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Sanabria Lake

Coordinates: 42°07′21″N 6°43′09″W / 42.12250°N 6.71917°W / 42.12250; -6.71917
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sanabria Lake
Lago de Sanabria
Llagu de Senabria
Sanabria Lake Lago de Sanabria Llagu de Senabria is located in Castile and León
Sanabria Lake Lago de Sanabria Llagu de Senabria
Sanabria Lake
Lago de Sanabria
Llagu de Senabria
LocationLa Sanabria,
Castile and León
Coordinates42°07′21″N 6°43′09″W / 42.12250°N 6.71917°W / 42.12250; -6.71917
Primary inflowsRío Segundera, Río Cárdena
Primary outflowsRío Trefacio
Catchment area11.42 km2 (4.41 sq mi)
Basin countriesSpain
Max. length3.3 km (2.1 mi)
Max. width1.47 km (0.91 mi)
Surface area3.48 km2 (1.34 sq mi)
Average depth27.7 m (91 ft)
Max. depth51 m (167 ft)
Water volume96,289,887 m3 (3.4004453×109 cu ft)
Shore length19.13 km (5.67 mi)
Surface elevation1,018 m (3,340 ft)
Islandsone
SettlementsPuebla de Sanabria
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Sanabria Lake (Spanish: Lago de Sanabria, Spanish pronunciation: [ˈlaɣo ðe saˈnaβɾja]; Leonese: Llagu de Senabria) is a lake located 8 km to the northwest of Puebla de Sanabria in the province of Zamora, Spain. It is one of the very few sizable natural lakes in Spain.[1]

With a surface of 368 hectares it is also the largest glacial lake in the Iberian Peninsula.

The main inflow and outflow of water from the lake is the river Tera. The lake is a widening of the Tera.

The Sanabria lake is now within the limits of the Sanabria Lake Natural Park. The area was declared a Natural Park in 1978.[2]

The Sanabria comarca is one of the few areas in Western Europe having a sizeable population of wild wolves living in the Sierra de la Culebra mountain range.

The lake was the site of a tragedy when the Vega de Tera dam failed and triggered a deadly flood. Bodies of the 144 killed ended up in the lake, most not recovered.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ J. C. Vega, C. De Hoyos, J. J. Aldasoro, J. De Miguel und H. Fraile: Nuevos datos morfométricos para el Lago de Sanabria, Limnetica, 24(1-2): 115-122 (2005) Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Royal decree that established the park (in Spanish) Archived 2009-05-07 at the Wayback Machine, Junta de Castilla y León website
  3. ^ Saseta, Sergio (8 January 2016). "El día que el mundo se hundió en Ribadelago". El Norte de Castilla (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 9 December 2018. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
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