Trety Island
Trety Island Остров Третий | |
---|---|
Island | |
Trety Island | |
Coordinates: RU 61°34′N 162°34′E / 61.567°N 162.567°E | |
Country | Russian Federation |
Federal subject | Kamchatka Krai |
Trety Island or Treti Island (Остров Третий; Ostrov Trety, literally: The Third Island) is a relatively large island in the western shores of the Shelikhov Bay, at the northern end of the Sea of Okhotsk. It is located 4 km to the south of a peninsula that encloses a small bay in an area that is largely uninhabited.[1][2][3]
Geography
Trety Island is roughly triangular in shape. It is 8 km long and has a maximum width of 3.7 km.
2.3 km north of Trety, in the sound that separates it from the mainland shore, lies an islet only 700 m long and 400 m wide.
- Vtoroy 61°28′N 163°00′E / 61.467°N 163.000°E and Krayny (Остров Крайний) 61°27′N 163°00′E / 61.450°N 163.000°E, or Chemenvytegartynup (Чеменвытегартынуп), a group of two smaller islands, lies about 30 km to the southeast of Trety. Krayny is the larger of the two and they are separated from each other by a 1.7 km wide sound.
Administratively Trety Island belongs to the Kamchatka Krai of the Russian Federation.
History
American whaleships cruised for bowhead whales off Trety[4] and Krayny[5] in the 1860s and 1870s. They called the former Ship Rock and the latter Grampus Island. On 11 August 1867, the barque Stella (270 tons), of New Bedford, Capt. Ebenezer F. Nye, was wrecked on Krayny. Two men were killed as the barque was smashed to pieces. The rest of the crew were rescued by several nearby vessels.[6][7][8]
References
- ↑ Geographic Location
- ↑ Satellite picture
- ↑ Geographical data
- ↑ Josephine, of New Bedford, June 9, 1865, Kendall Whaling Museum; Sea Breeze, of New Bedford, June 23, 1867, Old Dartmouth Historical Society (ODHS).
- ↑ Sea Breeze, of New Bedford, Aug. 14, 1866, ODHS; Arnolda, of New Bedford, July 25, 1874, ODHS.
- ↑ Sea Breeze, of New Bedford, Aug. 15, 1867, ODHS.
- ↑ Whalemen's Shipping List and Merchants' Transcript (Vol. XXV, No. 35, Oct. 29, 1867, New Bedford).
- ↑ Starbuck, Alexander (1878). History of the American Whale Fishery from Its Earliest Inception to the year 1876. Castle. ISBN 1-55521-537-8.