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Cape Kane

Cape Kane (Danish: Kap Kane) is a headland in North Greenland. Administratively it belongs to the Northeast Greenland National Park.[2]

Cape Kane was named after Arctic explorer Elisha Kent Kane (1820 – 1857) at the time that it was the nearest land to the North Pole that had been put on the map.[3]

Geography

Cape Kane is a rocky headland located 14.5 km (9.0 mi) west of Cape Washington,[4] northeast of Conger Sound and off the western side of the mouth of Hunt Fjord.[5] Hunt Fjord is under the influence of slow-moving glaciers discharging on both sides of Cape Kane that completely fill it and partially clog neighboring Conger Sound as well.[6]

Cape Kane is the westernmost point of the Roosevelt Land Peninsula. Cape Christiansen is the headland on the other side of Conger Sound, at the northern end of Lockwood Island.[4][2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Greenland Pilot
  2. ^ a b Nunat Aqqi; Stednavne
  3. ^ The Polar Question — Proceedings - 1885 Vol. 11/4/35
  4. ^ a b Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Greenland and Iceland Enroute, p. 95
  5. ^ Geographical Items on North Greenland - Encyclopedia Arctica 14
  6. ^ North Greenland Glacier Velocities and Calf Ice Production

External links