Magerøya

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Magerøya
Geography
Location North Norway, Europe
Coordinates 71°03′02″N 25°41′54″E / 71.05056, 25.69833Coordinates: 71°03′02″N 25°41′54″E / 71.05056, 25.69833
Area 436.4 km² (168.5 sq mi)
Highest point Gråkallfjellet
417 m (1,370 ft)
Administration
Flag of Norway Norway
County Finnmark


Magerøya is an island in Finnmark county in the extreme north of Norway, in the community of Nordkapp. The island features a bleak, barren tundra-landscape devoid of any trees (except for a few small pockets of mountain birch), with steep cliff faces on the coast and dramatic mountainscapes in the interior. It has an area of 436.6 square kilometres (168.6 sq mi). The highest elevation is 417 meters (1,370 ft) above sea level.

View from European route E 69.
View from European route E 69.
Nordkapptunnelen entrance

Magerøya's main claim to fame is the North Cape, a steep cliff cape on the northern coast that is a major tourist attraction. To accommodate the large amounts of tourists visiting the island, a subsea tunnel was built from 1993 to 1999. The North Cape Tunnel, which is 6.87 kilometers (4.27 mi) long and reaches a depth of 212 meters (700 ft) below sea level, was for a time one of the longest and of the deepest subsea tunnels in the world. Fog or ice may occur inside the tunnel, even in summer.

The small village of Skarsvåg with some of the most northern trees in the world
The small village of Skarsvåg with some of the most northern trees in the world

Norway's Hurtigruten ferry service touches Magerøya at Honningsvåg; the waters around the island remain ice-free year round due to the warm North Atlantic drift.

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