Ushakov Island


Ushakov Island is an isolated island located in the Arctic Ocean, Russian Federation.
The average yearly precipitation ranges from at a height of and between and around the highest point of the island's ice cap.

Geography

Ushakov Island is located close to the region of permanent sea ice midway between Franz Josef Land and Severnaya Zemlya, at the northern limit of the Kara Sea.
This island lies close to the limit of permanent ice; it is desolate and subject to severe Arctic storms. Its total area is.
This island belongs to the Taymyrsky Dolgano-Nenetsky District of the Krasnoyarsk Krai administrative division of Russia. Owing to its extreme northerly location, the sea surrounding Ushakov Island is covered with pack ice in the winter and is full of ice floes during the summer. The closest land is lonely Vize Island further south.

Ice cap

Ushakov Island is covered by an ice cap. The highest point of this glacial feature is. The rocky ground below the icemass is flat and part of it lies below sea level. The edges of the ice cap form to high icy cliffs along the shore. The surface of the ice cap has become smaller between 1950 and 2000, but the ice volume has grown from to. The average thickness of the ice having increased from to.

History

This island was the last piece of undiscovered territory in the Soviet Arctic. It was finally located in 1935 when the few remaining unexplored areas in the northern Kara Sea were surveyed by Soviet hydrographic and oceanographic operations on icebreakers to study the sea and ice.
The expedition that discovered the island was led by Georgiy Alekseevich Ushakov aboard Icebreaker Sadko. The elusive island was subsequently named after this polar explorer, cartographer and oceanographer.
The first wintering in Ushakov Island was undertaken in 1954–55 and a polar station was established in 1954. This was abandoned during the 1980s and when an expedition visited the island in 2001, they found two small buildings partly sunken into the ice.