Sabine Island Explained

Sabine Island
Native Name:Sabine Ø
Native Name Link:Danish language
Map:Greenland
Location:Greenland Sea, Eastern Greenland
Coordinates:74.6°N -77°W
Archipelago:Pendulum Islands
Total Islands:3
Major Islands:Sabine, Little Pendulum Island
Area Km2:155.9
Highest Mount:Keferstein
Elevation M:699
Country:Greenland
Population:0

Sabine Island (; Danish: Sabine Ø) is an island to the northeast of Wollaston Foreland, previously known as Inner Pendulum Island. It is in the Northeast Greenland National Park area.

Geography

See also: Pendulum Islands. Sabine Island is long from Kap Neumayer in the north to Teddy Udkig in the south, and wide. The area measures, and the shoreline . The highest elevation is the high Keferstein.[1] Other important peaks are Kronebjerg, Tafelbjerg and Søspidsen.[2]

Together with an islet named Walrus Island (Danish: Hvalros Ø) off its southern point,[3] and Little Pendulum Island located to the east, it constitutes the Pendulum Islands group. Numerous huts used by Inuit remain on the island.

There is also a small Sabine Island in Melville Bay, Northwest Greenland, as Mr. Sabine was also on the 1818 Ross expedition to these parts. That exposed islet was the site of a U.S. LORAN station in the post-war era.

History

The North East Greenland coast was colonized by Palaeo- and Neo-Eskimo groups in the past. The Inuit and their ancestors colonized and abandoned the area at least four times during the last four thousand years.[4] There are remains of Inuit dwellings in Sabine Island that were first reported by Carl Koldewey during the Second German North Polar Expedition 1869–70.

Sabine Island was named Sabine Insel by Koldewey's expedition after the geophysicist General Sir Edward Sabine, who carried out pendulum gravimetric experiments on the island in 1823.[5] Sabine had been aboard the Clavering 1823 Arctic expedition, the only one to encounter living Inuit in Northeast Greenland.

The Second German North Polar Expedition built a house at Germaniahafen on the south side. This station was later used by hunting expeditions.

From August 1942 to June 1943, the German meteorological expedition Unternehmen Holzauge under the command of Captain Hermann Ritter, with headquarters in Hansa Bay on the eastern side of the island, operated successfully on Sabine. It was discovered in March by the North-East Greenland Sledge Patrol, established by Greenland governor Eske Brun. In May, the station was bombed by U.S. aircraft from Iceland led by Colonel Bernt Balchen. In June, the surviving members of the German team were evacuated to Norway by air from a Dornier Do 18 seaplane launched from ship .

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://islands.unep.ch/ITP.htm UNEP
  2. http://mapcarta.com/17866056 Søspidsen
  3. http://mapcarta.com/17866264 Hvalros Ø
  4. http://natmus.dk/footermenu/organisation/forskning-og-formidling/nyere-tid-og-verdens-kulturer/etnografisk-samling/arktisk-forskning/projects/geoark-project/ Cultural History, Climate and Environment in Holocene North East Greenland
  5. https://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1781943 Wordie, J.M. (1927) The Cambridge Expedition to East Greenland in 1926. Geographical Journal 70 (3): 225-265