Flevopolder
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| File:Flevopolder by Sentinel-2, 2018-06-30.jpg The Flevopolder | |
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| Geography | |
|---|---|
| Location | Flevoland |
| Coordinates | Lua error in Module:Coordinates at line 489: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). |
| Area | 970 km2 (370 sq mi) |
| Administration | |
| Largest settlement | Almere[1] (pop. 202,764) |
| Demographics | |
| Population | 317,000 |
The Flevopolder is an island polder forming the bulk of Flevoland, a province of the Netherlands. Created by land reclamation, its northeastern part was drained in 1955 and the remainder—the southwest—in 1968.
Unlike other major polders, it is surrounded by lakes and below-sea-level channels. By some definitions, it is the world's largest artificial island. Levees, dikes, and pumping were used to drain the land. The polder's name references the ancient Lake Flevo. The Flevopolder, along with the Noordoostpolder, forms the Flevoland province, which is located near Amsterdam in the southwest and Kampen, Overijssel in the northeast.
Boundaries
[edit | edit source]Unlike other major polders, such as Noordoostpolder and Wieringermeer, the Flevopolder is surrounded by bordering lakes or below-sea-level channels. These are the IJsselmeer, the Veluwemeer, Ketelmeer, and Gooimeer. By some definitions, it is the largest artificial island in the world.[2][3][a]
History
[edit | edit source]Reclamation of its land
[edit | edit source]Levees and dikes were first built around the polder. However, unlike similar projects, the internal water was then drained by diesel and electric pumps.
Etymology
[edit | edit source]Its name refers to the ancient Lake Flevo.
Geography
[edit | edit source]The Flevopolder together with the Noordoostpolder forms the province of Flevoland, the most recent province to be added to the Netherlands. Its southwestern point is close to Amsterdam and its opposite end is close to Kampen, Overijssel. It has three highly dominant settlements in terms of distribution of population.
Footnotes
[edit | edit source]- ^ René-Levasseur Island in the Canadian province of Quebec is considerably larger than the Flevopolder. However, this island was a natural landform that became an island after the completion of the Daniel-Johnson dam in the late 1960s created Manicouagan Reservoir.
References
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