Schweizerland

Summary

Schweizerland, also known as Schweizerland Alps,[1] is a mountain range in King Christian IX Land, eastern Greenland. Administratively this range is part of the Sermersooq Municipality.[2] Its highest point is one of the highest peaks in Greenland.

Schweizerland
Schweizerland Alps
View of the mountains rising above the Midgard Glacier at the southern end of the range.
Highest point
PeakMont Forel
Elevation3,383 m (11,099 ft)
Dimensions
Length75 km (47 mi) N/S
Width40 km (25 mi) E/W
Area270 km2 (100 sq mi)
Geography
Schweizerland is located in Greenland
Schweizerland
Schweizerland
Location
CountryGreenland
Range coordinates66°40′N 37°0′W / 66.667°N 37.000°W / 66.667; -37.000

Owing to its high peaks Schweizerland is a popular climbing destination, together with the Watkins Range to the northeast and the Stauning Alps further north.[3] Tasiilaq Heliport is located near the area of the range.

History edit

The range was formerly a remote unknown area. It was named 'Schweizerland' in 1912 by Swiss geophysicist and Arctic explorer Alfred de Quervain[4] following the Second Swiss Expedition in which he crossed the Greenland ice cap from Godhavn (Qeqertarsuaq) on the west, to Sermilik Fjord on the eastern side.[5]

De Quervain also identified the position and approximate height of Mont Forel, highest point of Schweizerland. Mont Forel was then thought to be the highest mountain in the Arctic Circle area. However, at the time of the British Arctic Air Route Expedition led by Gino Watkins in 1930, Watkins discovered a new mountain range from the air located over 350 km to the northeast. This was the higher Watkins Range with the Gunnbjørnsfjeld, the actual highest summit in Greenland.[6] An attempt to climb Mont Forel was made by Lawrence Wager and Alfred Stephenson in 1931 but the mountaineers were stopped by the ice dome at the top of the mountain.[7]

In the years that followed, Watkins' 1932-33 East Greenland Expedition, the 1934 British Trans-Greenland Expedition with Lindsay, Croft and Lieutenant Arthur Godfrey of the Royal Engineers —which mapped the much larger Crown Prince Frederick Range to the northeast,[8] and the 1936-37 Paul-Émile Victor Expedition visited Schweizerland. All these expeditions carried out surveys in the little-known mountainous region, the latter taking a great number of photographs and sketches.[6] Mont Forel would be finally climbed in the same decade by an expedition of the Akademischer Alpen-Club of Zürich led by André Roch in 1938.[9]

Geography edit

The Schweizerland Range is a mountain system bound by the Greenland ice sheet to the north, the northern shore of the Sermilik Fjord system to the south and the Fenris Glacier to the west. Although its eastern limits are not well defined, there are two distinct regions in the range, one located in the south, roughly between the Jura Glacier (Juragletscheren) and the Midgard Glacier, and the other in the north limited by the ice cap at its northern end and the upper reaches of the K.J.V. Steenstrup Glacier to the southeast.[2] The Arctic Circle passes through the southern part of the range.

Schweizerland is highly glaciated, containing many active glaciers and nunataks, and its topography is very pronounced. The highest point of the range is 3,383 m high Mont Forel, located in the northern region of Schweizerland. Døren is a 1,929 m high mountain pass near Mont Forel.[10] The Crown Prince Frederick Range stretches northeastwards to the northeast of Mont Forel.

The area of the mountain range is uninhabited, but Tasiilaq, the most populous community on the eastern coast of Greenland, is relatively near.

 
Defense Mapping Agency map of Greenland sheet.

Mountains edit

The highest peak in Schweizerland is Mont Forel located at the northern limit. Quite a few of the features and peaks in and near the range are very well known among mountaineers; among these the Fox Jaw Cirque at the southern end, as well as the Rytterknaegten and the Trillingerne deserve mention.[11] Certain peaks such as the ca 3,250 m high Perfeknunatak have only recently been named and some are yet unnamed.[9] Gaule Bjerg is a 2,133 m high isolated peak located in a nunatak to the northwest, off the main area of the range.

  • Mont Forel (3,383 m)
  • Henri-Dunant Bjerg (2,744 m)
  • Jomfruen (2,744 m), a nunatak
  • Dobbelthætten (2,640 m), a ridge
  • Paddenhatten (2,446 m), a nunatak
  • Nordposten (2,202 m), a nunatak
  • Avantgarden (2,160 m), a ridge
  • Sydposten (2,106 m), a nunatak
  • Medet (2,106 m), a nunatak
  • Bredekuppel (2,029 m)
  • Guldnålene (1,724 m), a nunatak
  • Quervain Bjerg (1,558 m), a nunatak
  • Lauper Bjerg (1,537 m), a nunatak
  • Charcot Fjelde (837 m), located at the southern end

Bibliography edit

  • Greenland, Peaks above Fenrisgletscher, Schweizerland, East Greenland, American Alpine Journal (AAJ), Climbs And Expeditions, Volume 32, Issue 64, 1990, Page 184, ISBN 0-930410-43-2
  • Buoy observations from the windiest location in the world ocean, Cape Farewell, Greenland

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mont Forel 3360m". Greenland Independent. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  2. ^ a b Google Earth
  3. ^ "Climbing and Mountaineering in Greenland". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  4. ^ Alfred de Quervain's Swiss Greenland expeditions, 1909 and 1912 in Polar Record, Cambridge Journals by William Barr
  5. ^ The Swiss Expedition to Greenland 1938. André Roch
  6. ^ a b Encyclopedia Arctica 14: Greenland
  7. ^ AAJ - Greenland, Mt. Forel, Climbs And Expeditions
  8. ^ 'The British Trans-Greenland Expedition, 1934' The Geographical Journal Vol. 85, No. 5 (May 1935
  9. ^ a b Mountain Info. Greenland 2006 Climb Magazine. January 2008 issue, p. 70
  10. ^ "Schweizerland". Mapcarta. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  11. ^ Mountain.ru - Гренландия (Greenland)

External links edit

  • The Development of Mountaineering in East and North-East Greenland, An Outline History
  • Wall to Wall - EICA Ratho to Fox Jaw Cirque, East Greenland
  • Tangent Expedition Reports
  • Jan Strobel, Ein "Schweizerland" im arktischen Eis; Tagblatt der Stadt Zürich, 28 June 2016