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Suess Land

Coordinates: 73°0′N 26°20′W / 73.000°N 26.333°W / 73.000; -26.333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suess Land
Illustration of the 1870 discovery of Petermann Peak by Julius Payer, Ralph Copeland and Peter Ellinger after climbing onto Payer Peak in Suess Land.
Suess Land is located in Greenland
Suess Land
Suess Land
Geography
LocationEast Greenland
Coordinates73°0′N 26°20′W / 73.000°N 26.333°W / 73.000; -26.333
Adjacent to
Length70 km (43 mi)
Width50 km (31 mi)
Highest elevation1,979 m (6493 ft)
Highest pointPayer Peak
Administration
Greenland (Denmark)
ZoneNortheast Greenland National Park
Demographics
PopulationUninhabited

Suess Land is a peninsula in King Christian X Land, East Greenland. Administratively it is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park.

History

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This peninsula was named by A.G. Nathorst after Austrian geologist Eduard Suess (1831–1914) at the time of his 1899 venture searching for traces of the lost Andrée expedition. Nathorst had previously translated a book by Eduard Suess into Swedish.[1]

Geography

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Suess Land has a mountainous, Alpine terrain. It is located west of Ymer Island, south of Andree Land, north of Lyell Land and northeast of Gletscherland.[2]

It is bounded in the west by Kjerulf Fjord, in the north by Kaiser Franz Joseph Fjord, in the northeast by the Antarctic Sound, in the east by the King Oscar Fjord, in the south by the Kempe Fjord and the Dickson Fjord. The peninsula is attached to Goodenough Land by a narrow isthmus in the southwest.[3]

There are several glaciers in the peninsula, including the Fulach Glacier, the Sonklar Glacier and the Hisinger Glacier that has its terminus at the southwestern end.

Map of Northeastern Greenland

References

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  1. ^ "Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland". Geological Survey of Denmark. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  2. ^ Google Earth
  3. ^ "Suess Land". Mapcarta. Retrieved 9 July 2019.