Melville Bay

Melville Bay (Greenlandic: Qimusseriarsuaq; Danish: Melville Bugt), is a large bay off the coast of northwestern Greenland. Located to the north of the Upernavik Archipelago, it opens to the south-west into Baffin Bay. Its Kalaallisut name, Qimusseriarsuaq, means "the great dog sledding place".[1]

Melville Bay
Melville Bugt
Location of Melville Bay in Northwest Greenland
LocationArctic
Coordinates75°45′N 61°00′W
Native nameQimusseriarsuaq
Ocean/sea sourcesBaffin Bay
Basin countriesGreenland
Max. length300 km (190 mi)
Max. width100 km (62 mi)
Max. depth1,000 m (3,300 ft)
FrozenBetween October and late July

The bay was named after Robert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville, (1771 - 1851) head of the Admiralty.

Geography

Melville Bay is delimited by Cape York in the northeast and Wilcox Head, the western promontory on Kiatassuaq Island in the south.[2] Some islands of the Upernavik Archipelago are in the Melville Bay area, such as Kiatassuaq Island, Kullorsuaq Island, Saarlia Island and Saqqarlersuaq Island. Melville Bay is free of fast ice between mid August and the end of September on average. Navigation is dangerous as there are numerous icebergs in the bay throughout the year.[3]

An Inuit hunting boat in southern Melville Bay. Late morning fog and icebergs in the background.
Aerial view of Wilcox Head

History

In the 19th century Melville Bay was an important place for whaling fleets.

View of two ships in Melville Bay by Edward Augustus Inglefield.
1869 photograph of a steamer and a party of hunters in Melville Bay.
gollark: Who wants *that*?
gollark: It's precise, it just doesn't have great range.
gollark: I had a more ridiculous idea than that involving just a lot of nested tuples.
gollark: Arbitrarily sized tuples are *basically* lists.
gollark: If you had nestable lists, I had a great idea for how to hack those into numbers more efficiently than unary.

See also

References

  1. "Melville Bay". Danish Polar Center. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
  2. Upernavik Avannarleq, Saga Map, Tage Schjøtt, 1992
  3. Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 82


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