Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Aura (Archipelago Sea)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Main source
  
Oripää

Basin size
  
885 km (342 sq mi)

Source
  
Oripää

Country
  
Finland

River mouth
  
Turku

Length
  
70 km

Mouth
  
Turku

Bridges
  
Myllysilta, Martinsilta

Aura (Archipelago Sea) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Discharge
  
Average rate: 7 m/s (250 cu ft/s)

The Aura (Finnish Aurajoki; Swedish Aura å) is a river in south-western Finland. Its sources are in the town of Oripää, and it flows through Pöytyä, Aura and Lieto before discharging into the Archipelago Sea in the middle of the city of Turku. The waters of the Aura river are brown. The total length of the river is about 70 kilometres (43 mi), and it contains eleven rapids, the biggest of which is Nautelankoski at Lieto. The reserve tap water for Turku Region is drawn from the Aura, the city's secondary waterworks being situated by the Halinen rapids.

Map of Aurajoki, Turku, Finland

The word "Aura" appears to come from an archaic Swedish word for waterway (aathra, which is still current in the form ådra), but in Finnish it translates as "plough," a name the river lives up to. Situated in an agricultural zone, it is made turbid by surface runoff from nearby farms with eutrophication as the biggest threat. Its condition has been improving since the 1970s and the Aura river is now clean enough to support salmon.

The banks of the river have been inhabited on locations at least 6,000 years ago. It is notable for the cultural heritage in Finland. The archdiocese of Finland has been situated near the river since the thirteenth century.

References

Aura (Archipelago Sea) Wikipedia


Similar Topics