Franz Josef Land

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Location of Franz Josef Land

Franz Josef Land (russ. Земля Франца Иосифа, Zemlja 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 Spitsbergen, and is administered by Arkhangelsk Oblast.
At latitudes between 80.0° and 81.9° north, it forms the most northerly group of islands in Europe and the whole of Eurasia. The extreme point is Cape Fligeli (mys Fligeli) on Rudolf-Island (ostrow Rudolfa). The archipelago is only 900 to 1110 km (560 to 690 statute miles) from the North Pole, closer than all land masses except for Canada's Ellesmere Island and Greenland. Franz Josef Land consists of 191 ice-covered islands and is largely uninhabited.

The archipelago was discovered on August 30, 1873 by the Austro-Hungarian Polar expedition of Payer/Weyprecht, financed by Н. Wilczek. After exploration of its southern islands it was named to the honour of the Austrian emperor Franz Joseph I. In 1895 (and partly in 1896) Fridtjof Nansen supplemented the explorations. Old maps called the island group "Fridtjof Nansen Land". In 1926 the islands were taken over by the Soviet Union, and a few inhabitants came for research and military purposes. Access by ships is possible only for a few summer weeks and requires a special permit.

Contents

Characteristics

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 Fligeli (Fligeli Point), on Ostrov Rudol'fa (Rudolfa Island), which reaches as far north as 81°52'N. The largest island is Zemlya Georga (Georga Island) which measures 69 miles (110 km) from end to end. The highest point in the archipelago is on Zemlya Viner-Neyshtadt (Viner-Neyshtadt Island) which reaches 2,035 ft (620 m) MSL.

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 2.2 °C (36 °F). The annual mean temperature of −12.8 °C (9 °F). In a 30-year period, the highest temperature recorded has been 10 °C (50 °F) and lowest −48.9 °C (-56 °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. From data for Nagurskoye.

Wildlife

Native wildlife consists mostly of walrus, Arctic foxes, and polar bears. Common birds include kittiwakes, fulmars, and gulls. Beluga whales are often spotted in the waters. Caribou antlers have been found on Hooker Island, suggesting that herds reached here up to about 1,300 years ago during a warmer climate.

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Places of significance

The following list describes important islands in Franz Josef Land and their significance.

History

The archipelago was discovered 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". The name was bestowed in honor of Austrian emperor Franz Joseph of Austria. The Norwegians Fridtjof Nansen and Hjalmar Johansen passed through the islands in 1886 during an attempt to reach the pole. The islands then became a target of opportunity for explorers trying to reach the pole. By sheer coincidence, explorers Fridtjof Nansen and Frederick George Jackson met at Northbrook Island in 1896.

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). Here it delivered 650 pounds (300 kg) of commemorative mail and met with the icebreaker 'Malygin'. After travelling 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 Ostrov Rudolfa.

During the Cold War years, the polar regions were a hot buffer zone between the U.S. and Russia, and many points in the arctic became key strategic locations. The islands were declared one of many national security areas from the 1930s to 1991, and were 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.

See also

External links

See also: Franz Josef Land, 1873, 1895, 1926, Antonov, Archipelago, Arctic Ocean, Arkhangelsk