Cape Vilda

Cape Vilda (Russian: Мыс Вильда) is a headland in the Kara Sea, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russian Federation. This cape is located on the western shore of the Taymyr Peninsula, at the western end of Middendorff Bay.[1]

Cape Vilda
Мыс Вильда
Location of Cape Vilda
LocationKrasnoyarsk Krai,  Russia
Coordinates75°40′17″N 91°15′25″E
Offshore water bodiesKara Sea
AreaRussian Far North

The Myachina Islands, a group of two small islets, lie 3 km north of Cape Vilda.[2]

History

In 1921 Nikifor Begichev led a Soviet expedition in search for Roald Amundsen's 1919 Arctic expedition's crew members Peter Tessem and Paul Knutsen on request of the government of Norway. Checking the remains of campfires, Begichev was able to establish that Amundsen's men had passed Cape Vilda, more than halfway down their journey, and that at that point all was well. Captain Jakobsen, a Norwegian who went with Begichev, found later an abandoned sledge 90 km west of Mys Vil’da, indicating that something had gone wrong with his two ill-fated compatriots.[3]

gollark: What rigged inventions?
gollark: But yes, you should vote based on UPIDs, Unique PotatOS IDs.
gollark: Which you can't really do here because we all have random number generators.
gollark: I assume that high-level rock/paper/scissors is about some kind of complex psychological analysis.
gollark: XENON CIRCUMVENTION has nothing to do with the ability of voting to vote.

References

  1. GoogleEarth
  2. Geographical data
  3. William Barr, The Last Journey of Peter Tessem and Paul Knutsen, 1919.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.