Queen Victoria Sea

The Queen Victoria Sea (Russian: Море королевы Виктории, Morye Korolevy Viktorii) is a body of water in the Arctic Ocean, stretching from northeast of Svalbard to northwest Franz Josef Land. It is obstructed by ice most of the year.

Queen Victoria Sea
The Queen Victoria Sea in an 1898 Franz Josef Land map showing the explorations of Frederick G. Jackson
Queen Victoria Sea
LocationArctic Ocean
Coordinates81°30′N 38°00′E
TypeSea
Native nameМоре королевы Виктории  (Russian)
Basin countriesNorway and Russia
Max. length550 km (340 mi)
FrozenMost of the year
References[1]

This sea is named after Queen Victoria. Russian Arctic explorer Valentin Akkuratov claimed that a branch of the Gulf Stream reached as far north as the Queen Victoria Sea.[2]

Geography

The Queen Victoria Sea is located at 81° north longitude and 38° east latitude.[3] The Arctic Ocean farther north of the sea is frozen year-round. The sea stretches as far west as the Sjuøyane in Svalbard and as far east as Rudolf Island in the Franz Josef Archipelago.

The islands of Kvitøya and Victoria Island are located at the southern limit of this Arctic sea. To the south lies the Barents Sea.

See also

References

  1. Geographical Dictionary of the World, p. 1510
  2. Белые призраки Арктики
  3. Queen Victoria Sea: Svalbard


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