Daly Range

The Daly Range or Daly Mountains (Danish: Daly Bjerge) is a mountain range in Peary Land, Northern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park.

Daly Range
Daly Bjerge
Roosevelt Range section of Robert Peary's 1900 explorations map "Polar Regions"
Highest point
PeakUnnamed
Elevation1,399 m (4,590 ft)
ListingList of mountain ranges of Greenland
Dimensions
Length40 km (25 mi) NW/SE
Width15 km (9.3 mi) NE/SW
Geography
Location
CountryGreenland
RegionPeary Land
Range coordinates83°22′N 27°10′W
Parent rangeRoosevelt Range
Geology
Age of rockPrecambrian, Silurian

It forms the eastern end of the northernmost mountain range on Earth.[1] The area of the range is barren and uninhabited.

History

The mountain chain was named by Robert Peary after Judge Charles P. Daly, President of the American Geographical Society and member of the executive committee of the Peary Arctic Club in New York.[2]

In 1900 Peary saw the range from the coast and was the first to put it on the map. The Daly Range was further surveyed in 1907 by Johan Peter Koch, Aage Bertelsen and Tobias Gabrielsen, the northern team of the ill-fated Denmark expedition, when they reached their northernmost point, Cape Bridgman.[3] Aerial surveys by Lauge Koch in 1930 during the Three-year Expedition to East Greenland mapped the area with higher precision.[4]

Still, the Daly Range remained very little explored until July 2000, when members of the American Alpine Club made an attempt to climb the highest point up the Bertelsen Glacier to the base of the peak. This attempt, however, was thwarted by awful weather conditions and the mountain remained unclimbed until July 2003 when four alpinists led by Dennis Schmitt were able to reach the highest point of the range from the Moore Glacier.[5]

Geography

The Daly Range is the easternmost subrange of the Roosevelt Range.[6] Its highest peak rises above the confluence of the Moore Glacier and the Bertelsen Glacier.[7] It is a prominent 1,399 m (4,590 ft) high summit covered by an ice cap —Schmitt gives a height of 1,456 m (4,777 ft) that contradicts the height on maps.[5]

This mountain chain runs roughly from WNW to ESE at the eastern end of Johannes V. Jensen Land southeast of Bliss Bay in the Wandel Sea, SW of Cape Bridgman and north of the mouth area of Frederick E. Hyde Fjord, rising steeply above the coastal plain.[8] The H. H. Benedict Range (H. H. Benedict Bjerge) rises to the west and southwest, beyond the Moore Glacier.[7]

Map of Northern Ellesmere Island and far Northern Greenland.
J. P. Koch 1911 map of NE Greenland showing at the top the Daly Range and the Bertelsen Glacier, the easternmost features of the Roosevelt Range.
gollark: But you *write* C++.
gollark: Nobody knows the full details of how all the technology they interact with works, and it's tempting to just anthropomorphize it.
gollark: Well, machines in general, not computers.
gollark: We already have the trendy new replacement of computer animism.
gollark: You can at least pick the bizarre customs you're subjected to in the modern world. Some of them. Slightly.

See also

References

  1. 2002 American Alpine Journal, p.286
  2. R. E. Peary, Report of RE Peary, CE, USN, on Work Done in the Arctic in 1898-1902, 1903 - JSTOR
  3. G. Amdrup: Report on the Danmark Expedition to the North-East Coast of Greenland 1906–1908. In: Meddelelser om Grønland 41, 1913, pp. 1–270
  4. Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Bulletin 21. 2010
  5. North America, Greenland, The Far North, Jensenland, Explorations of Most Northerly Land
  6. "Greenland Pilot" (PDF). Danish Geodata Agency. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  7. "Daly Bjerge". Mapcarta. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  8. "Daly Range". Geographical Items on North Greenland Encyclopedia Arctica vol.14-0639. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.