Matochkin Strait Explained

Matochkin Strait or Matochkin Shar (Russian: Ма́точкин Шар) is a 323km2 strait, structurally a fjord, between the Severny and Yuzhny Islands of Novaya Zemlya. It connects the Barents Sea and the Kara Sea.

Geography

The Matochkin Strait is one of the largest fjords in the world.[1] The banks along the strait are high and steep. Its length is approximately 100km (100miles) and its width in its narrowest part is approximately600m (2,000feet). The strait is covered with ice for the most of the year. There are abandoned fishing settlements along the strait (Matochkin Shar, Stolbovoy).

History

The Tsar Bomba was detonated on October 1961, in the vicinity of Matochkin Strait, over the Novaya Zemlya archipelago.[2]

It is also the site where, from 1963 to 1990, about 39 underground nuclear tests took place in a vast array of tunnels and shafts under Mount Lazarev and other massifs. After 2000, Russia started to reactivate the test site by enlarging old tunnels and starting construction work. Each summer since then various subcritical hydronuclear experiments have taken place. In 2004, Rosatom reportedly performed a series of subcritical hydronuclear experiments with up to 100g of weapon-grade plutonium each.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Alexander P. Lisitzin, Sea-Ice and Iceberg Sedimentation in the Ocean: Recent and Past, p. 449
  2. Web site: Tsar Bomba History, Location, Megatons, & Facts Britannica . 2022-09-20 . www.britannica.com . en.
  3. Web site: Russia: Central Test Site, Novaya Zemlya . 2003-07-30 . Nuclear Threat Initiative . 2006-10-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061029023406/http://www.nti.org/db/nisprofs/russia/weafacl/othernuc/novayaze.htm . October 29, 2006 .