Somerset Island (Nunavut) Explained

Somerset Island (Nunavut) should not be confused with Somerset Island, Bermuda.

Somerset Island
Native Name:Kuuganajuk
Native Name Link:Inuktitut
Location:Northern Canada
Pushpin Map:Canada Nunavut#Canada
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Nunavut##Location in Canada
Pushpin Relief:1
Coordinates:73.25°N -123°W
Archipelago:Arctic Archipelago
Area Km2:24786
Rank:46th
Highest Mount:Creswell Peak
Elevation M:489
Country:Canada
Country Admin Divisions Title:Territory
Country Admin Divisions:Nunavut
Country Admin Divisions Title 1:Regions
Country Admin Divisions 1:Kitikmeot, Qikiqtaaluk
Population:Uninhabited

Somerset Island (Inuktitut Kuuganajuk) is a large, uninhabited island of the Arctic Archipelago, that is part of the Canadian territory of Nunavut. The island is separated from Cornwallis Island and Devon Island to the north by the Parry Channel, from Baffin Island to the east by Prince Regent Inlet, from the Boothia Peninsula to the south by Bellot Strait, and from Prince of Wales Island to the west by Peel Sound. It has an area of 24786km2, making it the 46th largest island in the world and Canada's twelfth largest island.[1]

The majority of the island lies in the Qikiqtaaluk Region and is home to the summer Arctic Watch Lodge. A small southern portion lies in the Kitikmeot Region and is the site of the former Fort Ross trading post.

History

Around 1000 AD, the north coast of Somerset Island was inhabited by the Thule people, as evidenced by whale bones, tunnels and stone ruins.

William Edward Parry was the first documented European to sight the island in 1819.[2]

HMS Fury was an Arctic exploration ship commanded by Henry Parkyns Hoppner. She was damaged by ice while overwintering and was abandoned on 25 August 1825, at what has since been called Fury Beach on Somerset Island. Her stores were unloaded onto the beach and later came to the rescue of John Ross, who travelled overland to the abandoned cache when he lost his ship further south in the Gulf of Boothia on his 1829 expedition.

James Clark Ross was the nephew of John Ross, and accompanied him on the 1829 expedition. In late 1848, James Clark Ross returned to Somerset Island by landing two ships at Port Leopold on the northeast coast to winter. In April the following year, he launched an exploration of the island by sledge.

Roald Amundsen transited the passage between the Island and the Prince of Wales Island in the Gjøa in the first successful traverse of the Northwest Passage in 1904. Henry Larsen transited the passage, in the St Roch in the second successful transit in 1943. But he found this route was dangerously icebound, and also too shallow for commercial travel.

The Fort Ross trading post was established and run by the Hudson's Bay Company at the southeastern end of the island from 1937 to 1948. When it was closed, the island was left uninhabited except for occasional use of the former store and manager's house as shelters by Inuit caribou hunters from Taloyoak, and a small settlement at Creswell Bay, which after 1967 consisted solely of the family of Timothy Idlout and Naomi Nangat.[3] The Idlout family left Somerset Island in 1991, leaving it completely uninhabited. In 2006, CBC's The National included Fort Ross in a special series focused on climate change.[4]

Tourism

Arctic Watch Lodge, a tourism establishment built in 1992, is located on Somerset Island. Arctic Watch was established at Cunningham Inlet because of the large number of beluga whales that congregate there in the summer. Arctic Watch Lodge is operated by Richard Weber and Josée Auclair.[5] There is a private airstrip at the site, Arctic Watch Lodge Aerodrome.

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Atlas of Canada - Sea Islands . Atlas.nrcan.gc.ca . 2009-08-12 . 2010-08-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20130122002132/http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/learningresources/facts/islands.html . 2013-01-22.
  2. Book: Parry , William Edward . Journal of a voyage for the discovery of a North-West passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific: performed in the years 1819-20 . John Murray . 1821 . London . William Edward Parry 1819. .
  3. Web site: Timothy Idlout (1916-92) . 2016-04-10 . 2020-07-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200702053242/http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic46-1-96.pdf . dead .
  4. News: Northwest Passage: The National visits Canada's North . . 2006-10-27 . 2008-08-14 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20061103043803/http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/northwest-passage/communities.html . 2006-11-03 .
  5. https://weberarctic.com/about-us About us