Chamisso Wilderness

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Chamisso Wilderness
IUCN Category Ib (Wilderness Area)
Chamisso Island
Chamisso Island
Location Alaska, USA
Area 455 acres (1.84 km²)
Established 1975
Governing body US Fish and Wildlife Service

Chamisso Wilderness is a 455-acre (1.84 km²) wilderness area in the U.S. state of Alaska. It was designated by the United States Congress in 1975.

A small subunit of the Chukchi Sea Unit of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, Chamisso Island and nearby Puffin Island were combined as a wildlife refuge in 1912, designated Wilderness in 1975, and added to the AMNWR in 1980.[1]

Chamisso Island comprises one large sand spit and a low beach zone surrounding a covering of tundra with a few marshy bogs. Although Chamisso Island is much larger, Puffin Island houses many more nesting birds, especially horned puffin, black-legged kittiwake, and thick-billed murre who build their nests on the steep-walled cliffs that fall into Spafarief Bay. Eskimos still cross from the mainland to gather eggs, primarily from kittiwakes and murres. With the exception of birds and the occasional fox that crosses frozen sea in winter, nothing lives on the islands that make up Chamisso Wilderness. Walruses, seals, and whales can often be seen in Spafarief Bay.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Chamisso Wilderness - Wilderness.net

[edit] External links

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