Eastern Schelde

History, Economic Importance, & Facts

Oct 4, 2023 - 04:17
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OosterscheldedamOosterscheldedam

Eastern Schelde, Schelde also spelled Scheldt, Dutch Oosterschelde, channel extending about 50 km (30 miles) northwestward through the Delta Islands in the southwestern Netherlands to the North Sea. A former estuary of the Schelde River (as well as of the Meuse [Maas] River before completion in 1970 of a dam on the Volkerak Channel), the Eastern Schelde consists of a main southeast-northwest channel between the islands of Tholen (northeast), Noord-Beveland (southwest), and Schouwen and Duiveland (northwest) and the former island, now a peninsula, of Zuid-Beveland. A smaller northeastern arm of the channel extends northwest of Tholen Island to the Volkerak Channel. The Eastern Schelde is an area of shellfish cultivation (mussels, oysters, and shrimp) and a wintering area for geese and other migratory birds.

Completed in 1986 as part of the Delta Works project, the Oosterscheldedam (Eastern Schelde Dam) at the mouth of the channel is a storm surge barrier that has transformed the channel into a tidal saltwater area. Secondary dams include the Oesterdam in the eastern part of the Eastern Schelde and the Philipsdam in the Volkerak Channel north of Sint Philipsland peninsula. The Oesterdam forms freshwater Lake Zoom and is connected by the Eendracht (Schelde-Rhine Canal) north to the freshwater Volkerak Channel. The dams accommodate road travel and frontage recreation areas.

The Zeelandbrug (Zeeland Bridge), which crosses the Eastern Schelde and extends 5,022 metres (16,472 feet) between Schouwen and Duiveland and Noord-Beveland, was opened in 1965.

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