Henrietta Island

Henrietta Island (Russian: Остров Генриетты, tr. Ostrov Genriyetty; Yakut: Хенриетта Aрыыта, romanized: Xenriyetta Arııta) is the northernmost island of the De Long archipelago in the East Siberian Sea. Administratively it belongs to Yakutia of the Russian Federation.

Henrietta Island
Native name:
  • Остров Генриетты (Russian)
  • Хенриетта Aрыыта (Yakut)
View of the shores of Henrietta Island.
Henrietta is the northernmost island of the De Long group
Geography
LocationArctic Ocean
Coordinates77°06′N 156°30′E
ArchipelagoDe Long Islands
Area12 km2 (4.6 sq mi)
Length4 km (2.5 mi)
Width4 km (2.5 mi)
Highest elevation312 m (1024 ft)
Highest pointIce cap HP
Administration
Russia
Federal SubjectYakutia
Demographics
Populationuninhabited
Location of the De Long Islands.

Geography

Henrietta is roughly circular in shape and its diameter is about 6 km. Cape Melville (Mys Mel'villya), Henrietta's northernmost landhead, is the northernmost point of the De Long Islands, as well as the northernmost land thousands of miles east and west.[1] The closest land is Jeannette Island, located to the ESE.

Ice cap

Almost half of the island is covered by a central ice cap that reaches its maximum height at 312 m. The ice cap area has a surface of approximately 6 km² and occupies the highest south-eastern part of the island. The southern and eastern edges of the ice cap are fringed by 40 to 50 m tall icy cliffs rising above the underlying basalt plateau.

Henrietta Island Landsat picture

Geology

Henrietta Island consists of folded Middle Paleozoic basaltic lava and proximal volcanogenic turbidites overlain by Cenozoic clastic sedimentary rocks. The Paleozoic strata have been intruded by numerous sills, dikes, and sheets of basalts, andesite-basalts, and porphyritic diorite. The basalts and porphyritic diorite have been dated by potassium–argon dating method to be about 310-450 million years old and the porphyritic diorite has been dated by the argon–argon dating method to be about 400-440 million years old. Gritstones that are part of the Cenozoic clastic sedimentary rocks contain fragments of underlying Paleozoic strata along with significantly older gneisses, granites, quartzites, and schists.[2][3][4]

History

American explorer and US Navy lieutenant commander George W. De Long set out in 1879 aboard the Jeannette, hoping to reach Wrangel Island and to discover open seas in the Arctic Ocean near the North Pole. However, the ship entered an ice pack near Herald Island in September 1879 and became trapped. The vessel drifted several hundred miles with the ice, passing north of Wrangel Island. In May 1881 it approached Jeannette Island and Henrietta Island. According to The Annual Report of the Secretary of the Navy, for the Year 1882 (p. 16), "A sled party landed, hoisted the national ensign, and took possession in the name of the United States".[5][6] The excursion, led by George W. Melville, landed on June 2 or 3, constructed a cairn, and placed inside it a record of their visit.

During the 1914–1915 Imperial Russian Arctic Ocean Hydrographic Expedition led by Boris Vilkitsky, the Vaygach approached Jeannette Island with the intention of mapping Jeannette and Henrietta Islands, but heavy ice blocked the approach.[7] In 1916 the Russian ambassador in London issued an official notice to the effect that the Imperial government considered Henrietta, along with other Arctic islands, integral parts of the Russian Empire. This territorial claim was later maintained by the Soviet Union.

A Soviet polar station was established on Henrietta Island in 1937 in an expedition by Rudolf Samoylovich, and closed in 1963. Henrietta Island served in 1979 as the starting point for a Soviet expedition to the North Pole on skis.[8]

Some U.S. individuals assert American ownership of Henrietta Island, and others of the De Long group, based on the 1881 discovery and claim. However, according to the U.S. Department of State in 2003, the U.S. government has never claimed Henrietta Island.[9]

Physical description

Henrietta Island was described by the sled party from the De Long expedition in the following terms: "The island is a desolate rock, surmounted by a snow-cap, which feeds several discharging glaciers on its east face. Dovekies nesting in the face of the rock are the only signs of game. A little moss, some grass, and a handful of rock were brought back as trophies. The cliffs are inaccessible, because of their steepness."[10]

Henrietta Island as seen from space
Sketch by Lt. Cmdr. George DeLong on 25 May 1881, depicting Henrietta Island, north of Siberia

References

  1. Mys Mel'villya
  2. Kos’ko, M.K., and G.V. Trufanov, 2002, Middle Cretaceous to Eopleistocene Sequences on the New Siberian Islands: an approach to interpret offshore seismic. Marine and Petroleum Geology. vol. 19, no. 7, pp. 901–919.
  3. Vinogradov, V.A., G.I. Kameneva, and G.P. Yavshits, 1975, About the Hyperborean platform in view of the new data on geological structure the Henrietta island. Arctic tectonics. vol. 1, Leningrad, USSR.
  4. Vinogradov V.A., E.A. Gusev, and B.G. Lopatin, 2006, Structure of the Russian Eastern Arctic Shelf in R.A. Scott and D.K. Thurston, eds., pp. 90–98, Proceedings of the Fourth International conference on Arctic margins, OCS study MMS no. 2006-003, Mineral Management Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, Anchorage, Alaska.
  5. Naval Historical Center, 2003a, A Lengthy Deployment: The Jeannette Expedition in Arctic Waters as Described in Annual Reports of the Secretary of the Navy, 1880–1884 Archived 2008-04-07 at the Wayback Machine Last visited May 26, 2008.
  6. Naval Historical Center, 2003b, Jeannette Arctic Expedition, 1879–1881 — Overview and Selected Images. Last visited May 26, 2008
  7. Starokadomski, L.M. and O.M. Cattley, 1919, "Vilkitski's North-East Passage, 1914–15". The Geographical Journal. vol. 54, no. 6, pp. 367–375 (December 1919) (requires JSTOR access).
  8. Adventure Club, nd, 25 лет с Северным полюсом!, a description of the 1979 polar ski trek from the Adventure Club (Russian). Last visited May 26, 2008.
  9. Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, US State Department, 2003, Status of Wrangel and other Arctic islands Last visited May 10, 2009.
  10. De Long, Emma, ed., 1883, The Voyage of the Jeannette: The Ship and Ice Journals of George W. De Long, Volume II. Houghton Mifflin and Company. Last visited May 26, 2008 at the Internet Archive).
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