Английская Википедия:Geography of Franz Josef Land

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Файл:Franz Josef Land location-en.svg
Location of Franz Josef Land
Файл:Map of Franz Josef Land-en.svg
Map of Franz Josef Land
Файл:Northbrookisland fj.jpg
Northbrook Island

The Geography of Franz Josef Land refers to an island group belonging to Arkhangelsk Oblast of Russia. It is situated in the Barents Sea of the Arctic, north of Novaya Zemlya and east of Svalbard. At latitudes between 80.0° and 81.9° north, it is the most northerly group of islands associated with Eurasia. The extreme northernmost point is Cape Fligely on Rudolf Island. The archipelago consists of 191 ice-covered islands with a total area of Шаблон:Convert. It is currently uninhabited. The archipelago is only Шаблон:Convert from the North Pole, and the northernmost islands are closer to the Pole than any other land except for Canada's Ellesmere Island and Greenland. The largest island is Zemlya Georga (George Land) which measures Шаблон:Convert from end to end. The highest point in the archipelago is on Ostrov Viner-Neyshtadt (Wiener Neustadt Island) which reaches Шаблон:Convert above sea level. The central cluster of large islands in the midst of the archipelago forms a compact whole, known as Zichy Land, where islands are separated from each other by very narrow sounds that are frozen most of the year.

During the period 1926 and 1932 Franz Josef Land also known in Russian as Zemlya Franca Josepha became a part of the Soviet Union and is included under the Arkhangelsk Oblast. In 1994, it was declared the Sakasnik Nature Reserve covering an area of Шаблон:Convert including area of the sea surrounding the land but with restricted entry only on special permit which is not given easily; out of this area, Шаблон:Convert area around the military base of Nagurskoye on the Alexandra Land is totally out of bounds.Шаблон:Sfn

Landforms

Файл:Champ insel geode.jpg
Cannonball concretion (spherical rocks) on Champ Island, Franz Josef Land

The archipelago is located at the nearest about Шаблон:Convert from the North Pole, far beyond the Polar Circle. The group's 191 islands measure Шаблон:Convert. They extend over a length of Шаблон:Convert in the north–south direction and Шаблон:Convert in the east–west direction.Шаблон:Sfn There are flat mountains in the range of Шаблон:Convert above sea level. The general lie of the land is in the elevation range between Шаблон:Convert in the north and Шаблон:Convert in the south with Wilczek Land forming the highest land mass at an elevation of Шаблон:Convert.Шаблон:Sfn The islands are covered with glaciers to the extent of 85%, with no land breaks, and the land area of all the islands is only about 20%, with a coastline measuring Шаблон:Convert.Шаблон:Sfn There are multiple icebergs, with limited length of less than Шаблон:Convert and some of them are similar to the Antarctic tabular iceberg. Air borne radar measurements have recorded an ice layer of Шаблон:Convert in Graham Bell and Hall Islands; the thick ice cover on the islands is a phenomenon of the last 1000 years. As a result the reindeer population has not survived in these islands. Moving down to the coastal region, where the ice disappears, many lakes and ponds are seen. But as this area is very limited only small streams are noted, the largest extendigng only Шаблон:Convert in length on Prince George Island.Шаблон:Sfn[1]

Islands

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View near the Polar Geophysical Observatory on Heiss Island

Franz Josef Land comprises some 191 more or less ice-covered islands with a total area of about Шаблон:Convert; the area varying with the fluctuation of glaciers during rising or receding stages. Its two largest islands are Prince George Island and Wilczek Land, the former lies to the west and the latter to the east in the archipelago.Шаблон:Sfn Two geographic subgroups in Franz Joseph Land are Zemlya Zichy (Zichy Land), a large and compact glaciarized island cluster located in the middle of the archipelago containing ten large islands, and Belaya Zemlya, a group of three islands in the northeast named Hvidtenland ("White Land") by Fridtjof Nansen. Through the middle of these two groups runs the wide strait which von Payer named the Austrian Strait, in honour of his country.[2] Rudolph Island is the nearest to the North Pole.Шаблон:Sfn The largest island, Zemlya Georga (George Land) measures Шаблон:Convert from end to end. The highest point in the archipelago is on Ostrov Viner-Neyshtadt (Wiener Neustadt Island) which reaches Шаблон:Convert above sea level.

The archipelago is divided in at least three subgroups:

The central islands again split in the minor groups:

Largest islands

Name Sub group Area (km2) Elevation (m)
Alexandra Land Western islands 1050 382
Prince George Land Western islands 2821 416
Bruce Island Western islands 191 301
Northbrook Island Western islands 254 344
Prince Rudolf Island Northern islands 297 461
Karl-Alexander Island Northern islands 329 365
Rainer Island Northern islands 140 284
Jackson Island Northern islands 510 481
Payer Island Northern islands 151 452
Greely Island Northern islands 149 447
Salisbury Island Northern islands 960 450
Ziegler Island Northern islands 448 554
Wiener Neustadt Island Northern islands 237 620
Luigi Island Northern islands 371 442
Champ Island Northern islands 374 507
Heiss Island Northern islands 132 242
Hall Island Southern islands 1049 502
MacKlintok Island Southern islands 612 521
Salm Island Southern islands 344 343
Hooker Island Southern islands 460 576
Eva-Liv Island Eastern islands 288 381
La Ronciere Island Eastern islands 478 431
Wilczek Land Eastern islands 2203 606
Graham Bell Island Eastern islands 1557 509

Western islands

Файл:Map of Western Franz Josef Land-en.svg
Western islands of Franz Josef Land

The western islands are separated from the other islands by the British Channel and De Bruyne Sound to the east. They include the large Alexandra Land and Prince George Land and the smaller Arthur, Bruce, Mabel, Bell, and Northbrook islands.

Alexandra Land

Alexandra Land is the westernmost island in the archipelago. It has an area of approximately Шаблон:Convert. The sounds Cambridge Sound to the east and Arkhangelsky Sound off the northeast coast separate it from Zemlya Georga (also known as Prince George Land) to the east.[3] Its highest point is Шаблон:Convert in the centre of the island, and there is also a Шаблон:Convert peak near the northern coast.[3] Cape Nimrod lies on its western coast, and Cape George Thomas on its northeastern coast on Arkhangelsky Sound. There is a base named Nagurskoye near its northern coast,[3] named after Jan Nagórski, which served as one of the most important meteorological stations in the archipelago during the Cold War.Шаблон:Sfn The northernmost Russian Air Force base is in the Alexandra Island (though in a poor condition) with a small unit of security force is existing since 1955. Prior to this, the manned base station in the extreme north was in the Rudolph island which is defunct since 1955.Шаблон:Sfn It has a Шаблон:Convert snow runway. An Antonov An-72 cargo aircraft crashed while landing at Nagurskoye on 23 December 1996.

Prince George Land

Prince George Land (Zemlya Georga), lies to the east of Alexandra Island is the largest island of Franz Josef Land which measures Шаблон:Convert from end to end. It has an area of Шаблон:Convert and lies within latitude 80.50° N and longitude 49.50° E. Its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4][5] The highest point is Шаблон:Convert in the northern-central part of the island. Jackson named the island "Prince George Land" after Queen Victoria's grandson.Шаблон:Sfn[5] There are also peaks of Шаблон:Convert on its western side and Шаблон:Convert near the southwestern coast, northwest of Gray Bay.[3] To the southeast of this is Nightingale Sound, which separates the island from the small islands of Bell island, Mabel Island and Bruce Island. To the north of this and off the east coast of Zemlya Georga is the British Channel, which has Hooker Island to the far southeast. Zemlya Georga has several capes on its northern end, including Cape Murray on the northeastern peninsula, Cape Bruce on the north-northeastern peninsula, and Cape Battenberg on the northern peninsula, marking the northernmost point of the island.[3] Several streams during the summer season flow into the sea in the northwestern side, and Geographer Bay divides the northeastern and north-north eastern peninsulas. Off the north coast, Leigh Smith Sound separates Zemlya Georga from the small Arthur Island, which has a peak of Шаблон:Convert and the Cape Ice Reconnaissance on its northern coast.[5]

Northern islands

Файл:Map of central Franz Josef Land-en.svg
Northern and Central islands of Franz Josef Land

The northern and central islands lie to the north of the De Bruyne Sound and Markham Sound and to the west of the Austrian Strait. They include Rudolf island to the north, the Zichy Land cluster of islands, and Heiss and Komsomol islands to the southeast.

Rudolf Island

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Rudolf Island

Cape Fligely on Rudolf Island at 81°52' N is the northernmost point of Franz Josef Land.Шаблон:Sfn Lieutenant Julius von Payer, an officer of the Austro-Hungarian army, cartographer, and mountaineer, planted an Austro-Hungarian flag at Cape Fligely during the 1874 expedition that discovered Franz Josef Land.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn The Baldwin-Ziegler expedition arrived in 1902 and established a depot, and the Fiala-Ziegler expedition set up camp here for two seasons.Шаблон:Sfn A meteorological station was set up in 1932 in coordination with International Polar Year (1932–3) but was evacuated in 1941.Шаблон:Sfn A later station functioned until 1995. Several pre-World War II Soviet stations existed in Teplitz Bay but little has remained according to the observations of the Kapitan Dranitsyn expedition in 2004.Шаблон:Sfn

Zichy Land

Файл:S7300884.JPG
Wiener Neustadt Island

The islands of the Zemlya Zichy archipelago are separated from each other by very narrow sounds that are frozen most of the year, forming a compact whole. From north to south the main islands are Karl-Alexander Island, Rainer Island, Jackson Island, Payer Island, Greely Island, Ziegler Island, Salisbury Island, Wiener Neustadt Island, Luigi Island and Champ Island.

Karl-Alexander Island covers an area of Шаблон:Convert with an elevation of Шаблон:Convert and its shoreline measures Шаблон:Convert.[4] Rainer Island has an area of Шаблон:Convert. The elevation of the island is Шаблон:Convert, and it has a shoreline of Шаблон:Convert length.[4] Jackson Island (Ostrov Dzheksona), discovered by Frederick George Jackson in May 1895, is Шаблон:Convert in area; its highest elevation is Шаблон:Convert and its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4]Шаблон:Sfn Greely Island, also Grili, encompasses an area of Шаблон:Convert with a shore length of Шаблон:Convert.[4] Payer Island covers an area of Шаблон:Convert with an altitude of Шаблон:Convert, and has a shoreline extending over Шаблон:Convert length.[4] Salisbury Island, also known as Solsberi Island, has an area of Шаблон:Convert and the highest point is at an elevation of Шаблон:Convert. The mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4]

Wiener Neustadt Island, also Viner-Noyshtadt or Viner N'Ojstadt, lies at Шаблон:Coord. It has an area of Шаблон:Convert and has a highest point of Шаблон:Convert.[3] Its shores extend over a length of Шаблон:Convert.[4] Luigi Island, also known as Ostrov Luidzhi, has a surface area of Шаблон:Convert; the highest point of the island is Шаблон:Convert and it has a shore line of Шаблон:Convert.[4] Champ Island has an area of Шаблон:Convert and is at an elevation of Шаблон:Convert and its shore line measures Шаблон:Convert.[4]

Heiss and Komsomol

Файл:SH101129.JPG
Heiss Island

Heiss Island and Komsomol Island lie southeast of Zichy land. The Austria Strait separates Hall Island from Komsomol and the large Wilczek Island further to the northeast.[3] Heiss Island, also known as Kheysa or Chejsa island, is bound within latitude 80.55° N and longitude 57.50° E. It encompasses an area of Шаблон:Convert. Its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4] The abandoned Kheysa, Soviet rocket launching site, was located on this island.[6] In the Geophysical Year 1957–58, a new meteorological station, which over the years became the largest such station, was established on the banks of a small crater lake in the ice free zone of this island and named after Ernst Krenkel, an Arctic explorer. The station was closed in 2000 and abandoned buildings are still seen here. Another weather station was established in 2005. The island is named after the Arctic explorer, Isaac Israel Hayes.Шаблон:Sfn

Southern islands

Файл:Map of Southeastern Franz Josef Land-en.svg
Southern islands of Franz Josef Land

The southern islands lies east of De Bruyne Sound, and south of British Channel, Markham Sound and Austrian Strait. They include the larger Hooker, McClintock, Hall and Salm islands, and many smaller islands.

Hooker Island

Hooker Island, named after British naturalist Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, lies to the southeast of Zemlya Georga, across the British Channel. It has an area of Шаблон:Convert and lies within latitude 80.25° N and longitude 53.00° E. The highest point on the island is at an elevation of Шаблон:Convert and its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4] A graveyard and two modern buildings exist. On Hooker Island's western side there is a bay in an un-glaciated area, Tikhaya Bay Шаблон:Coord). A large seabird colony exists near Tikhaya Bay at Skala Rubini Шаблон:Coord), a spectacular rock formation on Hooker Island's shore. Tikhaya Bay was the site of a major base for polar expeditions, and the location of a meteorological station from 1929 to 1963. There is another bay in the south of the island called Zaliv Makarova and another in the east known as Ledn.[3] To the southwest, De Bruyne Sound separates the island from Northbrook Island. To the north, the Young Sound separates the island from the islands of Koetlitz, Nansen, Pritchett, and several others.[7]

There are a number of islands surrounding Hooker Island. Scott-Keltie Island, with a highest point of Шаблон:Convert, is an island off the northwest coast, and is named in honor of Scottish geographer Sir John Scott Keltie (1840–1927). Шаблон:Convert beyond this, lying to the west of Scott-Keltie Island in the British Channel, is Eaton Island, a small, Шаблон:Convert long island. This island, which appears as Ostrov Itol in many Russian maps, was named after British scientist Rev. Alfred Edwin Eaton (1844–1929). May Island is a small island lying Шаблон:Convert off the south coast; to the southwest of this Etheridge Island, and to the southeast is Newton Island, Шаблон:Convert offshore, named in honor of Alfred Newton. Leigh-Smith Island lies east of Hooker island, separated from it by a Шаблон:Convert wide sound called Proliv Smitsona.[3] It is Шаблон:Convert long and has a maximum width of Шаблон:Convert. The island's highest point is Шаблон:Convert and its surface is wholly glacierized except for a small area at its northern point and another around Mys Bitterburga', its southernmost cape.[3] This island is named after British yachtsman and explorer Benjamin Leigh Smith. West of Leigh-Smith Island's northern end, off Hooker island's northeastern shore, there is a smaller island known as Royal Society Island, named after the Royal Geographical Society. It is Шаблон:Convert long and has a maximum width of Шаблон:Convert.[7]

MacKlintok Island

MacKlintok Island or McClintock Island, named after Irish explorer of the Arctic Francis Leopold McClintock,[8] lies to the east of Brady Island, which lies to the east of Leigh-Smith Island and Hooker Island. This island, located within latitude 80.20° N and longitude 54.80° E, is roughly square-shaped. Its maximum length is Шаблон:Convert and its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert. Its area is Шаблон:Convert, It is largely glaciated. The island's highest point is Шаблон:Convert in the eastern-central part of the island,[4][8] and there is a Шаблон:Convert peak near the northeastern coast. The island is located very close to the west of Hall Island, separated from it by a narrow sound, Proliv Negri.[3] The island's northernmost point is Mys Grili (Greely Cape) and the southeastern is Mys Oppoltsera (Cape Oppholtzer).[3]

Alger Island and the smaller Mathilda Island lies off MacKlintok Island's northern shore, separated from Alger by a Шаблон:Convert narrow sound. Its highest point is near the centre at Шаблон:Convert. Brady Island off the west coast is a relatively large island and is mostly glaciated. It is located west of MacKlintok Island's northwestern tip, separated from it by the Шаблон:Convert wide Aberdare Sound (Proliv Abyerder). The highest point on Brady Island is Шаблон:Convert;[3] it was named after the English scientist Henry Bowman Brady. Mys Vize, Brady Island's northernmost cape,[3] is named after Russian Arctic expert Vladimir Wiese. There are also several islands off the southern shore including the Ostrova Borisika islets and Aagaard Island, Шаблон:Convert off the southern coast, named in honor of Bjarne Aagaard, a Norwegian expert on Antarctic whaling and exploration.[8]

Alger Island

Alger Island, (Шаблон:Lang-ru), is a small island at latitude 80° 23′ N and longitude 56.00° E. It divides the south-central islands and the north-central group, and is located to the south of Markham Strait.[3] McClintock Island lies to its south. Discovered in August 1899 by the Walter Welmann expedition, it was named after Russell A. Alger, US Secretary of War. The coastline is fairly ice free. In 1901, Evelyn Briggs Baldwin established a camp here and named it Camp Ziegler, after William Ziegler, who had sponsored the expedition.Шаблон:Sfn

Hall Island

Файл:Kap tegethoff gross.jpg
View of Cape Tegetthoff

Hall Island (Ostrov Gallya) is an almost completely glacierized large island of Шаблон:Convert immediately to the east of MacKlintok Island. It lies within latitude 80.30° N and longitude 56.00° E. The highest point on the island is Шаблон:Convert and its mapped shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4][9] It was named after American Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall. The only relatively large areas free of permanent ice are located in its southern end, where there are two headlands, Cape Tegetthoff, and Cape Ozernyy, on the Littov Peninsula. Cape Tegetthoff has a range of hill peaks.[3] The airborne surveys revealed Шаблон:Convert thick mantles of ice and also in Graham Bell Island's ice capes.Шаблон:Sfn There is also a very small unglacierized area around its eastern cape, Cape Frankfurt, and another in its northwestern point, Cape Wiggins. Its highest point is Шаблон:Convert near its southwestern side, and there is also a peak of Шаблон:Convert in the northcentral part of the island. There is a wide bay on the southeastern side of Hall Island known as Hydrographer Bay and a smaller one west of the Littov Peninsula, known as Bukhta Surovaya.[3] To the southeast, there is a wider strait separating Hall Island from Salm Island, known as Proliv Lavroka. The strait to the east is known as Austrian Strait.

Just off the northern shore of Hall Island lie three small islets known as the Brown Islands, named in honor of George Brown of the Royal Navy, who participated in the 1850–1854 expedition in search of Sir John Franklin on the Investigator. Шаблон:Convert to the west of Hall island's northwestern cape lies the oval-shaped Шаблон:Convert long Newcomb Island, with a highest point of Шаблон:Convert. This island was named after Raymond Lee Newcomb, the naval officer in charge of the ill-fated DeLong expedition on the Jeannette. Шаблон:Convert off the northeastern side of Hall Island's eastern bay lies the small but steep Berghaus Island, reaching a height of Шаблон:Convert. Unglacierized, this island was named after cartographer Heinrich Berghaus (1797–1884).[9]

Sal'm Island, located on the wide strait of the Payer Austrian channel,[2] encompasses an area of Шаблон:Convert with an altitude or Шаблон:Convert and the shore length is Шаблон:Convert.[4]

Eastern islands

Файл:Map of Graham Bell Island and Wilczek Land-en.svg
Eastern islands of Franz Josef Land

The easterns islands lie to the east of the Austrian Strait, and include Wilczek Island, La Ronciere Island, and Graham Bell Island.

Eva-Liv Island

Eva-Liv Island, also Yeva-Liv or Jeva Liv, is the northeastern extremity of Franz Josef Land at Шаблон:Coord. It covers an area of Шаблон:Convert. It has an altitude of Шаблон:Convert and a mapped shore length of Шаблон:Convert.[3][4] The island was discovered by Nansen and Johansen on 24 July 1895. Nansen thought there were two islands, and named them after his wife and daughter. In 1905 it was found that "Eva" and "Liv" were in fact one island.Шаблон:Sfn

Graham Bell Island

Graham Bell Island, the easternmost island of Franz Josef Land, is immediately to the northeast of Wilczek Land across the Morgan Strait and is one of the larger islands in the archipelago, with an area of Шаблон:Convert. Partially glaciated, its highest point is Шаблон:Convert near the southern centre. Cape Kohlsaat, the easternmost point of the archipelago at 81°14′N, 65°10′E, lies on Graham Bell Island's eastern shore.[3] Cape Kohlsaat marks the northwesternmost corner of the Kara Sea, therefore it is a significant geographical landmark. Cape Leiter lies on the south point of the island.[3] This island was named after inventor Alexander Graham Bell. Graham Bell Island should not be confused with the smaller Bell Island which is also part of the Franz Josef archipelago. Graham Bell Island is home to a Cold War outpost (shut down in 1994) and the airfield 'Greem Bell' with a Шаблон:Convert runway.[10] This small island is mostly ice free and has a lagoon in the backdrop of a bell shaped mountain. The log cabin built by Benjamin Leigh Smith in 1881 is a well preserved cabin even now and is the oldest house on the land though unoccupied.Шаблон:Sfn

Graham Bell Island's northern shore is fringed by clusters of very small islets.[3] Three-ray Island lies off the western coast. Ostrov Perlamutrovyy (Pyerlamutrov Island) lies off the southeastern shore of Graham Bell Island, the Шаблон:Convert long Ostrov Trëkhluchevoy lies off its western shore, and Ostrov Udachnyy is part of a cluster of islets located along the northwestern shore.[10]

Wilczek Land

Wilczek Land is barren and its basaltic rock cliffs are exposed.Шаблон:Sfn[11] It lies to the northeast of Hall Island, across the Austrian Strait.[3] It is the second largest island of the Franz Josef Archipelago and is almost completely glaciarized except for two narrow areas along its western shores. The highest point on the island is Шаблон:Convert, in the western central part.[3] This large island is named after Austro-Hungarian Count Johann Nepomuk Wilczek, involved in the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition. This island should not be confused with small Wilczek Island, located southwest of Salm Island and named after the same person. Mys Ganza is Wilczek Land's westernmost cape. Cape Geller was the wintering site for two members of the 1899 Wellman expedition. Left with minimal supplies, one of them did not survive.Шаблон:Sfn

Off Wilczek Land's southern bay lies the small Klagenfurt Island, about Шаблон:Convert away from the shore, named after Klagenfurt, the capital of Carinthia. McNult Island lies just off the southeastern cape, with several other islets. Just off the eastern coast of Wilczek Land lie two small islets called Ostrova Gorbunova,[3] named after Russian naturalist Gregory Petrovich Gorbunov. The northern side of Wilczek is separated from La Ronciere Island by a straight known as Vanderbilt. The small island of Geddes lies off the northwestern point. To the east, Wilczek Land is separated from Graham Bell Sound by the Morgan Straight.[11]

List of Islands

Islands of Franz Josef Land include: Шаблон:Columns-list

Waterways

Markham Sound is a waterway between Zichy Land and the islands of McClintock and Hall.Шаблон:Sfn West of the British Channel is Prince George Land.Шаблон:Sfn Alexandra Land contains Weyprecht Bay.Шаблон:Sfn West of Austria Sound is Zichy Land.Шаблон:Sfn Immediately north of Franz Josef Land is the Queen Victoria Sea.Шаблон:Sfn

Climate

Climatic conditions here are very severe with minimum temperatures as low as (-)25 °C to (-) 30 °C during winter; even in summers the temperature does not rise above Шаблон:Convert. The polar nights lasts for 125 days while the polar days are 140.[1] Climatically, the Gulf Streams does not reach the islands of Franz Josef Land. Polynias are formed by the wind and sea currents that prevail in the northern and southern part of the land mass, which are the causative factors for the large ice free zone in the sea. The eastern and northern winds cause very cold breezes. The precipitation varies between Шаблон:Convert and Шаблон:Convert but mostly in the form of snow.Шаблон:Sfn

Geology

Two distinct geological formations identified are of the Late Triassic and Jurassic sedimentary process which are recorded to a depth of Шаблон:Convert at Cape Flora and recede gradually towards the coast line of the sea in the north. Fossilized tree trunks here attest to this assessment. Above the Jurassic sedimentary layer of Шаблон:Convert thickness, which is basaltic, cretaceous period intrusions of dolerite caused by volcanic eruptions are recorded. Also seen are many fault zones which have contributed to the removal of volcanic layers and exposing plateau tops and rock walls. Another feature noted here is of the shore line which appears to have receded, as a result of island formations (the rise of the islands above the icy sea is reported to be Шаблон:Convert per year).Шаблон:Sfn Though most of the land is covered by glacial ice, it does have outcrops covered with moss. The northeastern part of the archipelago is locked in pack ice most of the year; however the ice sometimes retreats north past the islands in summer (September).

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Bibliography Шаблон:Refbegin

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Links

Further reading

Шаблон:Franz Josef Land