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Understanding Polders in the Netherlands

Polders are low-lying tracts of land surrounded by embankments and drained artificially. There are three types: land reclaimed from bodies of water, flood plains separated from water by dikes, and marshes separated from water by dikes. Polders are common in river deltas, coastal areas, and former wetlands. The Netherlands has over 3,000 polders due to its history of reclaiming marshes and flooding, and polders make up about half of reclaimed land in northwest Europe. Polders require active water management through pumping and sluices.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
95 views5 pages

Understanding Polders in the Netherlands

Polders are low-lying tracts of land surrounded by embankments and drained artificially. There are three types: land reclaimed from bodies of water, flood plains separated from water by dikes, and marshes separated from water by dikes. Polders are common in river deltas, coastal areas, and former wetlands. The Netherlands has over 3,000 polders due to its history of reclaiming marshes and flooding, and polders make up about half of reclaimed land in northwest Europe. Polders require active water management through pumping and sluices.

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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Polder 1

Polder
A polder is a low-lying tract of land enclosed by embankments
(barriers) known as dikes, that forms an artificial hydrological
entity, meaning it has no connection with outside water other than
through manually-operated devices. There are three types of
polder:
• Land reclaimed from a body of water, such as a lake or the sea
bed.
• Flood plains separated from the sea or river by a dike.
• Marshes separated from the surrounding water by a dike and
Satellite image of Noordoostpolder, Netherlands
consequently drained. (595.41 km²)

The ground level in drained marshes subsides over time and thus
all polders will eventually be below the surrounding water level some or all of the time. Water enters the low-lying
polder through ground swell due to water pressure on ground water or rain fall and transportation of water by rivers
and canals. This usually means that the polder has an excess of water that needs to be pumped out or drained by
opening sluices at low tide. However, care must be taken in not setting the internal water level too low. Polder land
made up of peat (former marshland) will show accelerated compression due to the peat decomposing in dry
conditions.

Polders are at risk from flooding at all times and care must be taken to protect the surrounding dikes. Dikes are
mostly built using locally available materials and each has its own risk factor: sand is prone to collapse due to
oversaturation by water while dry peat is lighter than water, making the barrier potentially unstable in very dry
seasons. Some animals dig tunnels in the barrier, undermining the structure; the muskrat is notorious for this
behavior. For this reason in the Netherlands it is actively hunted to extinction. No such care is taken in neighboring
Germany though, causing the stock to be constantly resupplied across the border.
Polders are most commonly found, though not exclusively so, in river deltas, former fen lands and coastal areas.

Polders and the Netherlands


The Netherlands is frequently associated with polders. This is
illustrated by the English saying: God created the world, but the
Dutch created Holland.
The Dutch have a long history of reclamation of marshes and
fenland, resulting in some 3,000 polders[1] nationwide. About half
of all polder surface within northwest Europe is located within the
Netherlands. The first embankments in Europe were constructed in
Roman times. The first polders were constructed in the 11th
century. Due to flooding disasters, water boards called waterschap Pumping station in Zoetermeer, Netherlands. The
(when situated more inland) or hoogheemraadschap (near the sea, polder lies lower than the surrounding water on the
mainly used in Holland)[2] were set up to maintain the integrity of other side of the dike.

the water defences around polders, maintain the waterways inside


a polder and control the various water levels inside and outside the polder. Water bodies hold separate elections, levy
taxes and function independently from other government bodies. Their function is basically unchanged even

currently. As such, they are the oldest democratic institution in the country. The necessary co-operation between all
ranks in maintaining polder integrity also gave its name to the Dutch version of third way politics - the Polder
Polder 2

Model.
The 1953 flood disaster prompted a new approach to the design of dikes and other water-retaining structures, based
on an acceptable probability of overflowing. Risk is defined as the product of probability and consequences. The
damage in lives, property and rebuilding costs is offset against the cost of water defences. From these calculations
follow an acceptable flood risk from the sea at 1 in 4,000–10,000 years, while it is 1 in 100–2,500 years for a river
flood. The established policy forces the Dutch government to improve flood defences as new data on threat levels
becomes available.

Examples of polders

Belgium
• De Moeren, near Veurne in West Flanders
• Polders of Muisbroek and Ettenhoven, in Ekeren and Hoevenen
• Polder of Stabroek, in Stabroek
• Kabeljauwpolder, in Zandvliet
• Scheldepolders on the left bank of the Scheldt
• Uitkerkse polders, near Blankenberge in West Flanders

Canada
• Holland Marsh

France
• Marais Poitevin
• Les Moëres, adjacent to the Flemish polder De Moeren in Belgium.

Germany
• Altes Land near Hamburg
• Blockland & Hollerland near Bremen
• Nordstrand, Germany
• Bormerkoog and Meggerkoog near Friedrichstadt

Guyana
Black Bush Polder, Corentyne, Berbice

Italy
• Delta of the river Po such as Bonifica Valle del Mezzano

Japan
• Hachirogata in Akita Prefecture
• Isahaya Bay in Kyushu
• Kojima Bay in Okayama Prefecture
Polder 3

Korea, Republic of
• Parts of the coast of Ganghwa Island, adjacent to the river Han in Incheon
• Delta of the river Nakdong in Busan
• Saemangeum in Jeollabuk-do

Netherlands
• Alblasserwaard, containing the windmills of Kinderdijk, a World Heritage Site
• Andijk
• Anna Paulownapolder
• Beemster, a World Heritage Site
• Bijlmermeer
• Haarlemmermeer, containing Schiphol airport
• Krimpenerwaard
• Lauwersmeer
• Mastenbroek
• Noordoostpolder
• Ooijpolder
• Prins Alexanderpolder
• Purmer
• Schermer
• Rosandepolder
• Watergraafsmeer
• Wieringermeer
• Wieringerwaard
• Wijdewormer
• Zijpe- en Hazepolder
• Zuidplaspolder
• Eastern and Southern Flevoland polders, containing the cities of Lelystad and Almere, respectively. Together
these polders are also known as the Flevopolder.

Poland
• Vistula delta near Elbląg and Nowy Dwor Gdanski
• Warta delta near Kostrzyn nad Odra

United Kingdom
• Traeth Mawr
• Sunk Island, on the north shore of the Humber east of Hull
• Parts of The Fens
• Branston Island, by the River Witham outside the conventional area of the fens but connected to them.
• Parts of the coast of Essex
• Some land along the River Plym in Plymouth
• Some land around Meathop east of Grange-over-Sands, reclaimed as a side-effect of building a railway
embankment
• The Somerset Levels and North Somerset Levels
• Romney marsh
Polder 4

United States
• New Orleans
• Sacramento – San Joaquin River Delta

References
[1] "TKijk naar de geschiedenis" (https:/ / www. rijkswaterstaat. nl/ rws/ waterinnovatiebron/ cgi-bin/ toonlijst. pl?config=config& var=volgnr&
val=1& layout=index-forceframe& confignr=1& menu=1067260347& menuitem=1120115781). Rijkswaterstaat. . Retrieved 2008-01-21.
[2] http:/ / www. waterschappen. nl/ mijn-waterschap. html

• Farjon, J.M.J., J. Dirkx, A. Koomen, J. Vervloet & W. Lammers. 2001. Neder-landschap Internationaal:
bouwstenen voor een selectie van gebieden landschapsbehoud. Alterra, Wageningen. Rapport 358 (http://www2.
alterra.wur.nl/Webdocs/PDFFiles/Alterrarapporten/AlterraRapport358.pdf).
• Morten Stenak. 2005. De inddæmmede Landskaber - En historisk geografi. Landbohistorik Selskab.
• Ven, G.P. van de (red.) 1993. Leefbaar laagland: geschiedenis van waterbeheersing en landaanwinning in
Nederland. Matrijs, Utrecht.
• Wagret, P. 1972. Polderlands. London : Methuen.

External links
• Polder landscapes in the Netherlands within a northwest European and is also a landmark context (http://home.
planet.nl/~farjo001/internat_uk.htm)
• How to make a polder - online film (http://static.nai.nl/polders/e/hoe_e.html)
• http://watercanon.nederlandleeftmetwater.nl/view/canon/professionalisation
Article Sources and Contributors 5

Article Sources and Contributors


Polder  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=422731664  Contributors: 130.94.122.xxx, Alberth2, Amberrock, Ameres111, Amsterdam360, Andre Engels, Anonymous
anonymous, Anthony Appleyard, Arnoutf, Arz1969, Belanda Gila, Berland, Borgx, Brancart, J., CKA3KA, Calamarain, CanOfWorms, CanadianLinuxUser, Caspian blue, Classical geographer,
Colonies Chris, Conversion script, Dionysos1, Dj Capricorn, Dmz5, DuncanHill, Erik Zachte, Frokor, Funkendub, Gaius Cornelius, Gidonb, Gilgamesh, Graham87, Grutness, Hebrides,
Hede2000, HeikoEvermann, Hidaspal, Hottentot, Ilikepie11, Isomorphic, Jane023, Jbontes2000, Jeff G., Johan Lont, Joostik, Jyril, Katieh5584, Kim Bruning, Klparrot, Kubigula, L.tak, Lestari,
Life of Riley, Litjan, Look2See1, Maashatra11, Mane2, Manea10, Mark.murphy, Matthijs J, Meursault2004, Michael Hardy, MichaelAmongMichaels, MithrandirAgain, Mooncowboy, Nk,
Nopira, Orphan Wiki, Oxymoron83, P199, Paleorthid, Paulpw, Pburka, Philip Trueman, Poiuyt721, Prater, Prof saxx, R.J.Oosterbaan, Radagast83, Reboelje, Redvers, Reinoutr, Rjwilmsi,
Rkmlai, Rmhermen, Ron519098, Roo72, Rory096, Rothorpe, Rubseb, Rursus, Sagredo, Scipius, Shadowlynk, Sietse Snel, Smalljim, Stefan Kruithof, Stephenb, Sylwia Ufnalska, Telsa, The
Utahraptor, Thumperward, Utcursch, Van helsing, Vnoel, Wareq, Wiekelein, Xcentaur, Петър Петров, 160 anonymous edits

Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors


Image:Satellite image of Noordoostpolder, Netherlands (5.78E 52.71N).png  Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Satellite_image_of_Noordoostpolder,_Netherlands_(5.78E_52.71N).png  License: Public Domain  Contributors: BLueFiSH.as, Galwaygirl,
HenkvD, Reinoutr, Siebrand
Image:Gemaal_de_Leyens.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Gemaal_de_Leyens.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: User:Caseman

License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
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