Haug Range | |
Other Name: | Hauge Bjerge |
Length Km: | 60 |
Length Orientation: | E/W |
Width Km: | 10 |
Width Orientation: | N/S |
Elevation M: | 1094 |
Range Coordinates: | 81.5°N -94°W |
Period: | Lower Silurian |
Map: | Greenland |
The Haug Range (Danish: Hauge Bjerge)[1] is a mountain range in far northwestern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of Avannaata municipality. The range is located in Hall Land, one of the coldest places in Greenland.[2]
This mountain chain was named after Ivar Haug, who compiled the first Gazetteer of Greenland. The area of the range is characterized by Tundra climate.[3]
The Haug Range is an up to almost 1,100 m high little glaciated mountain range in Hall Land. It runs roughly from east to west across the peninsula, from the shores of the Nares Strait to the shores of the Newman Bay, separating the unglaciated Polaris Foreland in the north from the southern part of Hall Land.[4] 1094m (3,589feet) high Kayser Mountain, the highest elevation of the range, is located at its northeastern end. The area of the Haug Range is uninhabited.[5]
Pentamerus fossils dating back to the Lower Silurian have been found in this mountain range.[6] They belong to the Hauge Bjerge Formation.[7]