Vilkitsky Island (East Siberian Sea)

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For other islands and geographic features called "Vilkitsky" see Vilkitsky (disambiguation).

Vilkitsky Island (Russian: Oстров Вильки́цкого; Ostrov Vilkitskogo) is the southernmost island of the De Long group in the northern part of the East Siberian Sea. At barely 1.5 km sq it is the smallest island of the group. It is also off the limits of permanent ice and is unglaciated. As discussed by Fujita and Cook (1990), Vilkitsky Island consists of deeply eroded nepheline basalt lava flows.

Its longitude is 75° 42′N and its longitude 152° 30′E. Vilkitsky Island is part of the Sakha Republic administrative division of Russia.

Vilkitsky Island was discovered in 1913 during the Imperial Russian Arctic Ocean Hydrographic Expedition led by Boris Vilkitsky on the ships Taymyr and Vaygach.

This island should not be confused with Vilkitsky Island in the Kara Sea, with the Vilkitsky island group (now mentioned as Dzhekman Islands in most maps) which is part of the Nordenskjold Archipelago in the Kara Sea, or with the Vilkitsky Island located in the Laptev sea off the eastern shores of the Taymyr Peninsula.

All these islands are named after Russian hydrographer Boris Vilkitsky.

[edit] References

  • Respublika Sakha (Yakutiya) Land Feature Database
  • Fujita, K., and D.B. Cook, 1990, The Arctic continental margin of eastern Siberia, in A. Grantz, L. Johnson, and J. F. Sweeney, eds., pp. 289-304, The Arctic Ocean Region. Geology of North America, vol L, Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado.