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Peary Land
Peninsula in northern Greenland
Peninsula in northern Greenland
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Peary Land |
| image_name | Greenland.A2004208.1810.250m.jpg |
| image_caption | July 2004 NASA satellite image of northern Peary Land including Cape Morris Jesup. |
| image_size | 300px |
| map | Greenland |
| location | Northeast Greenland |
| coordinates | |
| area_km2 | 57000 |
| length_km | 360 |
| width_km | 200 |
| highest_mount | Helvetia Tinde |
| elevation_m | 1929 |
| waterbody | Victoria FjordArctic Ocean |
| Independence Fjord | |
| country | Greenland (Denmark) |
| population | 0 |
Independence Fjord
Peary Land is a peninsula in northern Greenland, extending into the Arctic Ocean. It reaches from Victoria Fjord in the west to Independence Fjord in the south and southeast, and to the Arctic Ocean in the north, with Cape Morris Jesup, the northernmost point of Greenland's mainland, and Cape Bridgman in the northeast.
History
Ancient settlements
Peary Land was historically inhabited by three separate cultures, during which times the climate was milder than presently. It contains the northernmost ruins on earth, an archaeological site found in 2023.
- Independence I culture, Paleo-Eskimo (around 2000 BC, oldest remains dating from 2400 BC)
- Independence II culture, Paleo-Eskimo (800 BC to 200 BC)
- Thule culture (ancestral to the modern Inuit, around AD 1300)
Peary's explorations
The area is named after Robert E. Peary, who first explored it during his expedition of 1891 to 1892. Originally, Peary Land was believed to be an island, separated from the main island by the so-called Peary Channel, an assumed connection between Nordenskiöld Fjord and Independence Fjord which in fact does not exist. Ludvig Mylius-Erichsen (1872–1907), the ill-fated leader of the Denmark expedition, searched in vain for the Peary Channel in 1907 and was misled to his death by existing maps. Knud Rasmussen's First Thule Expedition confirmed in 1912 that Peary Land is a peninsula. There are more than 200 km of dry land up to 1500 m high between Nordenskiöld Fjord and Independence Fjord.
Research and mining
There are two Arctic research stations on Jørgen Brønlund Fjord: Brønlundhus (erected in 1948) and Cape Harald Moltke (erected in 1972). Both stations were built on the initiative of Eigil Knuth and have been the basis for many scientific expeditions. Cape Harald Moltke station was built later in connection with use of the natural runway east of Jørgen Brønlund Fjord mouth. The stations are located 10 km from each other on either side of the fjord, with Brønlundhus on the western side. Travel between them in summer is by boat, depending on ice conditions. Since the death of Eigil Knuth, the stations have been administered by the Peary Land Foundation. Today, Brønlundhus can be characterised as a museum, with a collection of artefacts from polar explorations.
In 1993, zinc and lead deposits were discovered in the Citronen Fjord. They are deemed the largest yet unexploited zinc deposits in the world, and the exploitation of the Citronen mine is in the preparation phase. Important zinc and barium deposits have also been found at Navarana Fjord.
Geography
Peary Land is bounded by the Lincoln Sea (west of Cape Morris Jesup) and Wandel Sea of the Arctic Ocean in the north. Oodaaq island, the northernmost point of land of the world, lies off the north coast. Frederick E. Hyde Fjord, which cuts into Peary Land from the east 150 km deep, divides it into Northern Peary Land and Southern Peary Land. Cape Eiler Rasmussen is the easternmost point. The coastline is deeply indented by smaller fjords, such as G.B. Schley Fjord and Hellefisk Fjord in the east, and Sands Fjord, Benedict Fjord, J.P. Koch Fjord, De Long Fjord and Weyprecht Fjord in the west. Børglum River, the largest river in Greenland, is located in Peary Land.
Peary Land is not part of any municipality but belongs to the Northeast Greenland National Park. The size of the region is about 375 km from east to west and 200 km from north to south, with an estimated area of 57000 sqkm. It is only a bit more than 700 km south of the North Pole.
Peary Land is not covered by an ice cap because the air is too dry to produce snow. Precipitation levels are so low (only about 25 mm per year) that most of its surface is polar desert. Located mostly north of the 82°N parallel, it contains the most northerly ice-free region of the world, mostly in Southern Peary Land (such as Melville Land and Herlufsholm Strand) on the northern side of Independence Fjord. It was not covered by glaciers during the most recent ice age. However, in its western part, there is the Hans Tausen Ice Cap with ice at least 344 m thick.
Mountains
Peary Land is mountainous; the highest elevation is Helvetia Tinde reaching up to 1929 m in the heavily glaciated and little-explored Roosevelt Range, the northernmost mountain range in the world. The 1737 m high Wistar Bjerg in the Nordkrone and the 1433 m high Stjernebannertinde, highest point of the H.H. Benedict Range (a subrange of the Roosevelt Range).
| [[File:North Greenland section-txu-pclmaps-oclc-8322829 a 1.jpg | thumb | 300px | Map of Far Northeastern Greenland.]] | [[File:Pearyland.svg | thumb | 300px | Peary Land - location within Greenland]] |
|---|
Flora and fauna
Musk oxen and Peary Land collared lemmings are supported by the sparse vegetation, which covers only about 5% of the surface, mostly in the area around Jørgen Brønlund Fjord. However, plants are found all the way to the northernmost limits of land on Kaffeklubben Island. Other fauna include Arctic fox, polar wolf, polar bear, and Arctic hare. In former times there were also caribou, but the last live caribou reported from Northern Greenland were seen in Hall Land in 1922.
The flora include 33 species of flowering plants.
One to two million years ago, when climates were warmer, trees such as larch, black spruce, birch, yew, and thuja grew in northernmost Peary Land.
References
References
- "Frederick E. Hyde Fjord". Mapcarta.
- Gibbens, Sarah. (2024-05-08). "The last flower at the top of the world—and the perilous journey to reach it". [[National Geographic Partners]].
- (1925). "The Question of Peary Channel". Geographical Review.
- [[Georg Carl Amdrup. G. Amdrup]]: ''[https://archive.org/stream/meddelelseromgrn411913de#page/n15/mode/2up Report on the Danmark Expedition to the North-East Coast of Greenland 1906–1908]''. In: ''Meddelelser om Grønland'' 41, 1913, pp. 1–270
- "DPC - for researchers - Logistics - Kap Harald Moltke".
- [https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/projects/citronen-lead-zinc-project/ Citronen Lead-Zinc Project]
- [https://www.arctictoday.com/shipping-northern-greenlandic-mine-feasible-owner-says/ Shipping from northern Greenlandic mine feasible, owner says]
- [https://www.govmin.gl/images/Documents/Project_Opportunity/Project_opportunity_01_-_Zinc_potential_at_Navarana_Fjord.pdf Zinc potential at Navarana Fjord -Greenlands minerals authority]
- [https://www.academia.edu/7063388/Arctic_astronomy Liviu Ivanescu, ''Arctic astronomy'']
- "Den grønlandske Lods - Geodatastyrelsen".
- [https://collections.dartmouth.edu/arctica-beta/html/EA14-13.html Geographical Items on North Greenland Encyclopedia Arctica, vol. 14]
- ''Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute'', p. 130
- "Archaeological site".
- Meldgaard, Morten. "Greenland Caribou : Zoogeography, Taxonomy, and Population Dynamics".
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