Franz Josef Land: Difference between revisions
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'''Franz Josef Land''', '''Franz Joseph Land''', or '''Francis Joseph's Land''' ([[Russian language|Russ.]] ''Земля Франца-Иосифа'', ''Zemlya Frantsa-Iosifa'') is an [[archipelago]] located in the far north of [[Russia]]. It is found in the [[Arctic Ocean]] north of [[Novaya Zemlya]] and east of [[Svalbard]], and is administered by [[Arkhangelsk Oblast]]. Franz Josef Land consists of 191 ice-covered islands with a total area of 16,134 km². It has no native inhabitants |
'''Franz Josef Land''', '''Franz Joseph Land''', or '''Francis Joseph's Land''' ([[Russian language|Russ.]] ''Земля Франца-Иосифа'', ''Zemlya Frantsa-Iosifa'') is an [[archipelago]] located in the far north of [[Russia]]. It is found in the [[Arctic Ocean]] north of [[Novaya Zemlya]] and east of [[Svalbard]], and is administered by [[Arkhangelsk Oblast]]. Franz Josef Land consists of 191 ice-covered islands with a total area of 16,134 km². It has no native inhabitants, but several cites have been built by [[USSR|russian]] settlers |
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. they rely solely on walruses meat or [[leopard seal]] meat. [[Also]] every man there talks with a severe russian accent. [http://bringvictory.com | official site of Franz Joseff Land] |
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At latitudes between 80.0° and 81.9° north, it is the most northerly group of islands associated with [[Eurasia]]. The extreme northernmost point is [[Cape Fligely]] on [[Rudolf Island]]. The archipelago is only 900 to 1,110 km (560 to 690 statute miles) from the North Pole, and the northernmost islands are closer to the Pole than any other land except for Canada's [[Ellesmere Island]] and [[Greenland]]. |
At latitudes between 80.0° and 81.9° north, it is the most northerly group of islands associated with [[Eurasia]]. The extreme northernmost point is [[Cape Fligely]] on [[Rudolf Island]]. The archipelago is only 900 to 1,110 km (560 to 690 statute miles) from the North Pole, and the northernmost islands are closer to the Pole than any other land except for Canada's [[Ellesmere Island]] and [[Greenland]]. |
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The officially recognized discovery took place in 1873 by the [[Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition]] led by [[polar explorer]]s [[Julius von Payer]] and [[Karl Weyprecht]]. They named the archipelago in honour of the [[Austro-Hungarian]] emperor [[Franz Joseph I]]. Since the expedition was privately sponsored and not official, these islands have never been part of [[Austria-Hungary|Austria]]. |
The officially recognized discovery took place in 1873 by the [[Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition]] led by [[polar explorer]]s [[Julius von Payer]] and [[Karl Weyprecht]]. They named the archipelago in honour of the [[Austro-Hungarian]] emperor [[Franz Joseph I]]. Since the expedition was privately sponsored and not official, these islands have never been part of [[Austria-Hungary|Austria]]. |
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In 1926 the [[island]]s were taken over by the [[Soviet Union]], and a few persons were settled for research and military purposes. Access by ships is possible only for a few summer weeks and requires a special permit. |
In 1926 the [[island]]s were taken over by the [[Soviet Union]], and a few persons were settled for research and military purposes. Access by ships is possible only for a few summer weeks and requires a special permit if you want to visit the soviet cities. |
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== Geography == |
== Geography == |
Revision as of 19:02, 4 December 2009
80°34′N 54°47′E / 80.567°N 54.783°E Franz Josef Land, Franz Joseph Land, or Francis Joseph's Land (Russ. Земля Франца-Иосифа, Zemlya Frantsa-Iosifa) is an archipelago located in the far north of Russia. It is found in the Arctic Ocean north of Novaya Zemlya and east of Svalbard, and is administered by Arkhangelsk Oblast. Franz Josef Land consists of 191 ice-covered islands with a total area of 16,134 km². It has no native inhabitants, but several cites have been built by russian settlers . they rely solely on walruses meat or leopard seal meat. Also every man there talks with a severe russian accent. | official site of Franz Joseff Land At latitudes between 80.0° and 81.9° north, it is the most northerly group of islands associated with Eurasia. The extreme northernmost point is Cape Fligely on Rudolf Island. The archipelago is only 900 to 1,110 km (560 to 690 statute miles) from the North Pole, and the northernmost islands are closer to the Pole than any other land except for Canada's Ellesmere Island and Greenland.
The archipelago was possibly first discovered by the Norwegian sealers Nils Fredrik Rønnbeck and Aidijärvi aboard the schooner Spidsbergen in 1865 who, according to scarce reports, sailed eastward from Svalbard until they reached a new land, denoted Nordøst-Spitsbergen (Spitsbergen was the contemporary name of Svalbard). It is not known if they went ashore, and the new islands were soon forgotten.
The officially recognized discovery took place in 1873 by the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition led by polar explorers Julius von Payer and Karl Weyprecht. They named the archipelago in honour of the Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz Joseph I. Since the expedition was privately sponsored and not official, these islands have never been part of Austria.
In 1926 the islands were taken over by the Soviet Union, and a few persons were settled for research and military purposes. Access by ships is possible only for a few summer weeks and requires a special permit if you want to visit the soviet cities.
Geography
The archipelago is volcanic, composed of tertiary and jurassic basalts, and though covered mostly by ice it does have outcroppings covered with moss and lichens. The northeastern part of the archipelago is locked in pack ice all year round, however the ice sometimes retreats past the southern islands in the late summer.
The northernmost point in the archipelago, and in the entirety of Asia, is Mys Fligely (Fligely Point), on Ostrov Rudol'fa (Rudolf Island), which reaches as far north as 81°52'N. The largest island is Zemlya Georga (George Land) which measures 69 miles (110 km) from end to end. The highest point in the archipelago is on Ostrov Viner-Neyshtadt (Wiener Neustadt Island) which reaches 2,035 ft (620 m) MSL.
The basalts of the Franz Josef Islands are part of the High Arctic Large Igneous Province. The central cluster of large islands in the midst of the archipelago forms a compact whole, known as Zichy Land, where islands are separated from each other by very narrow sounds that are frozen most of the year.
Geographic divisions
The main geographic subgroups in Franz Joseph Land are:
- Zemlya Zichy (Zichy Land), a large and compact island cluster located in the middle of the archipelago containing ten large islands.
- Belaya Zemlya, a group of three islands in the northeast named Hvidtenland ("White Land") by Fridtjof Nansen.
- Ostrov Viktoriya (Victoria Island), an island which is not part of Franz Josef Land geographically, but is administratively included in it. Lying quite detached, and closer to Svalbard, this island is the westernmost of all Russian Arctic islands.
History
The first recognized exploration of the archipelago was done in 1873 by Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition explorers Karl Weyprecht and Julius von Payer, while their ship was locked in ice trying to find a northeast passage. After exploration of its southern islands, the name was bestowed in honor of Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. The Norwegians Fridtjof Nansen and Hjalmar Johansen passed through the islands in 1895/96 after an aborted attempt to reach the pole. By sheer coincidence, they met British explorer Frederick George Jackson at Northbrook Island in 1896.
In 1914, Russian navigator Valerian Albanov and one crewman, Alexander Konrad, sole survivors of the ill-fated Brusilov expedition, made it to Cape Flora in Northbrook Island, where they knew that Frederick George Jackson had left provisions and had built a hut in a previous Arctic expedition. Albanov and Konrad were timely rescued by Georgy Sedov's ship Saint Foka, while they were preparing for the winter. Their plight was chronicled in Albanov's published diary, In the Land of White Death.
With the introduction of larger steam-powered vessels, a number of sealing expeditions were made to the islands from the last decade of the 19th century, with more than 80% of these coming from Norway. In the late 1920s, both the Soviet Union and Norway claimed the islands. Norwegians called the islands "Fridtjof Nansen Land". The Soviet Union claimed a sector in the Arctic region that included Franz Josef Land and the nearby Victoria Island by a decree of 15 April 1926. Norway was notified on 6 May and officially protested on 19 December, contesting the Soviet claim.
In the following years, Norwegian authorities put much effort into reclaiming Victoria Island and Franz Josef Land. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not wish to take any measures to lay official claims, but had no objection to private initiatives. In 1929, consul Lars Christensen of Sandefjord, a whaling tycoon whose expeditions had annexed Bouvet Island and Peter I Island in Antarctica, funded an expedition of two vessels, S/S Torsnes and M/C Hvalrossen. Upon departure from Tromsø, the crew were given detailed instructions to erect a manned wireless station and leave a wintering crew on Franz Josef Land, and also to claim Victoria Island on behalf of Christensen. The objective was to obtain legal footing in part of the archipelago before the Soviets did. The expedition never reached Franz Josef Land due to severe ice conditions, and while waiting for better conditions they were surpassed by the Soviet icebreaker Georgij Sedov.
On 29 July 1929 Professor Schmidt of the Sedov Expedition raised the Soviet flag at Tikaya Bay, Hooker Island, and declared that Franz Josef Land was a part of the Soviet Union. Norway did not officially contest the Soviet annexation of Franz Josef Land itself, but continued their efforts regarding Victoria Island. The dispute over Victoria Island was ended when the Soviets annexed the island in September 1932.
In July 1931, a German airship marked a milestone in Russian polar exploration. The Graf Zeppelin travelled from Berlin to Hooker Island, by way of Leningrad (St. Petersburg). It delivered 300 kg (650 lbs) of commemorative mail and met with the icebreaker 'Malygin'. After traveling east along the 81st parallel to Severnaya Zemlya, it returned to Hooker Island and began a groundbreaking aerial survey of the archipelago, flying as far north as Rudolf island.
During the Cold War years, the polar regions were a hot buffer zone between the USA and Soviet Union, and many points in the Arctic became key strategic locations. The islands were declared as a national security area from the 1930s until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and were therefore off-limits to foreigners. An airfield was built at Greem Bell to serve as a staging base for Russian bomber aircraft, and training missions were quite common between Franz Josef Land, the mainland, and Novaya Zemlya. Though the islands were militarily sensitive, a cruise ship visited in 1971.
In 2005, the Austrian geographer Christoph Höbenreich led the Payer-Weyprecht-Memorial expedition to Franz Josef Land. The Austrian-Russian team followed the historic footsteps of explorer Julius Payer by ski and pulkasleds.
From 15 June 2009 the archipelago became part of the newly established Russkaya Arktika National Park.
Weather
In January the normal daily low is −15 °C (5 °F) and the high is −10.5 °C (13 °F). In July the normal daily low is 0 °C (32 °F) and daily high is 2.2 °C (36 °F). The annual mean temperature is −12.8 °C (9 °F). In a 30-year period, the highest temperature recorded has been 13 °C (55.4 °F) and lowest −54 °C (-64.2 °F). Precipitation is common year round, but is most common during the transition seasons of late spring and autumn. Fog is very common in the late summer.
Wildlife
The ecology of Franz Josef Land is influenced by its harsh cold climate, but the region nevertheless supports a diversity of biota. Native wildlife consists mostly of Walrus, Arctic foxes and Polar bears. Historic accounts from the late 1800s indicate the presence of Polar bears.[1] The Polar bear population in this region, as the case with other Arctic sub-regions, is genetically distinct from other polar bear sub-populations.[2] Common birds include kittiwakes, fulmars, and gulls. Beluga whales are often spotted in the waters. Reindeer antlers have been found on Hooker Island, suggesting that herds reached here up to about 1,300 years ago during a warmer climate.
Islands
Important islands
The following list describes some important islands in Franz Josef Land and their significance. The Russian name is quoted first. [3]
- Zemlya Aleksandry (Alexandra Land). Is the westernmost island in the archipelago. It has an area of approximately 411 square miles.[4] Nagurskoye base, named after Jan Nagórski, (80°49′N 47°25′E / 80.817°N 47.417°E) has served as one of the most important meteorological stations in the archipelago during the Cold War. It has a 1,500 m (4,900 ft) snow runway. An Antonov An-72 cargo aircraft crashed while landing at Nagurskoye on 23 December 1996.
- Ostrov Rudol'fa (Prince Rudolf Island) is the northernmost island. Teplitz Bay (81°48′N 57°56′E / 81.800°N 57.933°E) is a camp site that served as a staging point for numerous polar expeditions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Due to the steep terrain, the only airfield access is a small snow strip 300 m (1000 ft) up a glacier at (81°47'N 58°45'E).
- Ostrov Kheysa / G.M.O.Imyenya Z.T.Krenkel'a. (Heiss Island) Krenkel (80°37′N 58°03′E / 80.617°N 58.050°E) is the site of a meteorological station.
- Ostrov Greem-Bell (Graham Bell Island). This large island is home to a Cold War outpost and to the airfield Greem-Bell (81°09′N 64°17′E / 81.150°N 64.283°E), the largest airfield in the archipelago. It has a runway 2,100 m (7,000 ft) long. Russian cargo and fighter aircraft have regularly landed here since the 1950s.
- Ostrov Gukera (Hooker Island). Tikhaya Bay (80°20′N 52°47′E / 80.333°N 52.783°E) was the site of a major base for polar expeditions, and the location of a meteorological station from 1929 to 1963. It was visited by the Graf Zeppelin airship in July 1931 during a landmark aerial survey. Staff were marooned here from 1941 to 1945 during World War II. A graveyard and two modern buildings exist. A large seabird colony exists near Tikhaya Bay at Skala Rubini (Rubini Rock, 80°18′N 52°50′E / 80.300°N 52.833°E).
- Ostrov Nortbruk (Northbrook Island). This island is the most accessible location in the island group and formed the main base for polar expeditions in the late 19th and early 20th century. The camp (79°57′N 50°05′E / 79.950°N 50.083°E) at Cape Flora is historically significant. A chance encounter between explorers Fridtjof Nansen and Frederick George Jackson took place here in 1896. In 1904 coal was mined about 150 m (500 ft) up the slopes by explorers wintering over after their ship sank at Rudolf Island.
- Ostrov Dzheksona (Jackson Island). Cape Norway (80°12′N 55°37′E / 80.200°N 55.617°E) was where Fridtjof Nansen and Hjalmar Johansen wintered in 1895-96 after failing to reach the North Pole. A hut and a wooden post still remain.
- Ostrov Mak-Klintoka (McClintock Island)
- Ostrov Aldzher (Alger Island). The wintering site of the failed American Evelyn Baldwin expedition of 1901.
- Ostrov Nansena (Nansen Island). This island is located in the center of a cluster of islands of similar size separated from each other by narrow sounds.
- Zemlya Vilcheka (Wilczek Land [5]). Cape Geller (80°46′N 59°36′E / 80.767°N 59.600°E) was the wintering site for two members of the 1899 Welle expedition waiting for the team's return from the pole.
- Ostrov Gallya (Hall Island) was on August 30, 1873, the first of the Franz Josef Islands to be discovered. A small camp was built at Mys Tegetkhof (Cape Tegethoff, 80°05′N 58°01′E / 80.083°N 58.017°E) by the Walter Wellman expedition in 1898-99 and contains a marker honoring the discovery of the archipelago.
- Zemlya Georga (Prince George Land [6]) This is the largest island of the group measuring 69 miles (110 km) from end to end.
- Ostrov Viner-Neyshtadt (Wiener Neustadt Island). The highest point in the archipelago reaching 2,035 ft (620 m) above Sea Level (620 m) is on this island.
- Ostrov Yeva-Liv ( Eva Island) This island is the largest of the Belaya Zemlya subgroup.
Other islands
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Names of the islands
Very few of the islands in Franz Josef Land have Russian names. Most bear names of German, British, American, Italian and, in one case, Norwegian origin.
- Most of the islands were named by the 1874 Weyprecht and Payer Expedition, who used names in honor of Austro-Hungarian royalty and aristocratic dynasties, as well as the names of noblemen who had contributed to finance their venture. For some reason, unlike in the rest of Russia where geographic features named after the nobility were renamed, the aristocratic names of the Franz Josef Archipelago were preserved during the Soviet era.
- The Norwegian name "Hvidtenland" (Russian: Belaya Zemlya) was coined by the 1893 Fridtjof Nansen’s Expedition. Later it became apparent that it was a group of three islands.
- The 1895 Fredrick G. Jackson Expedition named some islands after British Arctic explorers and also after personalities of the Royal Geographical Society, the sponsors of the expedition.
- The 1901 Baldwin-Ziegler North Pole Expedition named certain islands after American scientists and explorers, sometimes renaming islands that had already been previously named, like La Ronciere Island, which they renamed "Whitney Island".
- Finally there are a few islands that were named by the 1905 Luigi Amedeo Duke of the Abruzzi Italian Polar Expedition, like the Pontremoli Islands.
See also
Bibliography
- Andreas Umbreit, SPITSBERGEN: Svalbard, Franz Josef Land, Jan Mayen, Bradt Travel Guides, U.K, 2005
- Valerian Albanov. In the Land of White Death.
- Karl Weyprecht, Die Metamorphosen des Polareises. Österr.-Ung. Arktische Expedition 1872-1874 (The Metamorphosis of Polar Ice. The Austro-Hungarian Polar Expedition of 1872-1874)
- Julius von Payer, New Lands within the Arctic Circle (1876)
- Andreas Pöschek, Geheimnis Nordpol. Die Österreichisch-Ungarische Nordpolexpedition 1872-1874. - Wien: 1999 (Available as PDF)
- William Barr, The First Tourist Cruise in the Soviet Arctic.
- I. Gjertz, B. Mørkved, "Norwegian Arctic Expansionism, Victoria Island (Russia) and the Bratvaag Expedition", Arctic, Vol. 51, No. 4 (December 1998), P. 330-335 (Available as PDF)
- H. Straub, Die Entdeckung des Franz-Joseph-Landes (discovery report), Styria-Verlag, Austria 1990.
- Christoph Höbenreich (2007): "EXPEDITION FRANZ JOSEF LAND. In der Spur der Entdecker nach Norden". Expeditionsbook on the Payer-Weyprecht-Memorialexpedition 2005, the Austro-Hungarian Northpolar-Expedition 1872-1874, the journey of the icebreaker Kapitan Dranitsyn 2006 und an expedition-chronic (publishing house Frederking-Thaler, Munich, ISBN 978-3-89405-499-1.
References
- ^ Ken Catford. 2007. One summer at Khabarova, Polar Publishing
- ^ C. Michael Hogan (2008) Polar Bear: Ursus maritimus, Globaltwitcher.com, ed. Nicklas Stromberg
- ^ [1], [2], [3]and [4]
- ^ Exploring Polar Frontiers By William James, p. 9
- ^ Royal Society Island
External links
- Names in Russian
- Payer-Weyprecht Memorial-Expedition Franz Josef Land 2005 (DE)
- Österreich-Lexikon
- List of Arctic expeditions
- Österr.-ungarische Expedition 1872-74, "Unknown land becomes visible in the fog"
- Northern tours to F.J.Land
- Polar literature (In Norwegian)
- Names and locations of islands of Franz-Joseph-Land
- Geographical search engine for names of Franz-Joseph-Land islands
- [7] World's northernmost Christian church
- Franz Josef Land - Russian Realm of the Ice Bear
Maps