
Skagerrak and Kattegat.
The 'Skagerrak'
strait runs between
Norway and the southwest coast of
Sweden and the
Jutland peninsula of
Denmark, connecting the
North Sea and the
Kattegat strait, which leads to the
Baltic Sea.
Name
The names for both ''Skagerrak'' and ''Kattegat'' are of
Dutch origin. ''Skagerrak'' is derived from the Dutch word for ''
Skagen'', the northernmost tip of
Jutland. The syllable "rak" means a straight
waterway.
[1][2] This ultimate source of this syllable is the
Proto-Indo-European root
★ reg-, "straight". No evidence suggests a connection to the modern Danish word ''rak'' (meaning rabble or riff-raff).
According to ''
Den Store Danske Encyklopædi'' and ''
Politikens Nydansk Ordbog'', the name ''Kattegat'' derives from the Dutch words ''Kat'' (cat) and ''Gat'' (hole). It refers to late
medieval navigation, where captains compared this region to a hole so narrow that even a cat would have difficulty creeping through due to the many reefs and shallow waters.
[3][4] At one point, the passable waters are a mere 3.84
kilometers (2.38
miles) wide. An older name for both the Skagerrak and
Kattegat was the ''Norwegian Sea'' or ''Jutland Sea''.
Knýtlinga saga mentions the name ''Jótlandshaf'' for both waters.
Geography
The Skagerrak is roughly triangular in shape, measuring in length, and between and in width. It deepens toward the Norwegian coast, reaching over 700 metres at the
Norwegian Trench. Some ports along the Skagerrak are
Oslo and
Kristiansand in
Norway and
Uddevalla and
Strömstad in
Sweden.
The Skagerrak has a
salinity of 30
practical salinity units. The volume available to biomass is about , including a wide variety of habitats from the sandbanks to Sweden and Denmark to the deeps of the Norwegian trench.

Battle of Jutland.
History
In both world wars, the Skagerrak was strategically very important for
Germany. One of the biggest sea battles of
World War I, the
Battle of Jutland, also known as the Battle of the Skagerrak, took place there
May 31 to
June 1,
1916. The importance of controlling this waterway, the only access to the Baltic, provided the motivation for the German invasion of
Denmark and
Norway during
World War II.
Biology
The Skagerrak provides a habitat for approximately 2000 marine species, many of them adapted to its waters. For example, a variety of
Atlantic cod called the Skagerrak cod spawns off the Norwegian coast. The eggs are buoyant and the hatchlings feed on
zooplankton. Juveniles sink to the bottom where they have a shorter maturity cycle (2 years). They do not migrate but remain local to Norwegian
fjords.
The variety of habitats and the large volume of
plankton on the surface support a prolific marine life. Energy moves from the top to the bottom according to
Vinogradov's ladder of migrations; that is, some species are
benthic and others
pelagic but there are graded layers in which species move vertically for short distances. In addition, some species are
benthopelagic, moving between surface and bottom.
The benthic species include ''
Coryphaenoides rupestris'', ''
Argentina silus'', ''
Etmopterus spinax'', ''
Chimaera monstrosa'' and ''
Glyptocephalus cynoglossus''. On the top are ''
Clupea harengus'', ''
Scomber scombrus'', ''
Sprattus sprattus''. Some species that move between are ''
Pandalus borealis'', ''
Sabinea sarsi'', ''
Etmopterus spinax''.
References
1. Nudansk Ordbog (1993), 15th edition, 2nd reprint, Copenhagen: Politikens Forlag, entry ''Skagerrak''.
2. Den Store Danske Encyklopædi (2004), CD-ROM edition, Copenhagen: Gyldendal, entry ''Skagerrak''.
3. Den Store Danske Encyklopædi (2004), CD-ROM edition, Copenhagen: Gyldendal, entry ''Kattegat''.
4. Nudansk Ordbog (1993), 15th edition, 2nd reprint, Copenhagen: Politikens Forlag, entry ''Kattegat''.
External links
★
Skagerrak Deep-water Fish Assemblage