Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland

Greenland lies northeast of the North American continent and, with its eight to nine hundred thousand square miles, is the world's large island. Although the entire country is arctic in nature, conditions vary widely because, from north to south, almost 25 degrees of latitude are covered. The m...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Author: Brun, Eske
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1966
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465
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collection University of Calgary Journal Hosting
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language English
topic Sarqaq culture
spellingShingle Sarqaq culture
Brun, Eske
Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
topic_facet Sarqaq culture
description Greenland lies northeast of the North American continent and, with its eight to nine hundred thousand square miles, is the world's large island. Although the entire country is arctic in nature, conditions vary widely because, from north to south, almost 25 degrees of latitude are covered. The most striking feature of the island is the ice-cap - Indlandsisen - that covers about five-sixths of the total area and is more than ten thousand feet thick, leaving only a marginal zone around the coastline free of ice. This marginal zone is mountainous, and in some places rises to more than twelve thousand feet, so that Greenland actually is one big bowl of ice. There are cracks in the edge of that bowl through which glaciers flow all the way down to the sea, depositing icebergs in the ocean. Besides the icebergs there is a great deal of ocean ice around the coastlines of the island, especially on the east coast where the East Greenland Current brings the pack ice down from the northern polar basin, hampering navigation to a great extent. Greenland was discovered about four thousand years ago by people coming across the narrow straits from the Canadian archipelago. Ruins of their homes have been found, but no remains of the people themselves. It is believed that they must have been the forefathers of the present-day Eskimos. We know that since then many waves of Eskimos have moved back and forth across Greenland, so that even the thousands of miles of uninhabited coastline, some of which is the most northerly land in the world, have been inhabited at one time or another. About a thousand years ago Greenland was first sighted from the East by an Icelander by the name of Gunnbjorn, but the first European to set foot on the land was Erik the Red from Iceland. He had been expelled from Iceland for three years on account of a small incident of killing his neighbours, and he used those three years to investigate Greenland. He found out that this was a nice country to live in; that was why he call it Greenland. When the three years were up he went back to Iceland but soon returned to Greenland bringing with him people who settled on the southwest coast and established a farming community that existed for five hundred years. Erik's son, Leif, was actually the man who discovered America, in the year 1000, five hundred years before Christopher Columbus discovered the Bahama Islands. From those days originate the ties between Denmark and Greenland, and it is very important to note that Greenland as a part of Denmark is not an eighteenth-century colonial venture but a thousand-year-old historical fact. Even though the old Norsemen in Greenland died out around the year 1500 and even though connection was interrupted for a couple of hundred years, the Kings of Denmark never forgot that Greenland was part of their realm; and in 1721 a missionary, Hans Egede, was dispatched. From that year we date the modern history. The modern history of Greenland is about two hundred years of Danish endeavours to cope with the responsibilities this possession has put upon Denmark: above all, the social responsibilities, responsibilities of governing and supporting the 40,000 people who now live there, the descendants of the old Eskimos and the Danish settlers. But the Danish people also keenly feel their scientific responsibilities in Greenland, for although only one per cent of them live on this island that constitutes 98 per cent of the whole of Denmark, within that 98 per cent there are scientific problems of greater moment than in the European part of the nation. .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Brun, Eske
author_facet Brun, Eske
author_sort Brun, Eske
title Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
title_short Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
title_full Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
title_fullStr Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland
title_sort scientific research in the arctic: greenland
publisher The Arctic Institute of North America
publishDate 1966
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465
geographic Arctic
Greenland
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
genre Arctic
Arctic
Canadian Archipelago
East Greenland
east greenland current
eskimo*
Greenland
Hans Egede
Ice cap
Iceberg*
Iceland
Sarqaq
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Canadian Archipelago
East Greenland
east greenland current
eskimo*
Greenland
Hans Egede
Ice cap
Iceberg*
Iceland
Sarqaq
op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 19 No. 1 (1966): March: 1–108; 62-69
1923-1245
0004-0843
op_relation https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465/50378
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/66465 2023-05-15T14:19:20+02:00 Scientific Research in the Arctic: Greenland Brun, Eske 1966-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465/50378 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/66465 ARCTIC; Vol. 19 No. 1 (1966): March: 1–108; 62-69 1923-1245 0004-0843 Sarqaq culture info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 1966 ftunivcalgaryojs 2022-03-22T21:23:17Z Greenland lies northeast of the North American continent and, with its eight to nine hundred thousand square miles, is the world's large island. Although the entire country is arctic in nature, conditions vary widely because, from north to south, almost 25 degrees of latitude are covered. The most striking feature of the island is the ice-cap - Indlandsisen - that covers about five-sixths of the total area and is more than ten thousand feet thick, leaving only a marginal zone around the coastline free of ice. This marginal zone is mountainous, and in some places rises to more than twelve thousand feet, so that Greenland actually is one big bowl of ice. There are cracks in the edge of that bowl through which glaciers flow all the way down to the sea, depositing icebergs in the ocean. Besides the icebergs there is a great deal of ocean ice around the coastlines of the island, especially on the east coast where the East Greenland Current brings the pack ice down from the northern polar basin, hampering navigation to a great extent. Greenland was discovered about four thousand years ago by people coming across the narrow straits from the Canadian archipelago. Ruins of their homes have been found, but no remains of the people themselves. It is believed that they must have been the forefathers of the present-day Eskimos. We know that since then many waves of Eskimos have moved back and forth across Greenland, so that even the thousands of miles of uninhabited coastline, some of which is the most northerly land in the world, have been inhabited at one time or another. About a thousand years ago Greenland was first sighted from the East by an Icelander by the name of Gunnbjorn, but the first European to set foot on the land was Erik the Red from Iceland. He had been expelled from Iceland for three years on account of a small incident of killing his neighbours, and he used those three years to investigate Greenland. He found out that this was a nice country to live in; that was why he call it Greenland. When the three years were up he went back to Iceland but soon returned to Greenland bringing with him people who settled on the southwest coast and established a farming community that existed for five hundred years. Erik's son, Leif, was actually the man who discovered America, in the year 1000, five hundred years before Christopher Columbus discovered the Bahama Islands. From those days originate the ties between Denmark and Greenland, and it is very important to note that Greenland as a part of Denmark is not an eighteenth-century colonial venture but a thousand-year-old historical fact. Even though the old Norsemen in Greenland died out around the year 1500 and even though connection was interrupted for a couple of hundred years, the Kings of Denmark never forgot that Greenland was part of their realm; and in 1721 a missionary, Hans Egede, was dispatched. From that year we date the modern history. The modern history of Greenland is about two hundred years of Danish endeavours to cope with the responsibilities this possession has put upon Denmark: above all, the social responsibilities, responsibilities of governing and supporting the 40,000 people who now live there, the descendants of the old Eskimos and the Danish settlers. But the Danish people also keenly feel their scientific responsibilities in Greenland, for although only one per cent of them live on this island that constitutes 98 per cent of the whole of Denmark, within that 98 per cent there are scientific problems of greater moment than in the European part of the nation. . Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Canadian Archipelago East Greenland east greenland current eskimo* Greenland Hans Egede Ice cap Iceberg* Iceland Sarqaq University of Calgary Journal Hosting Arctic Greenland ARCTIC 19 1