Wiedemann Range Explained

Wiedemann Range
Other Name:Wiedemann Bjerge
Length Km:30
Length Orientation:N/S
Width Km:15
Width Orientation:E/W
Highest:Wiedemann Range High Point
Elevation M:115
Range Coordinates:68.65°N -57°W
Map:Greenland

The Wiedemann Range (Danish: Wiedemann Bjerge) is a mountain range in King Christian IX Land, eastern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of the Sermersooq Municipality.

History

The range was visited in 1932 by a team of geologists belonging to Ejnar Mikkelsen's Second East-Greenland Expedition. It was named after German naturalist Christian Rudolph Wilhelm Wiedemann (1770–1840).[1]

In 1962, a VP-5 Lockheed P-2 Neptune on a patrol mission crashed into the slope of the Kronborg Glacier close to this range, killing all twelve men aboard. The crash site was finally discovered in 1966 when four geologists found it, but it was not until 2004 that the US Navy recovered all the crew remains and memorialized the deceased at the crash site.[2]

Geography

The Wiedemann Range is an up to 1715m (5,627feet) high mountain massif made up of nunataks. The southern end of the range rises close to the sea, in the Denmark Strait area, north of Cape Stephensen and NW of the Vedel Fjord. It stretches northwards at the head of the Wiedemann Fjord, bound by the Kronborg Glacier to the west —beyond which rises the Lilloise Range— and the Borggraven Glacier to the east.[3] The area of the range is uninhabited.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Spencer Apollonio, Lands That Hold One Spellbound: A Story of East Greenland, 2008 p. 218
  2. https://www.earth.ox.ac.uk/greenland-aircraft/ The fifty-year saga of the aircraft LA-9
  3. Web site: Wiedemann Bjerge. GeoHack. 17 June 2021.
  4. [Google Earth]