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Greenland
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Greenland,
also Kalaallit Nunaat (Danish Grønland), island, internally
self-governing part of Denmark, situated between the North Atlantic and
Arctic oceans. Greenland lies mostly north of the Arctic Circle and is
separated from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, on the west, primarily
by Davis Strait and Baffin Bay, and from Iceland, on the east, by the
Strait of Denmark. The largest island in the world, Greenland has a
maximum extent, from its northernmost point on Cape Morris Jesup to Cape
Farewell in the extreme south, of about 2655 km (about 1650 mi). The
maximum distance from east to west is about 1290 km (about 800 mi). The
entire coast, which is deeply indented with fjords, is roughly estimated
at 5800 km (3600 mi). The total area of Greenland is approximately
2,175,600 sq km (approximately 840,004 sq mi), of which some 1,834,000
sq km (about 708,110 sq mi) is ice cap.
Land and Resources
Greenland
consists of an interior ice-covered plateau surrounded by a mountainous,
generally ice-free, rim. The interior ice cap is thickest near the
center of the island, where the maximum depth is estimated at about 2440
m (about 8000 ft). Underneath the ice cover are the ancient rocks of the
Greenland Shield, which is geologically related to the Canadian Shield.
The greatest heights of land are along the eastern coast, where the
extreme elevation is Mount Gunnbjørn (3700 m/12,139 ft). Drainage is
afforded mainly by the so-called ice fjords, in which glaciers from the
ice caps pass through valleys to the sea, where they form thousands of
icebergs each year. The climate is extremely cold, but during the short
summer in the south the mean temperature is 8.9° C (48° F). The mammals
of Greenland are more American than European, and include the musk-ox,
wolf, lemming, and reindeer. The varieties of seal and whale, and most
of the species of fish and seabirds, are also American rather than
European. Circumpolar animals, such as the polar bear, arctic fox, polar
hare, and stoat, are also found.
Population
Greenlanders are a people of mixed ancestry, primarily Inuit (Eskimo)
and European, especially Danish-Norwegian. The total population of
Greenland (1992 estimate) was 55,385. Nearly all the population was
located on the narrow southwestern coastal fringe.
The capital, Nuuk, formerly known as Godthåb (population, 1992 estimate,
12,233), on the southwestern coast, is the largest and oldest Danish
settlement on the island, having been founded 1721. Sisimiut (Holsteinsborg;
population, 4800), on the western coast just north of the Arctic Circle,
is the second largest town. Other settlements include Qaqortoq (Julianehåb),
Paamiut (Frederikshåb), and Narsaq, on the southern coast; Thule, on the
northwestern coast; and Ammassalik, on the eastern coast.
Education is free and compulsory for all children between the ages of 7
and 16. About 100 school centers have been established, and their
languages of instruction are both Greenlandic (an Inuit language with
some Danish words) and Danish. A university center is at Nuuk.
Economy
Fishing, sealing, and fur trapping are the principal economic
activities. The fish catch is primarily cod, shrimp, and salmon; fish
processing is the major manufacturing industry. Agriculture is only
possible on about one percent of Greenland's total area. Cattle, sheep,
and goats are raised in small numbers in some portions of the
southwestern coast, and hardy vegetables are grown. Greenland was
formerly the world's main source of natural cryolite, a mineral used in
the manufacture of aluminum, but by the late 1970s, reserves were
exhausted. Lead and zinc were also produced until the mines were
exhausted in 1990, and deposits of coal and uranium are known to exist.
Exports are fish, hides and skins, fish oil, lead, and zinc. Thule Air
Base in the north supports a community of American and Danish civilian
and military personnel.
Government
In a referendum in 1979, Greenland voted for home rule. Denmark
continues to administer external affairs. Executive power is held by a
seven-member body, the Landsstyre, headed by a premier. Legislative
power is vested in a 27-member parliament, the Landsting. Greenlanders
elect two representatives to the Danish parliament.
History
Greenland was first explored by Eric the Red, a Norwegian settler in
Iceland and father of Leif Ericson, toward the end of the 10th century,
and Icelandic settlements were subsequently established there under his
leadership. By the early 15th century, however, these settlements had
vanished, and all contact with Greenland was lost. In the course of the
search for the Northwest Passage, Greenland was sighted again. The
English navigator John Davis visited the island in 1585, and his
explorative work, together with that of the English explorers Henry
Hudson and William Baffin, afforded knowledge of the west coast of
Greenland.
Danish Authority Established
The foundation of Danish rule was laid by a mission at Godthåb in 1721
by a Norwegian missionary, Hans Egede. In the 19th century Greenland was
explored and mapped by numerous explorers and navigators. From 1930 to
1931, British and German expeditions made weather observations on the
inland ice north of the Arctic Circle. In 1933 an American expedition
sponsored by the University of Michigan and Pan-American Airways engaged
in meteorological research more than 545 km (more than 340 mi) north of
the Arctic Circle.
The United States relinquished its claim to land in northern Greenland,
based on the explorations of the American explorer Robert Edwin Peary,
when it purchased the Virgin Islands from Denmark in 1917. In May 1921,
Denmark declared the entire island of Greenland to be Danish territory,
causing a dispute with Norway over hunting and fishing rights. In 1931 a
strip of land on the east coast was claimed by some Norwegian hunters,
whose action was later recognized by the Norwegian government. The
occupation was invalidated by the Permanent Court of International
Justice at The Hague in 1933.
U.S. Protection
Germany's occupation of Denmark in 1940, during World War II, brought
the status of Greenland again into question. Negotiations between the
U.S. government and the Danish minister to Washington resulted in an
agreement on April 9, 1941, granting the United States the right “to
construct, maintain and operate such landing fields, seaplane facilities
and radio and meteorological installations as may be necessary” to
protect the status quo in the western hemisphere; the United States also
assumed protective custody over Greenland for the duration of World War
II, although recognizing Danish sovereignty.
Greenland is the source of many of the weather changes in the northern
hemisphere, and knowledge of Greenland weather is of prime importance
for the prediction of conditions in the North Atlantic Ocean and in
western Europe. Weather and radio stations are of inestimable value for
Atlantic aerial traffic. In 1944, during World War II, a German
radio-weather station on the northeast coast was destroyed by the U.S.
Coast Guard, and various German attempts to establish weather bases on
Greenland were thwarted by Coast Guard vessels. In May 1947, Denmark
requested that the U.S. end the 1941 agreement. Protracted negotiations
culminated during April 1951, in a 20-year pact providing for Danish
control of the chief U.S. naval station in Greenland and for the
establishment of jointly operated defense areas. By the terms of other
provisions, the armed forces of the members of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization were authorized to use all naval, air, and military bases
on the island. In the early 1950s the United States expanded its
military operations in Greenland, constructing a vast strategic air base
at Thule, about 1500 km (about 930 mi) from the North Pole.
In June 1952, the Danish government and private Danish, Swedish, and
Canadian interests formed a company to exploit deposits of zinc, lead,
tungsten, and cryolite in eastern Greenland.
New Political Status
Under the new Danish constitution of May 1953, the country became an
integral part of the Danish monarchy and obtained representation in the
national parliament.
Following a popular referendum in January 1979, Greenland attained home
rule. Elections in April of that year for a new parliament were won by
the left-wing Siumut party. In a referendum held in February 1982, the
Greenlanders voted by a narrow margin to withdraw from the European
Community (now called the European Union); the withdrawal was completed
by early 1985. In the June 1984 elections, the Siumut party and a
moderate opposition group, the Atassut party, each won 11 seats in
parliament; the Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) won 3 seats. Results of the May
1987 elections were similarly divided. In March 1991 the balance shifted
as Atassut lost 3 seats and the IA gained 2.
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