Söderfjärden
Söderfjärden is a plain and partially a polder in Ostrobothnia, western Finland, just 10 kilometres south of the town of Vaasa. The plain is located in an impact crater at least some 640 million years old (Proterozoic). The crater has a diameter of 6.6 km and a maximum depth of 300 metres. It is filled with Cambrian sandstones leaving only the outer rim visible. There is also a central uplift, which is buried. After rising from the sea due to post-glacial rebound, Söderfjärden was a wetland but was later drained with help by a pump station. It is currently cultivated and is very clearly visible from air as a large, circular field. This makes Söderfjärden unique among the other impact structures in Finland which are at least partially below sea level.[1]
References
- ↑ "Söderfjärden". Earth Impact Database. University of New Brunswick. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
External links
- Sundom village travel information page about Söderfjärden.
- Söderfjärden in Finnish impact structures homepage.
- The homepage of a local exhibition site, called Meteoria, in Swedish, Meteoriihi in Finnish, describing the area. Ria (riihi) is a kind of barn, where crop is dried, and the building looks like one.
Coordinates: 63°00′18″N 21°34′30″E / 63.00500°N 21.57500°E