Fosen

Fosen landscape view; Åfjord.
Fosenhallen, indoor speed skating rink in Botngård

Fosen is a traditional district in Trøndelag, consisting of the municipalities Osen, Roan, Åfjord, Ørland, Indre Fosen, Orkland, Heim, Hitra and Frøya. The district is dominated by forested valleys, lakes, coastal cliffs but also shallow areas, and in the interior mountains reaching up to 675 m elevation.[1] The western coast has many skerries and some islands, such as Stokkøya in Åfjord. There are some good salmon rivers, and sea eagles and other sea birds are very common along the coast, notably on the shallow area near Ørland (Grandefjæra). The west coast has mild winters, and some locations (just west of the mountains) receive on average more than 2,000 mm of precipitation per year. Part of the Scandinavian coastal conifer forests (No: Kystgranskog) are located in the valleys of the peninsula, and smaller areas are classified as temperate rainforest with 67 nature reserves.[2][3] The largest nature reserve is Øyenskavelen (5,316 hectare), with many nature types including undisturbed forest, some of it classified as rainforest.[4]

The Kråkvåg bridge connecting the two islands Storfosna and Kråkvåg, Ørland municipality.
Opphaug; Ørland is the only area dominated by flat lowland on the peninsula

In colloquial speech, Fosen refers to the Fosen peninsula, i.e. Indre Fosen and further north, with the peninsula also having the Southern Sami name Fovsa.

  1. ^ "Dette er Fosens 10 høyeste fjelltopper". Fosna-Folket. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  2. ^ "Norsk regnskog". Fylkesmannen. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  3. ^ "Særlig verdifull sørtrøndersk natur". Fylkesmannen. 4 March 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Øyenskavelen Nature Reserve". Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2009-10-15.

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