Newman Bay

Newman Bay
Newman Fjord
Newman Bugt
Newman Bay is located in Greenland
Newman Bay
Newman Bay
Location in Greenland
LocationArctic
Coordinates81°38′N 58°0′W / 81.633°N 58.000°W / 81.633; -58.000
Ocean/sea sourcesRobeson Channel, Lincoln Sea
Basin countriesGreenland
Max. length91 km (57 mi)
Max. width6 km (3.7 mi)
SettlementsUninhabited

Newman Bay (Danish: Newman Bugt) or Newman Fjord is a fjord in northern Greenland. To the northwest, the fjord opens into the Robeson Channel of the Lincoln Sea. It is a part of the Northeast Greenland National Park.

There are muskoxen near the shores of the fjord.[1]

History

The fjord was named after the Reverend Dr. Newman of Washington, D.C. in September 1871 during the Polaris expedition by Charles Francis Hall. It would be the last place Hall named in Greenland, for he was taken ill shortly thereafter and died in November the same year.[2]

Geography

Newman fjord is roughly SE/NW oriented and opens to the northwest. To the west lies Hall Land with the Polaris Foreland in the shore near its mouth and to the east Nyeboe Land, both largely unglaciated areas. Nina Bang Mountain rises to the east of the fjord and the Haug Range, with Kayser Mountain, to the SW of its shores.[3]

The fjord's mouth is located close to the entrance of the Robeson Channel in the Lincoln Sea, Arctic Ocean; Cape Sumner is the headland on the southwestern side and Cape Brevoort on the northeastern.[4] There are a few small islands in the inner reaches midway between the mouth and its head.[5] Several small streams empty into the fjord, as well as a glacier at its head which discharges from the Greenland Ice Cap.[4]

Map of Northern Ellesmere Island and far Northern Greenland.

See also

References

  1. ^ Euphemia Vale Blake (ed.), Journey to the Arctic: The True Story of the Disastrous 1871 Mission to the North Pole, p. 180
  2. ^ Clements R. Markham, The Lands of Silence, p. 300
  3. ^ "Newman Bugt". Mapcarta. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
  4. ^ a b Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 94
  5. ^ GoogleEarth