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Sverdrup Island (Kara Sea)

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Russian island in the Kara Sea For the archipelago in Nunavut, Canada, see Sverdrup Islands. For the island in Greenland, see Sverdrup Island (Greenland).
Sverdrup Island
Native name: Остров Свердрупа
Location of Sverdrup Island in the Kara Sea
Geography
LocationKara Sea
Coordinates74°35′N 79°27′E / 74.583°N 79.450°E / 74.583; 79.450
Area70 km (27 sq mi)
Length15 km (9.3 mi)
Width10 km (6 mi)
Highest elevation33 m (108 ft)
Administration
Russia
KraiKrasnoyarsk Krai
OkrugTaymyr Autonomous Okrug
Demographics
Population0

Sverdrup Island (Russian: Остров Свердрупа) is an isolated Russian island in the southern region of the Kara Sea.

Sverdrup Island is named after Norwegian polar explorer and ship Captain Otto Sverdrup who sighted it on 18 August 1893 during the Fram Expedition led by Fridtjof Nansen.

Geography

It belongs to the Taymyr Autonomous Okrug of the Krasnoyarsk Krai administrative division of the Russian Federation.

The island is located 120 km north of Dikson on the Siberian coast. The nearest land mass is the Arkticheskiy Institut Islands, about 90 km to the northeast. The island has a wide bay opening towards the west. Its length is 15 km and its maximum width 10 km.

The sea surrounding Sverdrup Island is covered with pack ice with some polynias in the long winter and there are many ice floes even in the summer.

Flora and fauna

Sverdrup Island is covered with tundra vegetation. There are a few mammals, such as the lemming and arctic fox; among the birds the dunlin and some species of Charadriiformes deserve mention.

The island is part of the Great Arctic State Nature Reserve – the largest nature reserve of Russia and one of the biggest in the world.

See also

References

  1. pp. 154–157 Fridtjof Nansen: Farthest North. vol 1, Harper & Bros. New York & London 1897
  2. Dolgano-Nenetskiy Location
  3. P.S. Tomkovich (1998). "Breeding conditions for waders in Russian tundras in 1993" (PDF). Int. Wader Studies. 10: 124–131.
  4. Nature Reserve. bigarctic.ru
Russia Islands of the Kara Sea (Russian Arctic)
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