Hurry Inlet

Hurry Inlet (Danish: Hurry Fjord; Greenlandic: Kangerterajiva, meaning 'The Little Fjord') is a fjord in King Christian X Land, eastern Greenland. This fjord is part of the Scoresby Sound system.[1] Administratively it lies in the area of Sermersooq municipality.

Hurry Inlet
Hurry Fjord
Hurry Inlet
Location in Greenland
LocationArctic
Coordinates70°37′N 22°31′W
Native nameKangerterajiva
  (Greenlandic)
Ocean/sea sourcesScoresby Sound
Greenland Sea
Basin countriesGreenland
Max. length40 km (25 mi)
Max. width7 km (4.3 mi)

Nerlerit Inaat Airport is located on the western side of the fjord. People from nearby Ittoqqortoormiit like to go to Hurry Inlet to fish Arctic char for recreational purposes.[2]

History

The Hurry Inlet was named "Hurry’s Inlet" in 1822 by William Scoresby (1789 – 1857) in honour of Nicholas Hurry, the owner of his ship, the Baffin. Scoresby assumed that it was a sound that connected with Carlsberg Fjord to the north and that Liverpool Land was an island. Carl Ryder found that the fjord was a dead end and not a marine channel in 1895. The name often appears as "Hurry Fjord" on Danish maps.[3]

There are ancient Inuit ruins by the fjord.[3]

Geography

This fjord is located west of Ittoqqortoormiit in the northern shore of Scoresby Sound. Its mouth opens between Cape Hope to the east and Cape Stewart to the west only about 20 km (12 mi) west of the entrance of Scoresby Sound. It stretches from north to south for about 40 km (25 mi).[4]

To the west the fjord is bound by Jameson Land and to the east by Liverpool Land. The northern end of Hurry Inlet continues northward beyond its head as the Klitdal (Kangerterajittap Ilinnera). The Hans Glacier and the Greta Glacier have their terminus in the shores of the fjord.[4]

Geological map of Scoresby Sound.
Map of NE Greenland and Iceland.
gollark: Unicode seems to mostly work, apart from the mess of ways to represent some characters.
gollark: English isn't. We have loads of regional dialects. They're all *fairly* close, at least.
gollark: Ah yes, because you can totally just modify a language with hundreds of millions of speakers, Solar, totally practical.
gollark: It *looks* kind of simple, but it has an octillion nonsensical weird inconsistencies.
gollark: "not too complex"HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

See also

References

  1. Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 116
  2. Hanne Tuborg Sandell, Birger Sandell, Archaeology and Environment in the Scoresby Sund Fjord, p. 120
  3. Place names, NE Greenland
  4. "Hurry Inlet". Mapcarta. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.