighthouse (Norwegian: Makkaur fyr) is a coastal lighthouse located on the northern coast of the Varanger Peninsula in Båtsfjord Municipality, Finnmark county, Norway.

History

The lighthouse was established in 1928, destroyed during World War II, and later rebuilt. The lighthouse was listed as a protected site in 1998.[1] [2]

The 12m (39feet) tall white, square, concrete tower has a red top where the light is located. The 1,232,000 candela light emits two white flashes every 20 seconds at an elevation of above sea level. The light can be seen for up to 17.6nmi. The light is turned on from 12 August until 24 April each year, but it is off during the summer due to the midnight sun. There was an active foghorn operating at the site from 1922 until 1989. The site is only accessible by boat. The lighthouse was automated in 2005.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Makkaur fyr . Store norske leksikon. Henriksen, Petter. Kunnskapsforlaget. Oslo. Norwegian. 13 December 2011.
  2. Book: Norwegian Coastal Administration

    . 2012. Norske Fyrliste 2012. PDF. Kystverket. Norwegian Coastal Administration. Norwegian. 9788245013542. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131004224356/http://www.kystverket.no/PageFiles/7617/Troms%20og%20Finnmark.pdf. 2013-10-04.

  3. 19 July 2011. 2013-02-27.