Kennedy Channel

Kennedy Channel, Nunavut, Canada.
  Ellesmere Island, Nunavut
  Greenland

Kennedy Channel (Danish: Kennedy Kanalen; 80°55′N 66°30′W / 80.917°N 66.500°W / 80.917; -66.500 (Kennedy Channel)Coordinates: 80°55′N 66°30′W / 80.917°N 66.500°W / 80.917; -66.500 (Kennedy Channel)) is an Arctic sea passage between Greenland and Canada's most northerly island, Ellesmere Island.

It forms part of Nares Strait, linking Kane Basin with Hall Basin. From the south, its beginning is marked by Capes Lawrence and Jackson; its junction with Hall Basin is marked by Capes Baird and Morton. It is about 130 kilometres in length, between 24 to 32 kilometres in width and averages water depths between 180 to 340 metres.

It was named by Elisha Kane around 1854 during his second Arctic voyage in search of the lost Franklin expedition. It is not entirely clear, however, for which Kennedy he named the channel. Kane may have had his fellow explorer William Kennedy in mind, whom he had met a few years previously while both were involved in earlier searches for Franklin's expedition. However, most historians believe it was named for John Pendleton Kennedy, the United States Secretary of the Navy during 1852 to 1853, under whose direction Kane's second Arctic voyage took place.

It contains Hans Island, which is claimed by both Canada and Denmark.

References

Further reading

  • Dewing, Keith, J Harrison, Brian Pratt, and Ulrich Mayr. 2004. "A Probable Late Neoproterozoic Age for the Kennedy Channel and Ella Bay Formations, Northeastern Ellesmere Island and Its Implications for Passive Margin History of the Canadian Arctic". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 41: 1013-1025.
  • Kerr, J. William. Kennedy Channel and Lady Franklin Bay, District of Franklin. 1973.
  • Long, Darrel Graham Francis. Kennedy Channel Formation Key to the Early History of the Franklinian Continental Margin, Central Eastern Ellesmere Island, Arctic Canada : Supplementary Unpublished Data. Canadian journal of earth sciences, v. 26, p. 1147-1159, suppl. mat. 1989.


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