| The starkly dramatic Geirangerfjord and Nærøyfjord
are classic examples of the upper sections of two of the world’s
longest and deepest fjords. They are pristine well-developed
examples of an active glacial landscape. Their sheer rock walls,
hung with waterfalls and old transhumant farms rise 1,400m directly
from sea level to a quite different landscape of glaciated mountains.
COUNTRY Norway
NAME West Norwegian Fjords – Geirangerfjord and
Nærøyfjord
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Geirangerfjord area:
Hyskjet Nature Reserve: I 52 ha
Kallskaret Nature Reserve: I 90 ha
Geiranger-Herdalen Protected Landscape Area (proposed): V
49,745 ha
Total: 49,887 ha
Nærøyfjord area:
Hatle-Styve Natural Monument: III 0 ha
Grånosmyrane Nature Reserve: I 357 ha
Nordheimsdalen Nature Reserve: I 1,330 ha
Bleia Nature Reserve (proposed): I 2,180 ha
Bleia-Storebotnen Protected Landscape Area (proposed) V: 6,595
ha
Nærøyfjorden Protected Landscape Area V: 57,884
ha
Total: 68,346 ha
NATURAL WORLD HERITAGE SERIAL SITE
2005: Inscribed on the World Heritage list under Natural criteria
i and iii.
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PROVINCE
West Eurasian Taiga (2.3.3) - mountains / Boreonemoral (2.10.5)
- valleys
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION
The West Norwegian Fjords are located in southwestern Norway
240 km and 120 km northeast of Bergen. The Geirangerfjord
area lies 60 km inland between 62° 00’ - 62°
17’ N and 06° 55’ - 07° 24’ E in
Møre & Romsdal county. The Nærøyfjord
area, 120 km to its south, lies 100 km inland between 60°
45’ - 61° 09’ N and 06° 41’- 07°
16’ E in Sogn & Fjordane and Hordaland counties.
DATE AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT
| 1933: |
Hatle-Styve Natural Monument designated,
for a distinctive tree; |
| 1970: |
The Nature Conservation Act decreed the protection
of all significant natural features, Protected Landscapes,
Nature Reserves and Natural Monuments; it succeeded a
similar act passed in1905; |
| 1978: |
The Cultural Heritage Act was passed to protect all
pre-Reformation (1537) monuments and sites, establishing
a 5 km buffer zone around each; later extended to cover
all pre-1650 monuments; |
| 1984: |
Kallskaret Nature Reserve designated, for geology and
scenery; |
| 1985: |
Planning and Building Act: Environmental Impact Assessments
were required nation-wide for all major new developments
affecting natural or cultural assets. |
| 1995: |
Grånosmyrane Nature Reserve designated, for its
wetland and bird life. |
| 1999: |
Nordhelmsdalen Nature Reserve designated, for virgin
pine woodland; |
| 2002: |
Nærøyfjorden Protected Landscape Area designated,
for a natural and cultural landscape; |
| 2003: |
Hyskjet Nature Reserve designated, for its woodland; |
| 2004: |
Geiranger-Herdalen and Bleia-Storebotnen Protected Landscape
Areas and Bleia Nature Reserve; proposed for scenery,
geology, wildlife and cultural landscapes: approval expected.
|
AREA
Total area: 122,712 ha. Land: 111,966 ha (including
settlements); Fjord: 10,746 ha
Geirangerfjord: 51,802 ha. Land: 46,151ha; Fjord: 5,651ha
Nærøyfjord: 70,910 ha. Land: 65,815 ha. Fjord:
5,095 ha
LAND TENURE
Public. The State owns 14.5% of the areas (17,771ha). Privately
owned lands comprise 81.6% of the areas (100,103 ha); the
nature conservation areas cover 96.1% of total area.
Geirangerfjord. Total area excluding settlements: 49,887
ha.
Private land: 45,302 ha owned by 330 owners;
State owned area of fjord: 4,585 ha.
Protected areas are under the management of the Governors
of Møre & Romsdal county.
Nærøyfjord. Total area: excluding settlements:
68,346 ha.
Private land: 55,160 ha owned by 262 owners; State owned land:
9,800 ha;
State owned area of fjord: 3,386 ha.
Protected areas are under the management of the Governors
of Sogn & Fjordane and Hordaland counties. The Borough
Councils in each sector are responsible for the management
of inhabited areas.
ALTITUDE
Sea level to 1,850m (Torvløysa mountain above Geirangerfjord)
and 1,761m (Stiganosi mountain above Nærøyfjord).
PHYSICAL FEATURES
These dramatic fjords are the grandest landscapes in a country
of spectacular fjords, and the rivers which enter them have
not been developed for hydroelectric power. Each is at the
upper end of a major fjord system that developed along faults
and fracture zones at right angles, giving them a characteristic
zigzag form. Both fjords are submarine hanging valleys, which
have floors between 300-500m deep in ice-scoured basins, the
floor of Nærøyfjord ending 1,000m above the floor
of Sognefjord. Though their differences are not dramatic,
the two areas comprising the nominated property complement
each other.
The Geirangerfjord area is 60 km inland at the end of Storfjord.
It branches into two: Sunnylvsfjord of which Geirangerfjord
is a branch, and Norddalsfjord of which Tafjord is a branch.
Its fjords are 1-2 km wide and their sides reach a height
of 1,300m in places with old transhumance farms in the hanging
valleys. They are surrounded by mountains 1,600-1,700m high,
carrying glacial lakes. The highest peak, Torvløysa,
1,850m, rises north of Geiranger. The Geirangerfjord mountains
are more alpine in character than those of the more southerly
Nærøyfjord; block fields are more prevalent there
and permafrost and glaciers persist on the highest summits.
Nærøyfjord is located 100km inland near the end
of Sognefjord, and Aurlandsfjord branches off it. Its fjords
are 250m-2.5km wide with sides in places 900-1,400m high.
The surrounding mountains are smooth-topped with high glacial
lakes, a plateau glacier in Fresvikbreen and reach to 1,761m
in Stiganosi, above the Syrdal glacier. The uplands of Nærøyfjord
preserve much of the rounded landforms of the pre-glacial
fluvial-dominated landscape.
The Management Plan decribes five main landscape types in
the area. The fjord system with shore areas and undisturbed
hillsides where the physical relief is more prominent than
any other feature. Farms of three distinct types with their
surrounding cultural landscapes: fjord-side, valley and mountain-ledge.
Valleys of which a large number extend into the mountains,
have been used for centuries for transhumant summer grazing
and are marked by pastures and sheilings. Woods which are
deciduous in the valleys and on mountainsides, coniferous
at higher elevations. On mountains the tree line is at 900m
and 1,100m, up to 1,300 - 1,400m the vegetation is alpine.
Above this the landscape becomes one of scree, block fields,
snow fields and, over 1,700m, glaciers.
Geologically, the areas are extremely well-developed examples
of fjord landscape and excellent examples of young active
glaciation. Relatively recently, in geologic terms, the products
of glacial weathering were removed, leaving ice- and wave-polished
surfaces on the steep fjord sides which provide superbly exposed
and continuous three-dimensional sections through the bedrock.
In Geirangerfjord these are Precambrian gneisses of the West
Gneiss Region, a world-class example of deeply subducted continental
crust and of well preserved high-pressure rocks. In Geirangerfjord
there are outcrops of peridotite and serpentinite in the predominant
gneiss bedrock. In Nærøyfjord. the underlying
rocks are anorthosite and gabbro, with softer phyllite in
Aurlandsfjord. The high mountain surface is a slightly undulating
peneplain dissected by rivers, the courses of which were deepened,
widened and scoured 20,000 years ago by the glaciers of the
last Ice Age. Later melting of the heavy ice cap allowed the
land to rebound by some 110m, deepening the fjords, and by
5000 years ago most of the glaciers had disappeared leaving
thick till in places and many moraines. Where fractured, the
crystalline rocks are unstable and in weathering have created
a wide variety of rock-slide scars and slumps, active screes
and snow avalanche paths. Unpredictable rockfalls are still
frequent hazards and, in extreme cases, have created local
tsunamis in the enclosed waters of some fjords (62m high in
Tafjord in 1934). Most of the soils derived from gneiss and
anorthosite are nutrient-poor, but there are pockets of richer
soil on the other minerals and from newly eroded slides.
CLIMATE
This is transitional between oceanic and continental, but
varies markedly with aspect and altitude. Approximate measurements
can be given based on nearby readings: the average annual
temperature for the Geirangerfjord area is 6.6°C, ranging
from 0.5°C in January to 13.8°C in July with an average
rainfall of 1180mm, decreasing towards the east. Nærøyfjord
being further inland is some 1.5°-3°C colder and 120mm
drier. Snow persists from October to late May on the mountains
and from late November to March in the valleys of the northern
site, but only 2-3 weeks at Nærøyfjord. Winter
ice periodically ices over the fjord heads for 1-3 weeks,
though in Nærøyfjord it lasts longer. Large avalanches,
of both powdery snow and wet slabs regularly occur. The narrow
valleys can generate strong down-valley winds, and avalanche
air blasts can be very dangerous.
VEGETATION
The vegetation is typical of this part of West Norway, but
it is moderately diverse despite the nutrient-poor soils.
This is because of the range of gradients from coast to inland,
from north to south, from sea level to 1600m and the consequent
variety of terrains and microclimates. Pockets of peridotitite
and serpentinite rocks in the Geirangerfjord area give nutrient-rich
soil. Its main vegetation types are temperate woodland, rock
and scree, alpine grassland and man-made meadows. The woodland
includes old deciduous woods, pinewoods on peridotite, wooded
pasture and small patches of very diverse deciduous woods
on warm south-facing slopes. Around Nærøyfjord
woodlands are similar but vary with the soil, moisture, exposure,
altitude above sea level and use. There are large natural
woods of Scots pine Pinus sylvestris, but birch Betula
spp. woodland communities are the most common. A somewhat
richer grey alder Alnus incana community dominates
on avalanche fans beside the fjords. The best virgin pine
woodland in western Norway is found in Nordheimsdalen and
below Bleia. In a belt of phyllites around Flamsdalen 500
species have been recorded including unusual species.
The Alpine flora of the Geirangerfjord area is dependent
on snow cover and ranges from dwarf birch Betula
spp. and polar willow Salix polaris to herb-rich
grassland; the grassers of the grazed meadows host many rare
fungi. Above the tree-line which is between 800m and 900m
are scree, blockfields, snow fields and glaciers. The tree-line
above Nærøyfjord is between 900 and 1100m. Half
the alpine flora of Norway is found on its high mountains,
on carbonate rocks and lenses of phyllite. In the ungrazed
high land of Bleia there is natural grassland and, on its
screes, a rare sub-species of arctic poppy Papaver radicatum
ssp. relictum.
FAUNA
These districts are one of few areas in Norway where
all four native deer occur together: reindeer Rangifer
tarandus, three separate strains of which are found here,
the rarer elk Alces alces in the east, red deer Cervus
elaphus and roe deer Capreolus capreolus. Arctic
foxes Alopex lagopus, brown bears Ursus arctos,
lynx Lynx lynx, wolverine Gulo gulo (VU)
and otter Lutra lutra (VU) are occasionally seen.
Marine species have been well surveyed only in Nærøyfjord
where the water is unpolluted and 76 species, including Atlantic
salmon Salmo salar, are recorded. Species common
in deep sea water are found here in much shallower water,
including Norway lobsters and sea pens, one from a depth of
more than 300m down Kophobelemnon stelliferum, occurring
here at a depth of 35m. A common seal Phoca vitulina
colony of 15-30 individuals has a pupping site in Nærøyfjord,
and the common porpoise Phocoena phocoena is common
in both areas. White-beaked dolphins Lagenorhynchus albirostris,
sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus, minke whales
Balaenoptera acutorostrata and killer whales Orcinus
orca occasionally occur. Some 100 bird species breed
in the area, all typical of western Norway, but because of
the diversity of habitats they range from coastal birds to
high mountain species. The rivers have the densest population
in Norway of the national bird, the dipper Cinclus cinclus.
The alpine and subalpine mires attract many waders and the
cliffs host several raptors. The invertebrate fauna is not
well known, but most of the habitats may have quite a rich
range of species.
CULTURAL HERITAGE
Many carefully recorded relics are present in the area such
as Neolithic tools, burial mounds, hunting hides and reindeer
pitfall traps in the mountains, some of which were still in
use 400 years ago. Viking houses a thousand years old are
present and over 350 registered old buildings. These include
stave churches (Undredal church dates from 1147), abandoned
farms, some perched high on fjord sides, and transhumance
farm sheilings. Farming was the main source of income until
the mid 19th century when emigration accelerated and tourism
began to become important.
LOCAL HUMAN POPULATION
A population of 473 people exists within the nominated area.
This is relatively dense for a mountainous region of Norway
but it only inhabits 1.4% of the total area. In Geirangerfjord
there are 230 people in two settlements of which Geiranger
is much the larger. In Nærøyfjord there are 243
people in four small settlements. The main local villages
of Flam and Aurlandsvangen border the site. These valley settlements
are at river mouths and fjord heads at points at least risk
from avalanches. There are 56 farms within the Nærøyfjord
area of which 12 main farms and 24 smaller holdings are still
worked. In the Geirangerfjord nominated area there are 12
working farms and 24 with grazing. The average area is ten
hectares, with orchards, small arable infields and much grazing
mainly for goats and sheep using the marginal upland valleys.
Hunting is undertaken to cull the deer but local fishing is
now mostly recreational.
VISITORS AND VISITOR FACILITIES
These fjords are one of the cradles of scenic tourism in Europe,
visited for more than 150 years by scientists, artists and
tourists. Their values having been preserved by their steepness
and inaccessibility, the two fjords remain among the least
affected by development and have attained iconic status. Local
people have learned to cope successfully with great numbers
of tourists without degrading the landscape. More than a million
people are believed to visit the areas annually. Most touring
is done from cruise ships (151 in Geirangerfjord in 2003,
157 in Nærøyfjord in 2002) but the fjords can
be reached by car, train, boat and by foot along a number
of good trails and roads: Nærøyfjord is on the
main Bergen to Oslo highway. The Tourist Board figures for
visitors arriving by cruise ships in 2002 are 378,000 for
Geirangerfjord and 296,800 for Nærøyfjord, totalling
about three-fifths of the total visitor numbers to each area.
Geiranger has four large modern hotels, the Norwegian Fjord
Centre, a national Geological Park and a tourist information
centre. In 2004 the world’s largest cruise liner visited
the fjord. There are many hotels, guesthouses, holiday flats,
cabins and campgrounds in both areas, most in Nærøyfjord
being outside the nominated site. A tourist information office
exists there and a Fjord Heritage Foundation is to be established
there. Both areas have traditional working farms on display:
Herdalssaetra in the upland above Geirangerfjord, Styvi farm
and museum on Nærøyfjord. There are guided walking
and boat tours. Maps, guides and documentation for the area,
including films, are excellent.
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND FACILITIES
There has been continuous investigation of aspects of the
terrestrial biology since the mid 18th century, now recorded
on the National Database. A report on the entire biological
diversity of the Geirangerfjord area was published in 2001
and the birds of rivers in the Nærøyfjord area
were also recorded. Marine investigations have been fewer,
but the waters of the Nærøyfjord area and the
seals of Sognefjord have been studied. Both areas are important
for geomorphological research, having some features seldom
seen elsewhere or revealed so clearly. Historic rockslides
and the related tsunamis such as the Tafjord disaster became
internationally known through early studies; and the continuing
active mass movements on the steep slopes create opportunities
for useful research into geohazards. The recently established
International Centre for Geohazards financed by the Norwegian
Research Council, will focus on this region in future. The
avalanches and landslides can be used as indicators of climatic
change, using the records of past events: several sites around
Geirangerfjord have been studied for the frequency of avalanches,
and connections have been made with changes in meteorological
conditions. The sites are also recorded on a National Register
of Valuable Cultural Landscapes.
CONSERVATION VALUE
The starkly dramatic landscapes of Geirangerfjord and Nærøyfjord
are exceptional in scale and grandeur in a country of spectacular
fjords. They are extremely well-developed and pristine examples
of a classic fjord and glaciated landscape which is still
actively evolving. The West Gneiss Region is among the most
important reference landscapes of its type in Europe
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT
The areas have a tradition of conservation. Maintenance of
their natural condition is essential to tourism in the area.
The Protected Landscapes safeguard their natural beauty, cultural
interest and geology. The Nature Reserves safeguard smaller
more specific aspects, geological, floral and faunal. They
are regulated by many national acts, covering buildings near
the sea, open-air recreation, forest protection, traffic on
uncultivated land and waters, land, wildlife, pollution, salmonid
and freshwater fish and protection of watercourses from development.
Seven local rivers are legally protected from any hydro-electric
schemes. There is also a wide range of up-to-date county,
municipal and local development plans and sub-plans. The Storfjord
Project report (Geirangerfjord) describes a management strategy
for maintaining active farming and spreading awareness locally
of the cultural values of the landscape. An action plan for
nature and landscape management in Aurland, Nærøyfjord,
was drawn up in 1998. In 2004 a Declaration of Intent to cooperate
in the World Heritage Areas was agreed on between the main
councils and government agencies involved in them: the Directorates
for Nature Management and the Norwegian Nature Inspectorate,
the Directorate for Cultural Heritage, the Regional Divisions
for Environmental Conservation and Agriculture and Departments
of Cultural Affairs and Planning. Consultative committees
will be established if the site is inscribed.
A management plan was drawn up for the Nærøyfjord
area in 2003 and a similar plan is to be drawn up for Geirangerfjord
in 2004. This divides the area into protected wilderness,
traditionally utilised land, land for multiple/recreational
facility use, and settlement zones. The full plan will provide
guidelines for natural values and biological diversity, wild
areas, archaeological and historical monuments, cultural landscapes,
farming, woodland and forestry, wild reindeer, outdoor recreation,
tourism, transport and traffic, the armed forces, rivers and
hydroelectric power, research, education, the media and information.
There are regulations for each of the Reserves and Protected
Landscape Areas. Regulations for settled areas also cover
buildings, shoreline development and quarrying. Hunting and
fishing are licensed. Monitors for the following areas have
already been assigned: geological activity, flora and fauna,
monuments, buildings and landscapes, farmland, tourism and
land use.
MANAGEMENT CONSTRAINTS Almost
the whole area is covered by detailed protective regulations.
However, there are several issues of concern. There is potential
for viable mining and quarrying. Peridotite mining occurs
very near Geirangerfjord and anorthosite rock is mined underground
within the nominated area in the Nærøy river
valley. However, any future developments will be subject to
thorough environmental impact assessment. In Geirangerfjord
avalanches remain a threat to open roads in places and avalanche
blast can affect settlements across the valley (as at Gudvangen),
but local expertise in siting buildings and the use of tunnels
in the Nærøyfjord area have generally forestalled
losses. Abandonment of the traditional but not very profitable
farms would lead to loss of biodiversity, though niche farming
could be encouraged. Threats from military training maneuvers,
hydroelectric plants and aquaculture have now been eliminated.
A vast bluff of the mountain above Akernes is moving and threatening
to slide into Sunnylvsfjord. It is being carefully monitored
and evacuation routines are in place at the valley head. Damage
from tourism is limited by the confined nature of the communications
and is not significant despite the high numbers of visitors.
COMPARISON WITH SIMILAR SITES
The west coasts of Canada, southern Alaska, southern
Chile and Norway itself all have many comparable inlets and
fjords but no other World Heritage fjord landscape exists
within either of the two biogeographical provinces. In Norway
the two sites are acknowledged to be the least disturbed of
the dramatic interior fjordlands. Glacier Bay, in the St Elias
parks complex in Alaska, is already a World Heritage site
as are three other notable fjord landscapes: Ilulissat Icefjord,
west Greenland, Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland and
Te Wahipounamu, South Island, New Zealand. These are all much
shorter in length than the nominated sites. Glacier Bay is
also shorter but is very deep and part of a very high mountain
landscape with glaciers actively calving into the bay. Ilulissat
is basically an ice sheet in a lower hinterland. Gros Morne
is again in lower surroundings with no ice. Te Wahipounamu
is geologically a young landscape of tectonic origin. None
is closely comparable nor do they show the same degree of
historically settled landscape and (except for Ilulissat)
minuteness of past and present geological study.
STAFF
In Geirangerfjord a Warden is to be appointed for the Geiranger-Herdalen
Protected Landscape Area. In Nærøyfjord the Aurland
Municipal Council for Marginal Land operates a wardening system
for its lands. Three new wardens from the Norwegian Nature
Inspectorate have been appointed for nature conservation duties
within any future World Heritage site. Further surveillance
duties are carried out by the Nordfjella Wild Reindeer Committee,
the local police, local cultural maintenance contracts and
private landowners.
BUDGET
The Directorate for Cultural Heritage allocates the funds
necessary for cultural World Heritage sites and monuments
and the Directorate for Nature Management will do the same
for natural sites. The farms, forests and cultural landscapes
may receive funding from other sources. No further details
are currently available.
LOCAL ADDRESSES
County Governor of Møre & Romsdal, Fylkeshusa,
NO-6404 Molde.
County Governor of Sogn & Fjordane:
Department for Environmental Conservation Affairs, PB 37,
NO-6861 Leikanger.
Department for Agricultural Affairs, PB 14,NO-6801 Førde.
County Governor of Hordaland, PB 7310, NO-5020 Bergen.
REFERENCES
Gregory, J. (1913). The Nature and Origin of
Fjords. London, J. Murray.
IUCN (2005). World Heritage Nomination Technical Evaluation,
West Norwegian Fjords - Geirangerfjord and Nærøyfjord
(Norway). IUCN, Gland.
Suul, J.,Sønstebø, G. & Nordgulen, Ø.
(eds, Directorate for Nature Management) (2004). The West
Norwegian Fjords. Norwegian Nomination 2004. UNESCO World
Heritage List. Ministry of the Environment, Oslo.159
pp. with Maps and Photographs. [Contains a bibliography of
250 largely technical references, in Norwegian].
--------- (2004). Management Framework and Plans. The
West Norwegian Fjords. Norwegian Nomination 2004. UNESCO World
Heritage List. Oslo. 65 pp.
WEBSITES
www.geiranger.no
http://regionalpark.no
DATE July 2005
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