
There is only one freshwater
natural lake on the island of
Sardinia; it is Lake
Baratz (n.1 on map)
in the northwest, in the province of
Sassari near the town of Alghero. It
is small and almost at sea level
(elevation 24 meters/80 feet); the
surface area is 0.6 km²/c.160
acres.) The other lakes on the island
are all the result of the damming of
rivers; they have produced a number of
fair-sized bodies of water, some of
which are discussed here.
Originally,
the lakes were meant for agriculture and
the production of hydroelectric energy;
now they serve recreational purposes as
well. (Indeed, the photo centered as an
insert, top, is the small paddle-wheel
of the river boat shown in this photo on
the left). The lake in the photos is Lower Lake
Flumendosa (n.2).
The navigable portion of the lake is 17
km./10.5 miles long and is quite scenic.The
Flumendosa river, itself, that feeds the
lake is Sardinia's second longest
(after the Tirso river)
and is 127 km/79 miles long.
That river is also dammed farther to the
north, where it forms Upper Lake
Flumendosa (n. 7);
that dam was built in 1947-48. The upper
lake is 6 km/c.4 miles long and 1.5
km/c.1 mile wide. More on the
Flumendosa.
Lake
Coghinas
Lake
Coghinas (n.3)is
in
the
north
between the provinces of Sassari and
Olbia-Tempio. With a surface area of
17.8 km²/7 miles²and
a
capacity
of .25 km3of
water,
it
is
the second largest lake on Sardinia
(after Lake Omodeo, below) and one of
the major reservoirs in Italy. The dam
was built in 1924; it is 185 meters
long and 58 meters wide. It serves for
water supply as well as hydroeletric
power. The lake is now a popular
tourist attraction, and the shores
host a youth hostel, restaurants, and
a sailing club. Lake Coghinas is fed
by the river of the same name, itself
formed by the confluence of the
Mannu di Berchidda and
Mannu di Ozieri
rivers.
Lake
Omodeo (n.4)
is in
Barigadu, one of the historical
regions of
central
west Sardinia. The lake is the largest
artificial one (20 km long) on the
island and one of the largest in Italy.
It was formed between 1919 and
1924 by the construction of the
Santa Chiara dam on
the longest river in Sardinia,
the Tirso, at the town of
Ulà Tirso. The
construction employed 16,000 workers. It
was an impressive
bit of engineering,
and
the resulting lake was at the time
actually the largest artifical one in
Europe. The lake was named for the chief
engineer of the project, Angelo
Omodeo. A new
dam was built in 1997, dedicated to the
Sardinian medieval judge/ruler Eleonor of Arborea;
it is 582 meters long and 120 meters
wide. The dam serves for irrigation and
hydroelectric energy.
Lake
Gusana
 Lake Gusana
(n.5)
is the name of the artificial lake and
the surrounding area, in the territory
of Gavoi in the province of Nuoro. The
lake was formed between 1959 and 1961
by damming the river Gusana
between mount Littederone and Nodu Nos
Arcos. Besides
producing hydroelectric energy, the lake
is close to the archaeological sites of
Santu
Mikeli, to the domus de
janas in S'Iscrithola and
to the megalithic
complex of Perdas Fittas. For this
reason, accommodation facilities have
risen on the shores of the lake to
handle visitors.
Lake Liscia (n.6)
is in northern Sardinia near the
towns of Arzachena and Luogosanto, in
the Gallura region. With a capacity of
105 million cubic meters of water, it is
the principal reservoir in north-eastern
Sardinia. The dam was built in 1964.
Lake Mulárgia (n. 8)
is the overflow formed from Lower Lake
Flumendosa (n.2). That water, in turn, is
channeled down towards the reservoir for the
city of Cagliari at the southern tip of the
island.
Lake
Cedrino (n.9) was formed by the
damming of the Cedrino river in the valley
between Mt. Tului and Mt Bardia in order to
facilitate irrigation in the fields near
Dorgali. It is also a popular area for
kayaking and canoeing.
Lake Posada
(or Maccheronis) is a realtively large lake
in the hills of the northeast, not far from
the towns of Torpè e Posada (near n.
5 on the map), both in the province of
Nuoro. The lake is very deep in many places
right at the shore line and displays an
extremely irregular shape.
Lake
Flumineddu is a bit to the east of
Lower Lake Flunedosa (n.2) between the towns
of Seui and Ulassai. It is a large lake and
is part of the entire Flumendosa complex of
artificial bodies of water that provide
irrigation and electrical power to the
populated area in and around the capital of
Cagliari directloy to the south.
Some other lakes (L) are:
L. Lerno, L. S. Giovanni, L. Monte Pranu, L.
Cuga, L. del Termo.
One of the principal uses for these and
other lakes on the island of Sardinia is the
production of hydroelectric energy. This has
put Sardinia in the enviable position of
being self-sufficient in terms of
electricity. A blackout in late September,
2003, was the worst one in Italy since WWII,
affecting 55 million people and putting the
entire peninsula in the dark for a number of
hours—all except for Sardinia. I was on the
island at the time and watched the news
about the mainland blackout on television.
It worked fine.
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