Khatanga Gulf Explained

Khatanga Gulf
Location:Far North
Coords:73.75°N 109°W
Rivers:Khatanga River
Pushpin Map:Russia Krasnoyarsk Krai
Oceans:Laptev Sea
Countries:Russia

The Khatanga Gulf or Khatanga Bay (Russian: Хатангский залив) is a large tidal estuary in the Laptev Sea. It is relatively narrow, its length being with a maximum width of .

Geography

The Bolshoy Begichev Island divides the gulf into two straits: Northern Strait (wide) and Eastern Strait (wide). The maximum depth of the gulf is . The Khatanga River and the Popigay River flow out into the Khatanga Gulf. The shores of the gulf are high, steep, and indented. The tides are semidiurnal reaching up to . The Khatanga Gulf is covered with ice most of the year.[1]

The shores of the Khatanga Bay are generally raised, consisting of low tundra cliffs, as well as sandstone and mudstone cliffs and sedimentation areas.

Since the administrative border cuts across this area, the northern and western parts of the Khatanga Bay belong to the Krasnoyarsk Krai, while its southeastern side belongs to the Sakha administrative region of the Russian Federation.[2]

The former settlement and penal colony of Nordvik was located by a north-facing bay on the Eastern Strait of the Khatanga Gulf known as Bukhta Nordvik.[3]

References

Notes and References

  1. Olga N. Medkova, Coastal morphology and erosion of the Khatanga Bay. AARI.
  2. http://www.kommersant.com/p-28/r_371/Taimyr_(Dolgan-Nenets)_Autonomous_Area/ Administration
  3. [William Barr (Arctic historian)|William Barr]