Geography of Svalbard explained

Svalbard
Location:Arctic Ocean
Major Islands:Spitsbergen, Nordaustlandet, Edgeøya
Area Km2:64,029
Coastline Km:3587
Highest Mount:Newtontoppen
Elevation M:1713
Country:Norway
Country Largest City:Longyearbyen
Country Largest City Population:2060
Population:2600
Population As Of:2007
Density Km2:0.04

Svalbard is an archipelago in the Arctic Ocean roughly centered on 78° north latitude and 20° east longitude. It constitutes the northernmost territory of the Kingdom of Norway. The three main islands in the group consist of Spitsbergen (the largest island), Nordaustlandet and Edgeøya. There are also a number of smaller islands, such as Barents Island (Barentsøya) (1288km2), Kvitøya (682km2), Prins Karls Forland (English: Prince Charles Foreland) (615km2), Kongsøya (191km2), Bear Island (178km2), Svenskøya (137km2), Wilhelm Island (120km2) and other smaller islands or skerries (621km2).

Climate

See main article: Climate of Svalbard. There is no arable land in the island group due to heavy glaciation and the northern latitude. There are no trees native to the archipelago, but there are shrubs such as crowberry and cloudberry. The west coast of Spitsbergen remains navigable most of the year, due to favorable winds which keep the area ice-free. Norway claims a 200nmi fishery protection zone, but this is not recognized by neighboring Russia.

The climate of the Svalbard archipelago is arctic, tempered by warm North Atlantic Current along the west and northern coasts. This means cool summers and cold winters along the wild, rugged mountainous islands. The high land of the island interiors is generally ice covered year round, with the west coast clear of ice about one half of the year. There are many fjords along west and north coasts

Resources

Svalbard has many mineral resources, and coal was mined extensively on the west side of Spitsbergen.[1] Ice floes often block up the entrance to Bellsund (a transit point for coal exports) on the west coast and occasionally make parts of the northeastern coast inaccessible to maritime traffic

Environmental issues

Although many prior adverse practises are now banned, the issues surrounding past exploitation of animal resources in the Svalbard area remain a problem. With whale, seal and walrus populations are still far below than they were even two centuries ago (the average age of a Greenland whale). The population of polar bears are locally recovering from the major culls of the 1960s and 1970s that came about due to the availability of snow scooters; however, the polar bear remains threatened at a global level, due to unsustainable levels of killing by humans and marine water pollution.[2] There are a wide variety of birds in Svalbard including puffin, Arctic skua, kittiwake and fulmar,[3] many of which populations are being monitored.

Physical geography

Lands

The main islands of Svalbard is parted into several lands:

Fjords

There are numerous fjords among the Svalbard islands; the five longest of which (measured from the head to open sea) are listed here:[4] [5]

Coastlines

Largest islands[6] ! Island !! Area
(km2) !! Area
(sq mi)
Spitsbergen37673km2
Nordaustlandet14443km2
Edgeøya5074km2
Barentsøya1288km2
Kvitøya682km2
Prins Karls Forland615km2
Kongsøya191km2
Bjørnøya178km2
Svenskøya137km2
Wilhelm Island120km2
Others621km2
Coastlines of the Svalbard islands (listed from largest island to smallest) show the extensive variability characteristic of glacial formation:

Mountains

Although they are small when compared with the mountains of Norway, the elevation of the Svalbard island mountains accounts for much of the glacial erosion:

Glaciers

Rivers

Settlements

Inhabited

No roads link the settlements on the island; transportation includes boat, airplane, helicopter, and snowmobile. The gateway to Svalbard is Svalbard Airport, Longyearbyen.

Former

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Svalbard Archaeology. www.svalbardarchaeology.org.
  2. C. Michael Hogan. 2008
  3. Walter Brian Harland, Lester M. Anderson, Daoud Manasrah, Nicholas J. Butterfield. 1997
  4. http://www.ssb.no/emner/00/00/20/nos_svalbard/nos_d330/nos_d330.pdf Web publication of Statistics Norway, the official body for such data in Norway. Units provided are metric only; no unit conversions provided here.
  5. The percentage of Svalbard covered by glaciation varies by year; 59.8% is reported for 2005.
  6. Web site: Population in the settlements. Svalbard . https://archive.today/20110728153613/http://www.ssb.no/english/subjects/02/befsvalbard_en/tab-2009-10-22-01-en.html . dead . 28 July 2011 . . 22 October 2009 . 24 March 2010 .