Expedition discovers island believed world’s northernmost
HELSINKI – A team of Arctic researchers from Denmark said they accidentally discovered what they believe is the world’s northernmost island located off Greenland’s coast.
The scientists from the University of Copenhagen initially thought they had arrived at Oodaaq, an island discovered by a Danish survey team in 1978, to collect samples during an expedition that was conducted in July.
They instead ended up on an undiscovered island further north.
“We were convinced that the island we were standing on was Oodaaq, which until then was registered as the world’s northernmost island,” said expedition leader Morten Rasch of the university’s department of geosciences and natural resource management.
“But when I posted photos of the island and its coordinates on social media, a number of American island hunters went crazy and said that it couldn’t be true,” he said in a statement on Friday. “Island hunters” are known as adventurers whose hobby it is to search for unknown islands.
The yet-to-be-named island is about 850 yards north of Oodaaq, an island off Cape Morris Jesup, the northernmost point of Greenland and one of the most northerly points of land on Earth.
The tiny island, apparently discovered as a result of shifting pack ice, is about 100-by-200 feet in size and rises to about 10 to 13 feet above sea level, the university said. The research team reportedly doesn’t consider the discovery to be a result of climate change.
The island consists primarily of small mounds of silt and gravel, according to Rasch. He said it might be the result of a major storm that, with the help of the sea, gradually pushed material from the seabed together until an island formed. The island isn’t expected to exist for a long time, Danish researchers believe.