Skerry
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Janke (Talk | contribs)
fmt, and rm Rockall, it's not even a skerry, just a rock
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Template:Wiktionarypar A skerry is a small rocky island, usually defined to be too small for habitation. It may simply be a rocky reef.
The term skerry is derived from the old Norse sker, which means a rock in the sea. The Old Norse term sker got into the English language via the Scots language. It is a cognate of the Scandinavian languages' (skjær, skär and skjär).
Skerries are most commonly formed at the outlet of fjords where submerged glacially formed valleys at right angles with the coast join with other cross valleys in a complex array. In some places near the seaward margins of fjorded areas, the ice-scoured channels are so numerous and varied in direction that the rocky coast is divided into thousands of island blocks, some large & mountainous while others a merely rocky points or rock reefs, menacing navigation. The island fringe of Norway is such a group of skerries (called a skjærgård); many of the cross fjords are so arranged that they parallel the coast and provide a protected channel behind an almost unbroken succession of mountainous islands and skerries. By this channel one can travel through a protected passage almost the entire 1,600 km route from Stavanger to North Cape, Norway. The Blindleia is a skerry-protected waterway that starts near Kristiansand in southern Norway, and continues past Lillesand.
The “inside passage” provides a similar route from Seattle, Washington to Skagway, Alaska. Yet another such skerry protected passage extends from the Straits of Magellan north for 800 km.
The Swedish coast along Bohuslän is likewise skerry guarded.
The southwestern coast of Finland also has a large amount of skerries, so many, in fact, that they form an archipelago.
For a list of the various islands and island groups with skerry or skerries as part of their name see: The Skerries.
de:Schäre no:Skjærgård nl:Scherenkust pl:Szkier sv:Skärpl:Szkier