Gauss Peninsula Explained

Gauss Peninsula
Local Name:Gauss Halvø
Map:Greenland
Location:East Greenland
Coordinates:73.5°N -33°W
Length Km:80
Width Km:30
Highest Mount:Harder Bjerg
Elevation M:1627
Waterbody:

Muskox Fjord
Nordfjord
Kaiser Franz Joseph Fjord
Foster Bay

Country:Greenland (Denmark)
Country Admin Divisions Title:Zone
Country Admin Divisions:NE Greenland National Park
Population:Uninhabited

Gauss Peninsula (Danish: Gauss Halvø) is a peninsula in eastern Greenland. Administratively this peninsula is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park zone.

History

The second German North Polar Expedition 1869–70 originally gave the name Cap Gauss to a point on the south side of this peninsula, but A.G. Nathorst's 1899 expedition was unable to determine the position because of the rounding of the coast and applied the name Gauss Halfö to the peninsula as a whole. It is named after German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss.[1]

Geography

The Gauss Peninsula is located between the Muskox Fjord (Moskusokse Fjord) and Kaiser Franz Joseph Fjord. The Nordfjord lies at its western end and Mackenzie Bay and Foster Bay of the Greenland Sea shore on its southeastern side.[2]

The peninsula is mountainous, with the Hjelm Range (Hjelmbjergene) located on the southern coast and the Giesecke Range (Giesecke Bjerge) located in the eastern part of the peninsula. Hold with Hope peninsula is located further to the east, beyond the Badland Valley (Badlanddal).[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland . Geological Survey of Denmark . 18 September 2019.
  2. Web site: Gauss Halvø. Mapcarta. 20 April 2016.
  3. Web site: Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland . Geological Survey of Denmark . 18 June 2016 .