Paarlahti Explained

Paarlahti is a bay or inlet of the lake of Näsijärvi in the former Teisko municipality (now part of Tampere). Paarlahti is about 10 km long and has a maximum depth of about 60 m.[1]

Paarlahti has been fancifully called the longest inland fjord of Scandinavia (though Finland is not part of Scandinavia, rather it is a Nordic Country), although it does not really resemble the large fjords of Norway. With its long and narrow shape, its depth and its steep shores it is seen as a fjord by non-geologists. Usually there are no islands in a fjord, but Paarlahti has a few.[2] In Lake Inari in Finnish Lapland however, there are several bays that carry the word vuono (the Finnish word for fjord) in their names.

References

61.655°N 24.04°W

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/19980529225722/http://www.fma.fi/virtualboat/5_aunessilta.html Untitled Document
  2. http://palvelut.tampere.fi/osallistu/kansalaiskioski/kysymys.phtml?id=14 Tampereen kaupunki - Kansalaiskioski