Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps

The Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps (Danish: Prinsesse Caroline Mathilde Alper) are a mountain range system in the Holm Land Peninsula, King Frederick VIII Land, northeastern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park zone.[1]

Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps
Prinsesse Caroline Mathilde Alper
Highest point
PeakHolm Land HP
Elevation1,627 m (5,338 ft)
Dimensions
Length55 km (34 mi) N/S
Width30 km (19 mi) E/W
Area1,400 km2 (540 sq mi)
Geography
Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps is located in Greenland
Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps
Location
CountryGreenland
Range coordinates80°22′N 19°10′W / 80.367°N 19.167°W / 80.367; -19.167

The range was named by the 1938–39 Mørkefjord Expedition after Princess Caroline-Mathilde of Denmark (1912-1995), wife of Prince Knud of Denmark (1900-1976), patron of the expedition.[2]

Geography edit

The Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps run from north to south across the western half of the Holm Land peninsula. The Princess Elizabeth Alps located to the north across the Ingolf Fjord display a similar structure. The range is bound to the north and northwest by the inner Ingolf Fjord, to the east by the flatter eastern part of Holm Land, to the west by the Vandre Valley (Vandredalen) and the Saefaxi River (Sæfaxi Elv), and to the south by the Marmorvigen and the inner Hekla Sound, the NW branch of the Dijmphna Sound.[1]

The range has numerous rocky peaks and ridges that are unnamed. The highest point of the Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps reaches 1,627 m (5,338 ft) at 80°28′28″N 19°36′38″W / 80.47444°N 19.61056°W / 80.47444; -19.61056 with an almost as high 1,618 m (5,308 ft) peak located very close about 5 km to the southeast.[3] US Air Force maps display the same highest point reaching 1,801 m (5,909 ft)[4] and other sources 1,744 m (5,722 ft).[5]

The Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps lie in a desolate and uninhabited part of Greenland. The nearest settlement is Nord, a military outpost with an airfield located about 120 km to the north.[3]

Glaciers edit

The main glaciers in the Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps are:

Climate edit

The Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps lie in the high Arctic zone. Polar 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 -1 °C and the coldest is January with -28 °C.[6]

Bibliography edit

  • A. K. Higgins, M. P. Smith, N. J. Soper, A. G. Leslie, J. A. Rasmussen and M. Sønderholm 2000: The Neoproterozoic Hekla Sund Basin, eastern North Greenland: a pre-Iapetan extensional sequence thrust across its rift shoulders during the Caledonian orogeny. The Geological Society of London. 2001.
  • Pedersen, S. A. S., Leslie, A. G. & Craig, L. E. 1995. Proterozoic and Caledonian geology of the Prinsesse Caroline Mathilde Alper, eastern North Greenland. In: Higgins, A. K. (ed.) Express Report Eastern North and North-East Greenland 1995. Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), Copenhagen, 71–86.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Prinsesse Caroline Mathilde Alper". Mapcarta. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
  2. ^ "Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland". Geological Survey of Denmark. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  3. ^ a b GoogleEarth
  4. ^ 1969 ONC map of North Greenland; scale 1:1,000,000
  5. ^ Peakbagger - Hahn Land High Point, Greenland
  6. ^ "NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index". NASA. Retrieved 28 June 2016.

External links edit