}} On the Finnish side of Kvarken, there is a large
archipelago, the Kvarken Archipelago, which includes the large islands
Replot,
Björkö and over 5,600 smaller islands. Most of it belongs to the municipality of
Korsholm. Most of the small islands are inhabited. The archipelago is smaller on the Swedish side of the region, and the islands, part of
Umeå Municipality, have much steeper shores. The Kvarken region was historically important also, because mail was delivered across Kvarken when the sea was completely frozen from the Swedish to the Finnish coast. This mail route was used frequently during the period when
Finland was a part of
Sweden. During the
Ice Ages, the Kvarken region was located underneath the
Fennoscandian ice sheet. In 2006, parts of the Kvarken Archipelago were added as an extension to the
World Heritage Site of the
High Coast (located on the western shore of the Gulf of Bothnia) in
Sweden, because of its outstanding demonstration of isostatic uplift, and the influence of glacial retreat on the evolution of landforms and topography. The most Finnish parts of the High Coast/Kvarken Archipelago World Heritage Site are situated in the
Korsholm municipality. In the group of islands in the “middle” of the Kvarken region, in Swedish called
Valsörarna – Finnish
Valassaaret, is a lighthouse designed by who worked for
Gustave Eiffel's engineering bureau. The structural similarity between the lighthouse (built in 1885) and the
Eiffel Tower (built in 1889) is quite obvious. The lighthouse is now automated as are most lighthouses in Finland. == Transportation ==