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Réserve naturelle marine de La Réunion (La Réunion Marine Natural Reserve) La Réunion: La Réunion: Les Avirons, L'Étang-Salé, Saint-Leu, Saint-Paul, Les Trois-Bassins: 2007 35 RNN164 Sites géologiques de l'Essonne (Essonne Geological Sites) Île-de-France: Essonne: Auvers-Saint-Georges, Chauffour-lès-Étréchy, Ormoy-la-Rivière, Saint ...
French regional natural parks (in green), national parks (in red) and marine natural parks (in blue). A regional nature park [1] or regional natural park (French: parc naturel régional or PNR) is a public establishment in France between local authorities and the French national government covering an inhabited rural area of outstanding beauty in order to protect the scenery and heritage as ...
EPTB Seine Grands Lacs is a public territorial basin institution created in 1969 under the name of Institution interdépartementale des barrages-réservoirs du bassin de la Seine. Grouping together the departments of the former Seine , its mission is to reduce the winter and spring floods of the Seine and its main tributaries (the Yonne , Marne ...
The Lake of Orient or Seine Reservoir Lake is a lake in northeastern France, located in the Aube department of the Grand Est region.With a surface area of 23 km 2 (8.9 sq mi) and a normal capacity of 205 km 3 (49 cu mi), [1] it is the third-largest Artificial Lake in mainland France, after Lake Der-Chantecoq and Lake Serre-Ponçon, and ahead of Lake Sainte-Croix.
A national nature reserve, in French réserve naturelle nationale, (RNN) is a protected area that is part of natural reserves of France (RNF) and whose status is defined by the law on local democracy of February 27, 2002. It is a tool for the long-term protection of spaces, species or geological objects. [1] The duration of its protection is ...
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km 2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. Larchant ( French pronunciation: [laʁʃɑ̃] ⓘ ) is a commune in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region .
Between November 1 and June 30, water from the Aube is drawn from Jessains via a 4.4-km-long feeder canal (also known as the "canal d'Amance"), [10] when the river is at its highest level to prevent flooding: this is known as "flood control". The water then flows into Lake Amance, before returning via a 1.5 km-long junction canal to Lake du Temple.
The Parc naturel régional de Camargue is a protected area which was designated in 1970 along the shoreline of the Camargue, France. [1] The park protects a wetland environment and an adjacent marine area. The boundaries of the park have been expanded to include a lagoon called the Étang de Vaccarès.