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Arsuk

Village in Greenland

Arsuk

Summary

Village in Greenland

FieldValue
nameArsuk
image_skylineArsuk-sea.jpg
imagesize300px
image_captionArsuk under the Kuunnaat mountain
pushpin_mapGreenland
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation within Greenland
pushpin_mapsize300
subdivision_typeState
subdivision_nameKingdom of Denmark
subdivision_type1Constituent country
subdivision_name1Greenland
subdivision_type2Municipality
subdivision_name2[[File:Sermersooq-coat-of-arms.png22px]] Sermersooq
subdivision_type3District
subdivision_name3Paamiut
government_footnotes
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameJonathan Rasmussen
established_titleFirst Settled
established_date1500 B.C.E.
established_title2Founded
established_date21805
population_as_of2025
population_total79
timezone1Western Greenland Time
utc_offset1−02:00
timezone1_DSTWestern Greenland Summer Time
utc_offset1_DST−01:00
coordinates
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code3932 Arsuk

Arsuk is a village in the Sermersooq municipality in southwestern Greenland. It had 73 inhabitants in 2020. The name of the settlement means the beloved place in the Greenlandic language. The village is served by the communal all-purpose Pilersuisoq store.

Geography

Arsuk is located at the southern end of the Sermersooq municipality, on the coast of Labrador Sea near the mouth of the Arsuk Fjord in the southeast. It is north of Cape Desolation, where the coastline of southwestern Greenland turns to the east approximately 30 km to the south of the settlement at the wide mouth of Alanngorsuaq Fjord. The 1418 m Kuunnaat mountain rises on the mainland directly to the north of the village.

History

Map of the "Middle settlement" of the Norse in medieval Greenland. No written documents of this settlement exist and the name Middle settlement is constructed by modern archaeologists. The red dots indicate known Norse farm ruins.

The region was first settled by people of the Saqqaq culture arriving from the north. The area was resettled by the Norse between the 10th century and the 14th century. Thule people were the second southbound Inuit migration, to arrive in the region in the 15th century, with the area permanently settled since then.

The discovery of cryolite in Ivittuut in the inner parts of Arsuk Fjord attracted the interest of the Danes during the colonial era, leading to the formal foundation of the settlement in 1805. The timber Lutheran church was built in 1830.

The mines closed in 1987, with the Ivittuut settlement abandoned soon thereafter, leaving Arsuk on the economic periphery despite its tourism potential.

Transport

Arsuk is a port of call for the Arctic Umiaq Line coastal ship, linking the village with Paamiut in the north (6.5 hours), and Qaqortoq in the southeast (9.5 hours), both towns served by Air Greenland.

Population

Most towns and settlements in southern Greenland exhibit negative growth patterns over the last two decades, with many settlements rapidly depopulating. Arsuk has been losing population in almost every year in the last two decades. It lost more than half of its population relative to the 1990 levels, over 10% relative to the 2000 levels. The sharp decline in the 1990s was due to the mine closure and loss of employment. The weak growth in the late 2000s and stabilization of the population level prevented Arsuk from sharing the fate of Qassimiut, which lost more than two thirds of the population and is headed for abandonment − and that of Kangerluarsoruseq in the same municipality, which was abandoned in 2009.

References

References

  1. [http://www.sermersooq.gl/da/politik/folkevalgte/bygdebestyrelser.aspx Sermersooq Municipality] {{webarchive. link. (2010-05-06 {{in lang). da
  2. "Population by Localities". Statistical Greenland.
  3. [http://www.arsukfjorden.gl/ arsukfjorden.gl] {{in lang. da − ''frames required''
  4. O'Carroll, Etain. (2005). "Greenland and the Arctic". Lonely Planet.
  5. [http://www.aul.gl/images/stories/pdf/fartplan%2009.pdf Arctic Umiaq Line]{{dead link. (July 2017)
  6. [http://book.airgreenland.com/ Air Greenland booking] {{webarchive. link. (2010-04-22)
  7. [http://bank2.stat.gl/ Statistics Greenland] {{webarchive. link. (July 21, 2011)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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