Võrtsjärv

lake, Estonia
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Also known as: Lake Võrts, Ozero Vyrts-Yarv, Võrts-Järv, Virtsjärv
Also spelled:
Võrts-järv or Virtsjärv
Russian:
Ozero Vyrts-yarv

Võrtsjärv, lake (järv) in south-central Estonia, with an area of about 110 square miles (280 square km). Võrtsjärv forms part of the 124-mile (200-km) course of the Ema River (German: Embach), which enters the lake from the south and drains it toward the north and east into Lake Peipus on the Estonia-Russia border. The Võrtsjärv is navigable, as is the lower course of the Ema. The lake and river together divide the hilly Haanja region of southeastern Estonia from the flat remainder of the republic. The lake and its swampy, level basin are believed to be remnants of a much larger, ice-dammed prehistoric lake whose original drainage was toward the west. A Zoological and Botanical Institute was established on the lake in 1961.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.