Zichy Land

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Zichy Land
Russian: Земля Зичи

Location of the Zichy Land subgroup of the Franz Josef Archipelago.
Geography
Location Arctic
Coordinates 81°00′N 56°00′E / 81.000°N 56.000°E / 81.000; 56.000
Archipelago Franz Josef Archipelago
Country
Demographics
Population 0
Zichy Land islands to the south of Rudolf Island

Zichy Land (Земля Зичи; Zemlya Zichy) is a geographical subgroup of Franz Josef Land, Russia. It is formed by the central cluster of large islands in the midst of the archipelago. The islands are separated from each other by narrow sounds that are frozen most of the year, forming a compact whole.[1]

This island group was named after Hungarian Count Ödön Zichy (1811-1894) who was, beside Count Johann Nepomuk Wilczek, the second highest sponsor for the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition to Franz Josef Land.

Geography

The broad channel to the west of Zichy Land is known as Markham Channel (Russian: Пролив маркама; Proliv Markama), after British polar explorer Admiral Sir Albert Hastings Markham.

The northernmost point of Zichy Land is Mys Bema in Karl-Alexander Island and its southernmost point is Mys Fiume in Champ Island. The distance between both is 114 km (71 mi). Mys Armitidzh in Luigi Island is the westernmost point of the subgroup. The highest point is a 620 m elevation located on Wiener Neustadt Island.[2] The channels separating the islands in the southeastern area of the group are very narrow.

Islands

The individual islands forming the Zemlya Zichy archipelago are (from North to south):

See also

References

  1. Fridtjof Nansen's early map
  2. JSTOR - A Note on the Geography of Franz Josef Land

External links

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