Island (vestkyst) Faxe Bugt 1855

Updated to 1892. "Rare separately published sea chart of the West Coast of Iceland, engraved by O. C. Severin and published by the Kongelige Danske Søkort-Arkiv (Royal Danish Chart Archive). The present chart was issued after the initial group of sea charts produced by the Danish Royal Archive,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kongelige Danske Søkort-Arkiv
Format: Map
Language:unknown
Published: Kongelige Danske Søkort-Arkiv 1855
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~340263~90108436
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Summary:Updated to 1892. "Rare separately published sea chart of the West Coast of Iceland, engraved by O. C. Severin and published by the Kongelige Danske Søkort-Arkiv (Royal Danish Chart Archive). The present chart was issued after the initial group of sea charts produced by the Danish Royal Archive, but very early in the history of the charting of Iceland. Charting the Coast of Iceland As of the end of the 18th Century, there were still no meaningfully accurate charts of the coast of Iceland. The first serious work on this project was undertaken under the auspices of the Danish Royal Navy by captain Hans Erik Minor, who wassent to Iceland in 1776. Minor surveyed the area from Reykjanes to Snæfellsness, before his untimely death. Also in 1776, J. P. Wleugel was dispatched to Iclenad to survey parts of the eastern Fjords. In 1788, Minor's charts were published under the direction of Poul de Løvenørn, director of the Danish Institute of Surveying, with their corrections and changes. While the completion of the charting of these sections of Iceland was important, a signficant part of the island remained uncharted. Poul de Løvenørn led the effort to persuade the Royal Court to recommence surveying in 1800, proposing that the coastal measurements be resumed off Iceland and pointing out that Minor and Wleugel's charts were not suffciently accurate. It was resolved to pursue the project, with Norwegian officers Ole Mentzen Aanum and Ole Ohlsen, commissioned for the work. In 1803, Ohlsen was joined by Hans Jørgen Wetlesen and Hans Frisak. In 1805-6, Ohlsen and Wetlesen resigned and were replaced by Michael Smith and Hans Jacob Scheel. It was then up to Frisak and Scheel to do most of the work. When they left in 1814, they had triangulated the entire coast but had not completed the project. In 1815, Lieutenant Moritz Ludvig Born and Surveyor Arent Aschlund were sent to Iceland to complete the work, which required until 1818. In all, the surveying work had lasted for 18 years. The resulting coastal charts were thereafter ...