Bellot Strait
Bellot Strait is a passage of water in Nunavut separating Somerset Island on the north from the Boothia Peninsula on the south. At its eastern end is the Murchison Promontory, the northernmost part of mainland North America. The 2 km (1.2 mi) wide 25 km long strait connects the Gulf of Boothia and Prince Regent Inlet on the east with Peel Sound and Franklin Strait on the west.
The north side of the strait rises steeply to approximately 450 m (1,480 ft), and the south shore to approximately 750 m (2,460 ft). The current in the strait can run at up to 8 kn (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) and often changes its direction. It is also often filled with small icebergs which pose a danger to ships in the strait.
The first Europeans to see the strait were Captain William Kennedy and Joseph René Bellot who reached it by dogsled from Batty Bay in 1852. This proved that Somerset Island was an island and that Prince Regent Inlet had a difficult westward exit. In 1858 Francis Leopold McClintock tried to pass the strait and gave up. The strait was first crossed from west to east by the Hudson's Bay Company ship Aklavik in 1937, piloted by Scotty Gall.[1] Henry Larsen (explorer) crossed it in 1942 on the first west-east transit of the Northwest Passage.
The Fort Ross trading post, on the northern shore, was established in 1937 and lasted for eleven years, but the building has been refurbished and strengthened, and acts as a refuge for researchers and crews of small boats passing through.
References
Web sources
- The Canadian Encyclopedia
- The Columbia Gazetteer of North America
- Bellot Strait conditions - Ross Weld
Book sources
- Chambers World Gazetteer: An A-Z of Geographical Information (published August 1988)
Further reading
- Finley, K. J., and W. G. Johnston. An Investigation of the Distribution of Marine Mammals in the Vicinity of Somerset Island with Emphasis on Bellot Strait, August - September 1976. Toronto: LGL Environmental Research Associates, 1977.
Coordinates: 72°00′33″N 094°30′18″W / 72.00917°N 94.50500°W