
Flowing Free Through Albania
Downloads
- vjosariver_oli_2022252_lrg.jpg (5328x6084, JPEG)
Metadata
- Sensor(s):
- Landsat 8 - OLI
- Data Date: September 9, 2022
- Visualization Date: November 7, 2022
With a length of 272 kilometers (169 miles), the Vjosa River is far from being the longest or largest river in Europe. Instead, the river stands out because it is one of the only free-flowing rivers still found in Europe, a continent that has more than 1.2 million dams and other barriers on its rivers.
From its headwaters in the Pindus Mountains, the river flows through northwestern Greece and then through southwestern Albania. On September 9, 2022, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this natural-color image of the river winding through several gorges and its wide sand- and gravel-filled channel before draining into the Adriatic Sea.
In Greece (just southeast of this image), the river is called the Aoös and flows through the rugged terrain and dense forests of Vikos-Aoös National Park. It joins with a large tributary (the Sarandapor) near the border with Albania and then navigates through a sequence of steep canyons. At the river’s middle reaches, it flows across wide gravel and sand bars and develops multiple interlacing braided channels. As additional tributaries (including the Drino, Bënça, and Shushicë rivers) flow into the Vjosa, the braided channels revert to being a single meandering channel in the lowlands near the Adriatic Sea.
Though there have been plans to build hydroelectric power plants and other projects on the Vjosa and its tributaries, Albanian authorities in 2022 signed a pledge to limit development and eventually turn the area into a national park.
References
- Associated Press (2022, June 13) Albania enlists Patagonia to make wild Vjosa River a park. Accessed November 7, 2022.
- Belletti, B. (2020) More than one million barriers fragment Europe’s rivers. Nature, 588, 436–441.
- Euractiv (2022, June 14) Albanian government pledges Vjosa National Park but no timeline given. Accessed November 7, 2022.
- The Freshwater Blog (2022, June 15) A step closer to Europe’s first Wild River National Park on the Vjosa River. Accessed November 7, 2022.
- The Globe and Mail (2022, January 30) The fight to save the Vjosa, one of Europe’s last wild rivers. Accessed November 7, 2022.
- National Geographic (2021, July 12) Will dams spoil one of Europe’s last wild rivers? Accessed November 7, 2022.
- Schiemer, F. (2020) The Vjosa River corridor: a model of natural hydro-morphodynamics and a hotspot of highly threatened ecosystems of European significance. Landscape Ecology, 35, 953–968.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Allison Nussbaum, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.
This image record originally appeared on the Earth Observatory. Click here to view the full, original record.