• Source: Hekla Sound
  • The Hekla Sound (Danish: Hekla Sund) is a sound in King Frederick VIII Land, Northeast Greenland. Administratively it is part of the Northeast Greenland National Park zone.


    History


    The sound was named by the ill-fated 1906-1908 Denmark expedition after ship Hekla.


    Geography


    The Hekla Sound branches to the NW of the Dijmphna Sound at Cape Marie Dijmphna, separating the shore of Lynn Island from the southwestern shore of Holm Land with the southern end of the Princess Caroline-Mathilde Alps to the north. Further west it bends roughly southward, with Skallingen in the Greenland mainland to the west, joining again with the Dijmphna Sound.


    See also


    List of fjords of Greenland


    References




    External links


    Properties of the waters sampled in Dijmphna Sound
    Explanatory notes to the Geological map of Greenland

Kata Kunci Pencarian: