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Baker Island (Alaska)

Coordinates: 55°21′43″N 133°34′58″W / 55.36194°N 133.58278°W / 55.36194; -133.58278
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Baker Island is an island in the Alexander Archipelago of southeastern Alaska, United States. It lies off the central west coast of Prince of Wales Island. Its closest significant island neighbors are Noyes Island to its northwest, Lulu Island directly to its north, and Suemez Island across Bucareli Bay to its southeast. The smaller San Juan Bautista Island and St. Ignace Island separate it from Prince of Wales Island and its nearest community, Craig. The island has a land area of 44.44 square miles (115.1 km2) [1] and is uninhabited.

The first European to sight the island was Aleksei Chirikov in 1741.[2] It was named by William Healy Dall of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey in 1879 after Marcus Baker (1849–1903).[3]

References

  1. ^ Islands by land area: United Nations Environment Programme
  2. ^ Golder, Frank Alfred and Leonhard Stejneger (1922). Bering’s voyages: an account of the efforts of the Russians to determine the relation of Asia and America. New York: American Geographical Society.
  3. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Baker Island

55°21′43″N 133°34′58″W / 55.36194°N 133.58278°W / 55.36194; -133.58278