Princess Elizabeth Alps
Princess Elizabeth Alps | |
---|---|
Prinsesse Elisabeth Alper | |
View of the Elephant foot Glacier at Romer Lake with the Princess Elizabeth Alps in the background | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 1,466.4 m (4,811 ft) |
Dimensions | |
Length | 50 km (31 mi) NNE/SSW |
Width | 27 km (17 mi) ESE/WSW |
Geography | |
Location | |
Country | Greenland |
Range coordinates | 80°48′N 18°48′W / 80.8°N 18.8°WCoordinates: 80°48′N 18°48′W / 80.8°N 18.8°W |
Geology | |
Age of rock | Caledonian orogeny[1] |
Type of rock | Fold belt gneiss |
The Princess Elizabeth Alps (Danish: Prinsesse Elisabeth Alper) is a mountain range in King Frederick VIII Land, northeastern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park zone.
The range was named by Eigil Nielsen during the 1938–39 Mørkefjord Expedition after Princess Elisabeth of Denmark (1935–), daughter of Prince Knud.[2]
Geography
The Princess Elizabeth Alps run roughly from north to south across the western half of the large Crown Prince Christian Land peninsula with an average elevation of 1,058 m (3,471 ft). The area of the range is bounded in the north by the Flade Isblink, a massive ice sheet, to the west by the Nunataami Elv valley, to the south by the Ingolf Fjord, and to the east by the Tobias Glacier, beyond which lies Amdrup Land.[3] The Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps located to the south in Holm Land across the fjord display a similar structure.[4]
The Princess Elizabeth Alps lie in a desolate and uninhabited part of Greenland. The nearest settlement is Nord, a military outpost with an airfield located about 60 km to the NNE of the northern end.[4]
Mountains and glaciers
The range is an up to 1,466.4 m (4,811 ft) high largely glaciated mountain massif. The Bjørne Glacier runs southwards, draining the area of the Princess Elisabeth Alps. Other important glaciers in the range are the Smalle Spaerre Glacier and the Hjørne Glacier. In the south the range ends abruptly at the Ingolf Fjord, with the mountains rising steeply from the shore and in the north the elevations decrease until the range becomes a chain of small nunataks barely higher than the surrounding ice sheet.[4]
- HP (1,466 m); highest peak at 80°44′17″N 18°47′46″W / 80.73806°N 18.79611°W[4]
- Peak (1,446 m) at 80°40′11″N 19°5′3″W / 80.66972°N 19.08417°W[4]
- Peak (1,440.7 m) at 80°43′54″N 18°35′39″W / 80.73167°N 18.59417°W[4]
- Peak (1,422 m) at 80°45′50″N 18°44′36″W / 80.76389°N 18.74333°W[4]
- Peak (1,330 m) at 80°44′48″N 18°10′41″W / 80.74667°N 18.17806°W[4]
- Peak (1,327.7 m) at 80°42′4″N 18°14′14″W / 80.70111°N 18.23722°W[4]
- Peak (1,326.8 m) at 80°48′40″N 18°30′52″W / 80.81111°N 18.51444°W[4]
- Peak (1,313 m) at 80°50′34″N 18°19′20″W / 80.84278°N 18.32222°W[4]
Climate
The Princess Elizabeth Alps lie in the high Arctic zone. Tundra climate prevails in the area of the range, the average annual temperature in the area being -16 °C . The warmest month is July when the average temperature rises to 0 °C and the coldest is January with -26 °C.[5]
See also
References
- ↑ Willis, M. J.; Juntunen, T.; Porter, C. C.; Morin, P. J., High-resolution digital elevation models of the Flade Iceblink feature in NE Greenland
- ↑ "Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland" (PDF). Geological Survey of Denmark. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
- ↑ "Prinsesse Elisabeth Alper". Mapcarta. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Google Earth
- ↑ "NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index". NASA. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
External links
- Status of the endangered ivory gull, Pagophila eburnea, in Greenland
- InSAR observations of ice elevation and velocity fluctuations at the Flade Isblink ice cap, eastern North Greenland