Dolgy Island
Native name: <span class="nickname" ">о́стров До́лгий | |
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Map of Dolgy and adjacent small islands | |
Location of Dolgy Island in the Pechora Sea | |
Geography | |
Location | Pechora Sea |
Coordinates | 69°15′00″N 59°04′01″E / 69.250°N 59.067°ECoordinates: 69°15′00″N 59°04′01″E / 69.250°N 59.067°E |
Area | 106 km2 (41 sq mi) |
Length | 38 km (23.6 mi) |
Width | 4 km (2.5 mi) |
Administration | |
Russia | |
Oblast | Arkhangelsk Oblast |
Okrug | Nenets Autonomous Okrug |
Dolgy Island (Russian: остров До́лгий, meaning "Long Island") is an island in the Pechora Sea, east of the Khaypudyr Bay. The landscape of the island is relatively flat with small lakes and tundra patches.
This island should not be confused with other islands called "Dolgy", one of which is located in the Barents Sea itself in the bay southeast of Khodovarikha and the other in Karelia. Dikson Island was also formerly called "Dolgy".
Description
Dolgy Island's southern tip is located only 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) from the West Siberian Plain mainland. Long and narrow, it stretches roughly from north-west to south-east and is 38 kilometres (24 mi) in length, with an average width of 2.8 kilometres (1.7 mi).
This island is administratively a part of Nenets Autonomous Okrug, an autonomous okrug of Arkhangelsk Oblast.
Adjacent islands
There are smaller islands in Dolgy's vicinity at both of its ends which are a prolongation of the same submarine structure.[1]
- Matveyev Island, located in the north.
- Golets, a small islet located NW of the northern tip.
- Bolshoy Zelenets and Maly Zelenets, located in the south, between Dolgy and the mainland.
History
Stepan Malygin undertook a voyage starting from Dolgy Island in 1736-1737. There were two ships in this early expedition, the Pervy, under Malygin and the Vtoroy under the command of captain A. Skuratov. After entering the little-explored Kara Sea, they sailed to the mouth of the Ob River.[2]
Malygin took careful observations of these hitherto almost unknown areas of the Russian Arctic coastline. With this knowledge he was able to draw the first somewhat accurate map of the Arctic shores between the Pechora River and the Ob River.[3][4]
See also
- History of the Northern Sea Route
- Stepan Malygin
Bibliography
- Russian: G. Gilbo: Sprawotschnik po istorii geografitscheskich naswani na pobereschje SSSR. Ministerstwo oborony Soiusa SSR, Glaw. upr. nawigazii i okeanografii, 1985, p. 101.
References
- ↑ Island Location
- ↑ Leonid Sverdlov (Member of the Russian Geographic Society), Russian Naval Officers and Geographic Exploration in Northern Russia.
- ↑ Albert Hastings Markham, Arctic Exploration 1895
- ↑ C. Raymond Beazley, The Russian Expansion Towards Asia and the Arctic in the Middle Ages (to 1500). The American Historical Review