Frederiksborg Glacier Explained

Frederiksborg Glacier
Other Name:Frederiksborg Gletscher
Type:Valley glacier
Location:Greenland
Map:Greenland
Coordinates:68.4667°N -72°W
Mark:Blue_pog.svg
Terminus:Watkins Fjord
Kangerlussuaq Fjord
Denmark Strait

Frederiksborg Glacier (Danish: Frederiksborg Gletscher) is a glacier on the east coast of the Greenland ice sheet.[1] It is named after Frederiksborg Castle in Denmark.

Administratively this glacier is part of the Sermersooq Municipality.[2]

History

In 1935–36, during the British East Greenland Expedition led by geologist Lawrence Wager, E. C. Chambers and Dr. P. B. Fountaine set up walking up the glacier on an exploratory journey but had to turn back because it was too badly crevassed.[3] [4]

Geography

The Frederiksborg Glacier is a valley glacier that flows between high and rugged mountainous areas in a roughly north–south direction. It separates the Lemon Range in the west from the mountains that rise to the west of the Sorgenfri Glacier in the east.[1]

In its upper reaches the glacier flows at the foot of Actress, the highest peak of the Lemon Range. Its terminus is at the head of the Watkins Fjord, one of the branches of the great Kangerlussuaq Fjord system of the East Greenland coast.[5]

To the north of the Frederiksborg Glacier, there is the Upper Frederiksborg Glacier (Øvre Frederiksborg Gletscher), an ice cap west of which lie the Frederiksborg Nunataks located east of the Lindbergh Range.[6] [7]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frederiksborg Gletscher. Mapcarta. 29 September 2019.
  2. [Google Earth]
  3. Spencer Apollonio, Lands That Hold One Spellbound: A Story of East Greenland, 2008 pp. 243-247
  4. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/polar-record/article/british-east-greenland-expedition-193536/25DF1F20B943555F144B734110DBC739 British East Greenland Expedition, 1935–36
  5. Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 109
  6. Web site: Øvre Frederiksborg Gletscher. Mapcarta. 29 September 2016.
  7. [Google Earth]