Andrée Land (Greenland)
History
The peninsula was named by A.G. Nathorst on his 1899 expedition after Swedish Arctic explorer Salomon August Andrée, who had made an attempt to reach the North Pole by balloon in 1897. One of the aims of Nathorst's 1899 venture was to search for traces of the lost Andrée's Arctic Balloon Expedition, whose fate was unknown until 1930, when it became known that Andrée had crash-landed on the pack ice and died on Kvitøya.
The region was later visited and accurately mapped during Lauge Koch's expeditions to East Greenland.
Geography
Andrée Land is located about 100 km inland from the Foster Bay of the Greenland Sea. It is bound by Kaiser Franz Joseph Fjord in the southeast, and two branches of it, the Isfjord —beyond which lies Fraenkel Land— in the SW and the Geologfjord, beyond which lies Strindberg Land, in the east. Small and rocky Bjorne Island (Bjørneø) is located off the easternmost end of Andrée Land, north of Cape Weber.
The peninsula is attached to the mainland on its northwestern side, with the Gerard De Geer Glacier in its western boundary, beyond which lies Louise Boyd Land in the west and J. L. Mowinckel Land in the northwest. The Adolf Hoel Glacier flows in the north and the Nunatak Glacier in the northeast. A number of valleys cut across the peninsula; the most important are the Grejsdal in the middle, the Eremitdal further north and the Rendal in the west.
Mountains
Andrée Land is mountainous. The highest point is 2,360 m (7,740 ft) high Margaretatop, also known as Margarita Spids, located in the southern part. The Lacroix Mountains (Lacroix Bjerge) are a mountain range at the SW end rising above the Isfjord. Arnold Escher Land is a nunatak group to the NW of Andrée Land. Some of the other noteworthy peaks are:
- Aappalaatsiaq (1,998 m)
- Agardh Bjerg (1,820 m)
- Ajorpoq (1,498 m)
- Alpebjerg (2,052 m)
- Devil's Castle (Teufelsschloss) (1,303 m). Located at the SE end of Andrée Land on the fjord shore, opposite Cape Petersens, the NW extremity of Ymer Island.
- Djævleborg (1,800 m)
- Knivbjerg (1,987 m)
- Marcia Bjerg (1,460 m)
- Målebjerg (1,842 m)
- Mørkebjerg (1,497 m)
- Tårnfjeld (2,163 m)
See also
References
- ^ "Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland". Geological Survey of Denmark. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
- ^ "Andrée Land". Mapcarta. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
- ^ Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 120
- ^ "Bjørneø". Mapcarta. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
- ^ "Grejsdalen". Mapcarta. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
- ^ Google Earth
External links
- Media related to Andree Land at Wikimedia Commons
- Den grønlandske Lods - Sejladsanvisninger Østgrønland Archived 2020-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
- Glacitectonic deformations in East Greenland