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Polder

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Aerial view of forests, lakes, and wind turbines in the Netherlands.

A polder is a piece of land that people made by building walls called dikes around low-lying areas. These areas are often old lakes, seabeds, flood plains, or marshes that have been separated from water. Once the water is drained out, the land can be used for farming or building homes.

Aerial view of Flevopolder, the Netherlands

Because polders are lower than the surrounding water, they need special care to keep the water out. Water can seep into the polder from underground, rain, or rivers, so pumps and sluices are used to remove extra water.

Polders are most common in places like river deltas and coastal areas. The Netherlands has many polders. Famous polders there include the IJsselmeer, Beemster, Schermer, Flevopolder, and Noordoostpolder. Other countries with polders include Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada, and China.

Etymology

The word polder comes from Dutch. It started with an old Dutch word polre, which came from an even older word polra. These words described land that was higher than the land around it. Over time, the word changed and spread to many other languages.

Netherlands

The Netherlands is famous for its polders. Dutch engineers are skilled at turning wet areas into useful land for farming and building. A popular saying there is, "God made the world, but the Dutch made the Netherlands".

Pumping station in Zoetermeer, Netherlands: The polder lies lower than the surrounding water on the other side of the dike. The Archimedes' screws are clearly visible.

The Dutch have a long history of turning wet marshes into dry land, creating about 3,000 polders across the country. By 1961, they had turned nearly half of the Netherlands into usable land from the sea. About half of all polders in northwest Europe are in the Netherlands. The first polders were made in the 1100s. The oldest polder still around is Achtermeer, built in 1533.

Because of serious floods in the past, special groups called water boards were created to protect the dikes around polders. These water boards have their own elections and taxes and work separately from other government groups. They are some of the oldest democratic groups in the country.

After a big flood in 1953, the Dutch changed how they design dikes and water barriers. They now decide how strong these barriers need to be to help protect the land.

Some big Dutch polders include Beemster, Schermer, and Haarlemmermeerpolder. Polders made as part of the Zuiderzee Works include Wieringermeerpolder, Noordoostpolder and Flevopolder.

Examples of polders

Brazil

Several cities in the Paraíba Valley have polders on land taken from the floodplains around the Paraíba do Sul river.

Bangladesh

Bangladesh has 139 polders. Some face the sea, and others are along rivers. They were built in the 1960s to protect the coast from flooding and to keep out salt water. They help stop long-term flooding after big storms. The land is used for farming.

Belgium

  • De Moeren, near Veurne in West Flanders
  • Polders along the Yser river between Nieuwpoort and Diksmuide
  • 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
  • Prosperpolder, near Doel, Antwerp and Kieldrecht.

Canada

China

The city of Kunshan has over 100 polders.

The Yser river and West Flemish polders near Diksmuide

History

The Jiangnan region, at the Yangtze River Delta, has a long history of building polders. Most of these projects were done between the 10th and 13th centuries. The Chinese government helped local communities build dikes to drain swamp water. A system grouped 110 households under a headman to manage services and taxes in the polder.

Denmark

Finland

France

  • Marais Poitevin
  • Les Moëres, next to the Flemish polder De Moeren in Belgium.
  • Polders de Couesnon near Mont-Saint Michel in Normandy

Germany

Main article: Koog

Friedrichskoog is a polder in Schleswig-Holstein

In Germany, land reclaimed by building dikes is called a koog. The Deichgraf system was similar to the Dutch system.

In southern Germany, the word polder is used for basins made by opening dikes during river floodplain restoration.

Guyana

  • Black Bush Polder, Corentyne, Berbice.

India

Ireland

Italy

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

Japan

Wesselburenerkoog
  • Around the Ariake Sea in Kyushu, mainly in Saga but also in Fukuoka and Kumamoto Prefectures
  • Lake Hachirōgata in Akita was reclaimed in 1964, creating the town of Ōgata

Lithuania

Netherlands

Poland

Romania

The meandering Stingsloot separates the Vrouw Vennepolder (left) and the Rode Polder (right)

Singapore

Slovenia

  • The Ankaran/Ancarano Polder (Slovene: Ankaranska bonifika), Semedela Polder (Semedelska bonifika), and Škocjan Polder (Škocjanska bonifika) in reclaimed land around Koper/Capodistria.

South Korea

Spain

  • Parts of Málaga were built on reclaimed land

United Kingdom

United States

Images

A satellite view of the Noordoostpolder region in the Netherlands, showing farmland and natural landscapes from space.
Aerial view of wind farms in the Noordoostpolder region of the Netherlands, showing sustainable energy sources.
Map showing parts of the Netherlands that are below sea level and how they are protected from floods.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Polder, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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