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Aleutian Islands

The Aleutian Islands (/əˈlʃən/;[2][3] Russian: Алеутские острова; Aleut: Unangam Tanangin, “Land of the Aleuts”, possibly from Chukchi aliat, "island"), also called the Aleut Islands[4] or Aleutic Islands[5] and known before 1867 as the Catherine Archipelago, are a chain of 14 large volcanic islands and 55 smaller islands. Most of the Aleutian Islands belong to the U.S. state of Alaska, but some belong to the Russian federal subject of Kamchatka Krai.[1] They form part of the Aleutian Arc in the Northern Pacific Ocean, occupying a land area of 6,821 sq mi (17,666 km2) and extending about 1,200 mi (1,900 km) westward from the Alaska Peninsula toward the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia, and act as a border between the Bering Sea to the north and the Pacific Ocean to the south. Crossing longitude 180°, at which point east and west longitude end, the archipelago contains both the westernmost part of the United States by longitude (Amatignak Island) and the easternmost by longitude (Semisopochnoi Island). The westernmost U.S. island in real terms, however, is Attu Island, west of which runs the International Date Line. While nearly all the archipelago is part of Alaska and is usually considered as being in the "Alaskan Bush", at the extreme western end, the small, geologically related Commander Islands belong to Russia.

Aleutian Islands
Алеутские острова (Russian)
Native name:
Unangam Tanangin
Aleutian Islands highlighted
Aleutian Islands
Location in the northern Pacific Ocean
Geography
LocationNorth Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea
Coordinates52°12′N 174°12′W / 52.2°N 174.2°W / 52.2; -174.2Coordinates: 52°12′N 174°12′W / 52.2°N 174.2°W / 52.2; -174.2
Total islands>300
Major islandsUnimak Island, Unalaska Island, Adak Island
Area6,821[1] sq mi (17,670 km2)
Length1,200 mi (1900 km)
Highest elevation9,373 ft (2856.9 m)
Highest pointMount Shishaldin, Unimak Is.
Russia
Federal subjectKamchatka Krai
United States
StateAlaska
Largest settlementUnalaska (pop. 4,283)
Demographics
Population8,162 (2000)
Pop. density0.84/sq mi (0.324/km2)
LanguagesAleutian
Ethnic groupsAleut
Additional information
Time zones
 • Summer (DST)
  • Hawaii–Aleutian Daylight Time (UTC–9)
  • Alaska Daylight Time (UTC–8)

The islands, with their 57 volcanoes, form the northernmost part of the Pacific Ring of Fire. Physiographically, they are a distinct section of the larger Pacific Border province, which in turn is part of the larger Pacific Mountain System physiographic division. The islands are considered to be among the most geographically isolated areas in the North Pacific.[6]

Battles and skirmishes occurred on the islands during the Aleutian Islands campaign of World War II. The Japanese landing and occupation of Kiska and Attu in June 1942 were the only two invasions of the United States during that war.

Geology

Motion between the Kula Plate and the North American Plate along the margin of the Bering Shelf (in the Bering Sea north of the Aleutian arc) ended in the early Eocene. The Aleutian Basin, the ocean floor north of the Aleutian arc, is the remainder of the Kula Plate that was trapped when volcanism and subduction jumped south to its current location at c. 56 Ma.[7] The Aleutian island arc, then, formed in the Early Eocene (55–50 Ma) when the subduction of the Pacific Plate under the North American Plate began. The arc is made of separate blocks that have been rotated clockwise. The basement underlying the islands is made of three stratigraphic units: an Eocene layer of volcanic rock, an OligoceneMiocene layer of marine sedimentary rock, and a PlioceneQuaternary layer of sedimentary and igneous rock.[8]

Geography

 
Unalaska Island in the Aleutian Islands.
 
The Aleutian Islands from 32,000 feet (9,700 m).
 
Active Aleutian volcanoes.

The islands, known before 1867 as the Catherine Archipelago, include six groups (east to west)

All six are located between 51° and 55° N latitude and 172° E and 163° W longitude.[9] The largest islands in the Aleutians are Attu (the farthest from the mainland), and Unalaska, Umnak, and Unimak in the Fox Islands. The largest of those is Unimak Island, with an area of 1,571.41 mi2 (4,069.9 km2), followed by Unalaska Island, the only other Aleutian Island with an area over 1,000 square miles (2,600 km2).

The axis of the archipelago near the mainland of Alaska has a southwest trend, but at Tanaga Island (about 178° W) its direction changes to the northwest. This change of direction corresponds to a curve in the line of volcanic fissures that have contributed their products to the building of the islands. Such curved chains are repeated about the Pacific Ocean in the Kuril Islands, the Japanese chain, and in the Philippines. All these island arcs are at the edge of the Pacific Plate and experience much seismic activity, but are still habitable; the Aleutians lie between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates.[citation needed] The general elevation is greatest in the eastern islands and least in the western. The island chain is a western continuation of the Aleutian Range on the mainland.[10]

The great majority of the islands bear evident marks of volcanic origin, and there are numerous volcanic cones on the north side of the chain, some of them active; many of the islands, however, are not wholly volcanic, but contain crystalline or sedimentary rocks, and also amber and beds of lignite. The coasts are rocky and surf-worn, and the approaches are exceedingly dangerous, the land rising immediately from the coasts to steep, bold mountains.[10]

These volcanic islands reach heights of 6,200 feet (1,900 m). Makushin Volcano (5,691 feet (1,735 m)) on Unalaska Island, is not quite visible from within the town of Unalaska, though the steam rising from its cone is visible on a (rare) clear day. Residents of Unalaska need only to climb one of the smaller hills in the area, such as Pyramid Peak or Mt. Newhall, to get a good look at the snow-covered cone. The volcanic Bogoslof and Fire Islands, which rose from the sea in 1796 and 1883 respectively, lie about 30 miles (50 km) west of Unalaska Bay.[10]

In 1906, a new volcanic cone rose between the islets of Bogoslof and Grewingk, near Unalaska, followed by another in 1907. These cones were nearly demolished by an explosive eruption on September 1, 1907.[10] In 2017, the volcanic cone erupted sending ash and ice particles 30,000 feet (9000 m) into the air.[11]

Alfred Russel Wallace's 1879 book Australasia, Ian Todd's 1974 book Island Realm: A Pacific Panorama and Dean Kohlhoff's 2002 book Amchitka and the Bomb: Nuclear Testing in Alaska all associate the Aleutian Islands with the Oceania region due to their status as remote islands in the Pacific.[12][13][14] The islands, having biogeographical and ethnocultural affinities to North America, are not ordinarily considered a part of the region.[15][16]

Climate

 
Adak Island's climate creates a tundra

The climate of the islands is oceanic, with moderate and fairly uniform temperatures and heavy rainfall. Fogs are almost constant. Summer weather is much cooler than Southeast Alaska (around Sitka), but the winter temperature of the islands and of the Alaska Panhandle is very nearly the same.[10] According to the Köppen climate classification system, the area southwest of 53°30′N 167°00′W / 53.5°N 167.0°W / 53.5; -167.0 on Unalaska Island have a "Subpolar Oceanic Climate" (type "Cfc" as are Reykjavík, Tórshavn, Punta Arenas, Ushuaia and the Auckland Islands), characterized by the coldest month averaging above 0 °C (32 °F), 1–3 months averaging above 10 °C (50 °F), and no significant precipitation difference between seasons. To the northeast of that point, the climate becomes "Subarctic With Cool Summers And Year Around Rainfall" (type "Dfc" as are Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Murmansk, St. Moritz, and Labrador City), where it is similar but colder, with the coldest month averaging below 0 °C (32 °F).[17] During the winter the islands become the center for a semi-permanent low-pressure area called the Aleutian Low.[18]

The mean annual temperature for Unalaska, the most populated island of the group, is about 38 °F (3 °C), being about 30 °F (−1 °C) in January and about 52 °F (11 °C) in August. The highest and lowest temperatures recorded on the islands are 78 °F (26 °C) and 5 °F (−15 °C) respectively. The average annual rainfall is about 80 inches (2,000 mm), and Unalaska, with about 250 rainy days per year, is said to be one of the rainiest places within the U.S.[10]

Flora

 
Cape Promontory, Cape Lutkes on Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska.

The growing season lasts approximately 135 days, from early in May until late in September, but agriculture is limited to the raising of few vegetables. With the exception of some stunted willows, the vast majority of the chain is devoid of native trees.[10] On some of the islands, such as Adak and Amaknak, there are a few coniferous trees growing, remnants of the Russian period. While tall trees grow in many cold climates, Aleutian conifers — some estimated to be two hundred years old — rarely reach a height of even 10 feet (3 m), and many of them are still less than 5 feet (1.5 m) tall. This is because the islands, much like the Falklands and other islands of similar latitudes, experience such strong winds that taller trees are vulnerable to snapping off.

Instead of trees, the islands are covered with a luxuriant, dense growth of herbage and shrubs, including crowberry, bluejoint, grasses, sedges, and many flowering plants.[19] There are areas of peat bog near the coasts. Endemic plants include the endangered Aleutian shield fern.

Fauna

 
Transient orcas near Unimak Island, eastern Aleutian Islands

The Aleutians are home to many large colonies of seabirds. Buldir Island has 21 breeding seabird species, including the Bering Sea-endemic red-legged kittiwake. Large seabird colonies are also present at Kiska, Gareloi, Semisopochnoi, Bogoslof, and others. The islands are also frequented by vagrant Asiatic birds, including the common rosefinch, Siberian rubythroat, bluethroat, lanceolated warbler, and the first North American record of the intermediate egret.[20]

The habitats of the Aleutians are largely unspoiled, but wildlife is affected by competition from introduced species such as cattle, caribou, and foxes. Nearly all of the Aleutians are protected as part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge and the Aleutian Islands Wilderness.[21]

Observations have identified sea otters as a keystone species along the coasts of many of the Aleutian Islands. Their presence encourages the growth of kelp forests, as the otters control sea urchin populations (as large populations of sea urchins can create urchin barrens by clearing away kelp stands).[22]

Economy

 
Dutch harbor crab boats

On the less mountainous islands, the raising of sheep and reindeer was once believed to be practicable.[19] There are bison on islands near Sand Point. Sheep raising seems to have died off with the advent of synthetic fibers, which lowered the value of wool. During the 1980s, there were some llama being raised on Unalaska. The current economy is primarily based on fishing, and the presence of U.S. military. The only crop is potato. Chickens are raised in barns under protection from the cold.

Transportation

In addition to a partial air service and a ferry service, the Alaska Marine Highway passes through many of the U.S. islands.

Demographics

 
Residences in Adak, Adak Island

The native people refer to themselves as Unangan, and are now generally known by most non-natives as the "Aleut". The Aleut language is one of the two main branches of the Eskimo–Aleut language family. This family is not known to be related to any others. The 2000 U.S. Census recorded a population of 8,162 on the islands, of whom 4,283 were living in the main settlement of Unalaska.

History

Prehistory

As they stretch like a broken bridge from the continent Asia to the continent North America, many anthropologists[citation needed] hypothesize they were a route of the first human occupants of the Americas. However, the earliest known evidence in public recorded history of human occupation in the Americas is found much farther south. The early human sites in the Bering Sea have probably been submerged by rising waters and sand during the current interglacial period.

People living in or on the Aleutian Islands developed fine skills in hunting, fishing, and basketry. Hunters made their weapons, watercraft. The baskets found are noted[by whom?] for being finely woven with carefully shredded stalks of beach rye.

Russian period

 
An Aleutian man with a Creole woman in the Aleutian Islands
 
A Creole winter home in Unalaska, Aleutian Islands.

Explorers, traders and missionaries arrived from Russia beginning in 1741.

In 1741 the Russian government sent Vitus Bering, a Dane in the service of Russia, and Aleksei Chirikov, a Russian, in the ships Saint Peter and Saint Paul on a voyage of discovery in the Northern Pacific. After the ships were separated by a storm; Chirikov discovered several eastern islands of the Aleutian group, and Bering discovered several of the western islands. Bering was shipwrecked and died in the Komandorski Islands (Commander Islands); one of which now bears his name (Bering Island), along with the surrounding Bering Sea. The survivors of Bering's party reached the Kamchatka Peninsula in a boat constructed from the wreckage of their ship, and reported the islands were rich in fur-bearing animals.[10]

Siberian fur hunters flocked to the Commander Islands and gradually moved eastward across the Aleutian Islands to the mainland. In this manner, Russia gained a foothold on the northwestern coast of North America. The Aleutian Islands consequently belonged to Russia, until that country transferred all its possessions in North America to the U.S. in 1867.[10]

During the consolidation of the Russian-American Company there was sporadic conflict with the native population (frequently disastrous to the poorly armed and vastly outnumbered Russians). The colonies soon entered a relatively stable state based on cooperation, intermarriage, and official policies that provided social status, education, and professional training to children of mixed Aleut-Russian birth.[23] Within a generation, the day-to-day administration of the Russian-American colonies was largely in the hands of native-born Alaskans. Reversing the usual trend in colonization where indigenous technologies are replaced, the Russians adopted the Aleut kayak, or baidarka, sea otter hunting techniques, and the working of native copper deposits. The Russians instituted public education, preservation of the Aleut language through transliteration of religious and other texts into Aleut via an adaptation of the Cyrillic alphabet, vaccination of the native population against smallpox, and science-based sea mammal conservation policies that were ahead of their time.[23]

 
Russian Orthodox Church on Unalaska Island

By 1760 the Russian merchant Andrian Tolstykh had made a detailed census in the vicinity of Adak and extended Russian citizenship to the Aleuts.

During his third and last voyage in 1778, Captain James Cook surveyed the eastern portion of the Aleutian archipelago, accurately determined the position of some of the more important islands, and corrected many errors of former navigators.[10]

Orthodox Christian heritage

Among the first Christian missionaries to arrive in the Aleutian Islands was a party of ten Russian Orthodox monks and priests, who arrived in 1793. Within two years, a monk named Herman was the only survivor of that party. He settled on Spruce Island, near Kodiak Island, and often defended the rights of the Aleuts against the Russian trading companies. He is now known in the Orthodox Church as Saint Herman of Alaska.

Another early Christian missionary of the Russian Orthodox Church was Father Veniaminov who arrived in Unalaska in 1824. He was named Bishop Innokentii in 1840 and moved to Sitka. He is now known in the Orthodox Church as Saint Innocent of Alaska.

The principal settlements were on Unalaska Island. The oldest was Iliuliuk (also called Unalaska), settled in 1760–1775, with a customs house and an Orthodox church.

U.S. possession

 
Western Aleutian Islands, from a 1916 map of the Alaska Territory

After the American purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867, further development took place. New buildings included a Methodist mission and orphanage, and the headquarters for a considerable fleet of United States revenue cutters, which patrolled the sealing grounds of the Pribilof Islands.[10] The first public school in Unalaska opened in 1883.

 
Attu village, Attu Island in June 1937

The U.S. Congress extended American citizenship to all Native Americans (and this law has been held to include the indigenous peoples of Alaska) in 1924. A hospital was built in Unalaska in 1933 by the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs.

World War II

 
U.S. soldiers of the southern landing force on the beach at Massacre Bay, Attu Island during the Battle of Attu, May 11, 1943

During World War II, in what were the only two invasions of the United States during the war, small parts of the Aleutian islands were occupied by Japanese forces, when Attu and Kiska were invaded possibly to divert American forces away from the main Japanese attack at Midway Atoll. The U.S. Navy, having broken the Japanese naval codes, proceeded as if this was just a diversion,[24][25][26] and it did not expend large amounts of effort in defending the islands. More than 90 Americans were taken to Japan as prisoners of war. Most of the civilian population (over 800) of the Aleutians and Pribilovians were detained by the United States in camps in the Alaska Panhandle. During the Aleutian Islands campaign, American forces invaded Japanese-held Attu and defeated the Japanese. American and Canadian troops later launched an invasion of Kiska, 34,426 men composed of both Americans and Canadian participated however Japanese forces had already withdrawn, ending the campaign in the islands. The invasion was an embarrassment for the Allied forces as the entire Japanese force of 5,183 men had left the island on July 28 without the Americans noticing. However, the Americans suffered significant casualties during their 'invasion' – 313 men died as a result of accidents, with many dying due to accidental fire.

President Roosevelt visited Adak in 1944, meeting with commanders and eating with soldiers of the garrison. This was his first and only trip to the Aleutian Islands and Alaska as a whole. A rumor spread that FDR had accidentally left his Scottish Terrier "Fala" on one of the Islands and had to send a destroyer to retrieve the dog, costing taxpayers several million dollars. The President made fun of these rumors during a talk with the Teamsters Union in Washington DC, now known as the "Fala Speech". At this speech the President joked with the crowd saying, "Well, of course, I don't resent attacks, and my family doesn't resent attacks, but Fala does resent them!"[27]

June 3, 2002 was celebrated as Dutch Harbor Remembrance Day. The governor of Alaska ordered state flags lowered to half-staff to honor the 43 Americans who died during the two-day Japanese air attack in 1942. The Aleutian World War II National Historic Area Visitors Center opened that month.

Recent developments

The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act became law in 1971. In 1977, the Ounalashka Corporation (from Unalaska) declared a dividend. This was the first village corporation to declare and pay a dividend to its shareholders.

The Aleutian Islands were designated a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1976. The Aleutians were one of 17 biosphere reserves in the United States withdrawn by request of the U.S. government from the programme in June 2017.[28][29]

Nuclear testing

The U.S. conducted underground tests of nuclear weapons on Amchitka Island from 1965 to 1971 as part of the Vela Uniform program. The final detonation, the Cannikin, was the largest underground nuclear explosion by the U.S.

Russian Aleutians

Russian Aleutians is organized as Aleutsky District in Kamchatka Krai. It comprises

See also

References

  1. ^ a b The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica (18 December 2015). "Aleutian Islands". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  2. ^ "Aleutian Islands". Merriam-Webster. Merriam-Webster, Inc. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Aleutian". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  4. ^ Mark Nuttall, ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of the Arctic. Routledge. p. 333. ISBN 0-203-99785-9.
  5. ^ George Forchhammer (1863). Royal Society of London (ed.). "On the Constitution of Sea-Water, at different Depths, and in different Latitudes". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Taylor & Francis. 12: 131.
  6. ^ "The Aleutian Islands map showing locations of major island groups and islands mentioned in the text. *, Samalga Pass" – via ResearchGate.[better source needed]
  7. ^ Klemperer, S. L.; Miller, E. L.; Grantz, A.; Scholl, D. W. (2002). "Crustal structure of the Bering and Chukchi shelves: Deep seismic reflection profiles across the North American continent between Alaska and Russia". Special Papers, Geological Society of America. 360: 1–24. ISBN 9780813723600. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  8. ^ Holbrook, W. S.; Lizarralde, D.; McGeary, S.; Bangs, N.; Diebold, J. (1999). "Structure and composition of the Aleutian island arc and implications for continental crustal growth" (PDF). Geology. 27 (1): 31–34. Bibcode:1999Geo....27...31H. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1999)027<0031:SACOTA>2.3.CO;2. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  9. ^ i.e. east of 172° E and west of 163° W longitude, straddling the antimeridian
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Aleutian Islands". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 543–544.
  11. ^ "Alaska volcano erupts again, sending up another ash cloud". Fox News. 2017-01-26. Retrieved 2017-01-27.
  12. ^ Todd, Ian (1974). Island Realm: A Pacific Panorama. Angus & Robertson. ISBN 9780207127618. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  13. ^ Wallace, Alfred Russel (1879). Australasia. The University of Michigan. p. 2. Retrieved 12 March 2022. Oceania is the word often used by continental geographers to describe the great world of islands we are now entering upon [...] This boundless watery domain, which extends northwards of Behring Straits and southward to the Antarctic barrier of ice, is studded with many island groups, which are, however, very irregularly distributed over its surface. The more northerly section, lying between Japan and California and between the Aleutian and Hawaiian Archipelagos is relived by nothing but a few solitary reefs and rocks at enormously distant intervals.
  14. ^ Kohlhoff, Dean (2002). Amchitka and the Bomb: Nuclear Testing in Alaska. University of Washington Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780295800509. Retrieved 12 March 2022. The regional name of the Pacific Islands is appropriate: Oceania, a sea of islands, including those of Alaska and Hawaii. The Pacific Basin is not insignificant or remote. It covers one third of the globe's surface. Its northern boundary is the Aleutian Islands chain. Oceania virtually touches all of the Western Hemisphere.
  15. ^ "Oceania | Definition, Population, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  16. ^ Henderson, John William (1971). Area Handbook for Oceania. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 5. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  17. ^ "Interactive United States Koppen-Geiger Climate Classification Map". www.plantmaps.com. Retrieved 2018-10-31.
  18. ^ Rodionov, S.N.; Bond, N.A.; Overland, J.E. (November 2007). "The Aleutian Low, storm tracks, and winter climate variability in the Bering Sea". Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography. 54 (23–26): 2560–2577. Bibcode:2007DSRII..54.2560R. doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2007.08.002.
  19. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  20. ^ buldirbirds www.mun.ca[dead link]
  21. ^ "Aleutian Islands". Terrestrial Ecoregions. World Wildlife Fund.
  22. ^ Estes, James (2016). Serendipity: An Ecologist's Quest to Understand Nature. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520285033.
  23. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2013-04-07. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  24. ^ "War in the Pacific: The First Year". nps.gov. from the original on 2019-05-09. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  25. ^ "Japan Invades the Aleutian Islands". PBS. from the original on 2020-08-12. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  26. ^ "Battle of the Aleutian Islands". history.com. from the original on 2014-02-15. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  27. ^ "When the president came to dinner: FDR in Alaska". Anchorage Daily News. 2014-09-12. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  28. ^ UNESCO. "Biosphere Reserves: Konza Prairie". Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  29. ^ "23 new sites added to UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves". 14 June 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2018.

Further reading

  • Gibson, Daniel D., and G. Vernon Byrd. Birds of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Nuttall Ornithological Club, 2007. ISBN 978-0-943610-73-3
  • Ivanov, Viacheslav Vsevolodovich. The Russian Orthodox Church of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands and Its Relation to Native American Traditions—An Attempt at a Multicultural Society, 1794–1912. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1997. ISBN 0-16-048781-1
  • Jochelson, Waldemar. Archaeological Investigations in the Aleutian Islands. Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1925.
  • Morgan, Lael (September 1983). "The Aleutians: Alaska's Far-out Islands". National Geographic. Vol. 164, no. 3. pp. 336–363. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.

External links

  • U.S. Coast Pilot 9, Chapter 7, Aleutian Islands
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Aleutian Islands
  • Seattle to Aleutian Island Expedition

aleutian, islands, aleutians, redirects, here, people, aleut, other, uses, aleutian, disambiguation, russian, Алеутские, острова, aleut, unangam, tanangin, land, aleuts, possibly, from, chukchi, aliat, island, also, called, aleut, islands, aleutic, islands, kn. Aleutians redirects here For the people see Aleut For other uses see Aleutian disambiguation The Aleutian Islands e ˈ l uː ʃ en 2 3 Russian Aleutskie ostrova Aleut Unangam Tanangin Land of the Aleuts possibly from Chukchi aliat island also called the Aleut Islands 4 or Aleutic Islands 5 and known before 1867 as the Catherine Archipelago are a chain of 14 large volcanic islands and 55 smaller islands Most of the Aleutian Islands belong to the U S state of Alaska but some belong to the Russian federal subject of Kamchatka Krai 1 They form part of the Aleutian Arc in the Northern Pacific Ocean occupying a land area of 6 821 sq mi 17 666 km2 and extending about 1 200 mi 1 900 km westward from the Alaska Peninsula toward the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia and act as a border between the Bering Sea to the north and the Pacific Ocean to the south Crossing longitude 180 at which point east and west longitude end the archipelago contains both the westernmost part of the United States by longitude Amatignak Island and the easternmost by longitude Semisopochnoi Island The westernmost U S island in real terms however is Attu Island west of which runs the International Date Line While nearly all the archipelago is part of Alaska and is usually considered as being in the Alaskan Bush at the extreme western end the small geologically related Commander Islands belong to Russia Aleutian IslandsAleutskie ostrova Russian Native name Unangam TananginAleutian Islands highlightedAleutian IslandsLocation in the northern Pacific OceanGeographyLocationNorth Pacific Ocean Bering SeaCoordinates52 12 N 174 12 W 52 2 N 174 2 W 52 2 174 2 Coordinates 52 12 N 174 12 W 52 2 N 174 2 W 52 2 174 2Total islands gt 300Major islandsUnimak Island Unalaska Island Adak IslandArea6 821 1 sq mi 17 670 km2 Length1 200 mi 1900 km Highest elevation9 373 ft 2856 9 m Highest pointMount Shishaldin Unimak Is RussiaFederal subjectKamchatka KraiUnited StatesStateAlaskaLargest settlementUnalaska pop 4 283 DemographicsPopulation8 162 2000 Pop density0 84 sq mi 0 324 km2 LanguagesAleutianEthnic groupsAleutAdditional informationTime zonesHawaii Aleutian Time Zone UTC 10 Alaska Time Zone UTC 9 Summer DST Hawaii Aleutian Daylight Time UTC 9 Alaska Daylight Time UTC 8 The islands with their 57 volcanoes form the northernmost part of the Pacific Ring of Fire Physiographically they are a distinct section of the larger Pacific Border province which in turn is part of the larger Pacific Mountain System physiographic division The islands are considered to be among the most geographically isolated areas in the North Pacific 6 Battles and skirmishes occurred on the islands during the Aleutian Islands campaign of World War II The Japanese landing and occupation of Kiska and Attu in June 1942 were the only two invasions of the United States during that war Contents 1 Geology 2 Geography 3 Climate 4 Flora 5 Fauna 6 Economy 7 Transportation 8 Demographics 9 History 9 1 Prehistory 9 2 Russian period 9 2 1 Orthodox Christian heritage 9 3 U S possession 9 3 1 World War II 9 4 Recent developments 10 Nuclear testing 11 Russian Aleutians 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksGeology EditMotion between the Kula Plate and the North American Plate along the margin of the Bering Shelf in the Bering Sea north of the Aleutian arc ended in the early Eocene The Aleutian Basin the ocean floor north of the Aleutian arc is the remainder of the Kula Plate that was trapped when volcanism and subduction jumped south to its current location at c 56 Ma 7 The Aleutian island arc then formed in the Early Eocene 55 50 Ma when the subduction of the Pacific Plate under the North American Plate began The arc is made of separate blocks that have been rotated clockwise The basement underlying the islands is made of three stratigraphic units an Eocene layer of volcanic rock an Oligocene Miocene layer of marine sedimentary rock and a Pliocene Quaternary layer of sedimentary and igneous rock 8 Geography Edit Unalaska Island in the Aleutian Islands The Aleutian Islands from 32 000 feet 9 700 m Active Aleutian volcanoes The islands known before 1867 as the Catherine Archipelago include six groups east to west Fox Islands the main islands are Unimak Akutan Unalaska and Umnak Islands of Four Mountains the main islands are Yunaska and Chuginadak Andreanof Islands the main islands are Adak Atka Amlia Seguam Kanaga and Tanaga Rat Islands the main islands are Kiska and Amchitka Near Islands the main islands are Attu Island Agattu Island and the Semichi Islands Alaid Nizki and Shemya Commander Islands the main islands are Bering and Medny All six are located between 51 and 55 N latitude and 172 E and 163 W longitude 9 The largest islands in the Aleutians are Attu the farthest from the mainland and Unalaska Umnak and Unimak in the Fox Islands The largest of those is Unimak Island with an area of 1 571 41 mi2 4 069 9 km2 followed by Unalaska Island the only other Aleutian Island with an area over 1 000 square miles 2 600 km2 The axis of the archipelago near the mainland of Alaska has a southwest trend but at Tanaga Island about 178 W its direction changes to the northwest This change of direction corresponds to a curve in the line of volcanic fissures that have contributed their products to the building of the islands Such curved chains are repeated about the Pacific Ocean in the Kuril Islands the Japanese chain and in the Philippines All these island arcs are at the edge of the Pacific Plate and experience much seismic activity but are still habitable the Aleutians lie between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates citation needed The general elevation is greatest in the eastern islands and least in the western The island chain is a western continuation of the Aleutian Range on the mainland 10 The great majority of the islands bear evident marks of volcanic origin and there are numerous volcanic cones on the north side of the chain some of them active many of the islands however are not wholly volcanic but contain crystalline or sedimentary rocks and also amber and beds of lignite The coasts are rocky and surf worn and the approaches are exceedingly dangerous the land rising immediately from the coasts to steep bold mountains 10 These volcanic islands reach heights of 6 200 feet 1 900 m Makushin Volcano 5 691 feet 1 735 m on Unalaska Island is not quite visible from within the town of Unalaska though the steam rising from its cone is visible on a rare clear day Residents of Unalaska need only to climb one of the smaller hills in the area such as Pyramid Peak or Mt Newhall to get a good look at the snow covered cone The volcanic Bogoslof and Fire Islands which rose from the sea in 1796 and 1883 respectively lie about 30 miles 50 km west of Unalaska Bay 10 In 1906 a new volcanic cone rose between the islets of Bogoslof and Grewingk near Unalaska followed by another in 1907 These cones were nearly demolished by an explosive eruption on September 1 1907 10 In 2017 the volcanic cone erupted sending ash and ice particles 30 000 feet 9000 m into the air 11 Alfred Russel Wallace s 1879 book Australasia Ian Todd s 1974 book Island Realm A Pacific Panorama and Dean Kohlhoff s 2002 book Amchitka and the Bomb Nuclear Testing in Alaska all associate the Aleutian Islands with the Oceania region due to their status as remote islands in the Pacific 12 13 14 The islands having biogeographical and ethnocultural affinities to North America are not ordinarily considered a part of the region 15 16 The Aleutians seen from space Image of the islands taken by the STS 56 crew These cloud formations were seen over the western Aleutian Islands ASTER image of the islands Aleutian Islands on May 15 2014 by NASA s Aqua satellite Climate Edit Adak Island s climate creates a tundra The climate of the islands is oceanic with moderate and fairly uniform temperatures and heavy rainfall Fogs are almost constant Summer weather is much cooler than Southeast Alaska around Sitka but the winter temperature of the islands and of the Alaska Panhandle is very nearly the same 10 According to the Koppen climate classification system the area southwest of 53 30 N 167 00 W 53 5 N 167 0 W 53 5 167 0 on Unalaska Island have a Subpolar Oceanic Climate type Cfc as are Reykjavik Torshavn Punta Arenas Ushuaia and the Auckland Islands characterized by the coldest month averaging above 0 C 32 F 1 3 months averaging above 10 C 50 F and no significant precipitation difference between seasons To the northeast of that point the climate becomes Subarctic With Cool Summers And Year Around Rainfall type Dfc as are Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Murmansk St Moritz and Labrador City where it is similar but colder with the coldest month averaging below 0 C 32 F 17 During the winter the islands become the center for a semi permanent low pressure area called the Aleutian Low 18 The mean annual temperature for Unalaska the most populated island of the group is about 38 F 3 C being about 30 F 1 C in January and about 52 F 11 C in August The highest and lowest temperatures recorded on the islands are 78 F 26 C and 5 F 15 C respectively The average annual rainfall is about 80 inches 2 000 mm and Unalaska with about 250 rainy days per year is said to be one of the rainiest places within the U S 10 Flora Edit Cape Promontory Cape Lutkes on Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands Alaska The growing season lasts approximately 135 days from early in May until late in September but agriculture is limited to the raising of few vegetables With the exception of some stunted willows the vast majority of the chain is devoid of native trees 10 On some of the islands such as Adak and Amaknak there are a few coniferous trees growing remnants of the Russian period While tall trees grow in many cold climates Aleutian conifers some estimated to be two hundred years old rarely reach a height of even 10 feet 3 m and many of them are still less than 5 feet 1 5 m tall This is because the islands much like the Falklands and other islands of similar latitudes experience such strong winds that taller trees are vulnerable to snapping off Instead of trees the islands are covered with a luxuriant dense growth of herbage and shrubs including crowberry bluejoint grasses sedges and many flowering plants 19 There are areas of peat bog near the coasts Endemic plants include the endangered Aleutian shield fern Fauna Edit Transient orcas near Unimak Island eastern Aleutian Islands Steller sea lions haul out on Amak Island The Aleutians are home to many large colonies of seabirds Buldir Island has 21 breeding seabird species including the Bering Sea endemic red legged kittiwake Large seabird colonies are also present at Kiska Gareloi Semisopochnoi Bogoslof and others The islands are also frequented by vagrant Asiatic birds including the common rosefinch Siberian rubythroat bluethroat lanceolated warbler and the first North American record of the intermediate egret 20 The habitats of the Aleutians are largely unspoiled but wildlife is affected by competition from introduced species such as cattle caribou and foxes Nearly all of the Aleutians are protected as part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge and the Aleutian Islands Wilderness 21 Observations have identified sea otters as a keystone species along the coasts of many of the Aleutian Islands Their presence encourages the growth of kelp forests as the otters control sea urchin populations as large populations of sea urchins can create urchin barrens by clearing away kelp stands 22 Economy Edit Dutch harbor crab boats On the less mountainous islands the raising of sheep and reindeer was once believed to be practicable 19 There are bison on islands near Sand Point Sheep raising seems to have died off with the advent of synthetic fibers which lowered the value of wool During the 1980s there were some llama being raised on Unalaska The current economy is primarily based on fishing and the presence of U S military The only crop is potato Chickens are raised in barns under protection from the cold Transportation EditIn addition to a partial air service and a ferry service the Alaska Marine Highway passes through many of the U S islands Demographics Edit Residences in Adak Adak Island The native people refer to themselves as Unangan and are now generally known by most non natives as the Aleut The Aleut language is one of the two main branches of the Eskimo Aleut language family This family is not known to be related to any others The 2000 U S Census recorded a population of 8 162 on the islands of whom 4 283 were living in the main settlement of Unalaska History EditPrehistory EditAs they stretch like a broken bridge from the continent Asia to the continent North America many anthropologists citation needed hypothesize they were a route of the first human occupants of the Americas However the earliest known evidence in public recorded history of human occupation in the Americas is found much farther south The early human sites in the Bering Sea have probably been submerged by rising waters and sand during the current interglacial period This article possibly contains unsourced predictions speculative material or accounts of events that might not occur Information must be verifiable and based on reliable published sources Please help improve it by removing unsourced speculative content July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message People living in or on the Aleutian Islands developed fine skills in hunting fishing and basketry Hunters made their weapons watercraft The baskets found are noted by whom for being finely woven with carefully shredded stalks of beach rye Russian period Edit An Aleutian man with a Creole woman in the Aleutian Islands A Creole winter home in Unalaska Aleutian Islands Explorers traders and missionaries arrived from Russia beginning in 1741 In 1741 the Russian government sent Vitus Bering a Dane in the service of Russia and Aleksei Chirikov a Russian in the ships Saint Peter and Saint Paul on a voyage of discovery in the Northern Pacific After the ships were separated by a storm Chirikov discovered several eastern islands of the Aleutian group and Bering discovered several of the western islands Bering was shipwrecked and died in the Komandorski Islands Commander Islands one of which now bears his name Bering Island along with the surrounding Bering Sea The survivors of Bering s party reached the Kamchatka Peninsula in a boat constructed from the wreckage of their ship and reported the islands were rich in fur bearing animals 10 Siberian fur hunters flocked to the Commander Islands and gradually moved eastward across the Aleutian Islands to the mainland In this manner Russia gained a foothold on the northwestern coast of North America The Aleutian Islands consequently belonged to Russia until that country transferred all its possessions in North America to the U S in 1867 10 During the consolidation of the Russian American Company there was sporadic conflict with the native population frequently disastrous to the poorly armed and vastly outnumbered Russians The colonies soon entered a relatively stable state based on cooperation intermarriage and official policies that provided social status education and professional training to children of mixed Aleut Russian birth 23 Within a generation the day to day administration of the Russian American colonies was largely in the hands of native born Alaskans Reversing the usual trend in colonization where indigenous technologies are replaced the Russians adopted the Aleut kayak or baidarka sea otter hunting techniques and the working of native copper deposits The Russians instituted public education preservation of the Aleut language through transliteration of religious and other texts into Aleut via an adaptation of the Cyrillic alphabet vaccination of the native population against smallpox and science based sea mammal conservation policies that were ahead of their time 23 Russian Orthodox Church on Unalaska Island By 1760 the Russian merchant Andrian Tolstykh had made a detailed census in the vicinity of Adak and extended Russian citizenship to the Aleuts During his third and last voyage in 1778 Captain James Cook surveyed the eastern portion of the Aleutian archipelago accurately determined the position of some of the more important islands and corrected many errors of former navigators 10 Orthodox Christian heritage Edit Among the first Christian missionaries to arrive in the Aleutian Islands was a party of ten Russian Orthodox monks and priests who arrived in 1793 Within two years a monk named Herman was the only survivor of that party He settled on Spruce Island near Kodiak Island and often defended the rights of the Aleuts against the Russian trading companies He is now known in the Orthodox Church as Saint Herman of Alaska Another early Christian missionary of the Russian Orthodox Church was Father Veniaminov who arrived in Unalaska in 1824 He was named Bishop Innokentii in 1840 and moved to Sitka He is now known in the Orthodox Church as Saint Innocent of Alaska The principal settlements were on Unalaska Island The oldest was Iliuliuk also called Unalaska settled in 1760 1775 with a customs house and an Orthodox church U S possession Edit Western Aleutian Islands from a 1916 map of the Alaska Territory After the American purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867 further development took place New buildings included a Methodist mission and orphanage and the headquarters for a considerable fleet of United States revenue cutters which patrolled the sealing grounds of the Pribilof Islands 10 The first public school in Unalaska opened in 1883 Attu village Attu Island in June 1937 The U S Congress extended American citizenship to all Native Americans and this law has been held to include the indigenous peoples of Alaska in 1924 A hospital was built in Unalaska in 1933 by the U S Bureau of Indian Affairs World War II Edit Main article Aleutian Islands campaign U S soldiers of the southern landing force on the beach at Massacre Bay Attu Island during the Battle of Attu May 11 1943 During World War II in what were the only two invasions of the United States during the war small parts of the Aleutian islands were occupied by Japanese forces when Attu and Kiska were invaded possibly to divert American forces away from the main Japanese attack at Midway Atoll The U S Navy having broken the Japanese naval codes proceeded as if this was just a diversion 24 25 26 and it did not expend large amounts of effort in defending the islands More than 90 Americans were taken to Japan as prisoners of war Most of the civilian population over 800 of the Aleutians and Pribilovians were detained by the United States in camps in the Alaska Panhandle During the Aleutian Islands campaign American forces invaded Japanese held Attu and defeated the Japanese American and Canadian troops later launched an invasion of Kiska 34 426 men composed of both Americans and Canadian participated however Japanese forces had already withdrawn ending the campaign in the islands The invasion was an embarrassment for the Allied forces as the entire Japanese force of 5 183 men had left the island on July 28 without the Americans noticing However the Americans suffered significant casualties during their invasion 313 men died as a result of accidents with many dying due to accidental fire President Roosevelt visited Adak in 1944 meeting with commanders and eating with soldiers of the garrison This was his first and only trip to the Aleutian Islands and Alaska as a whole A rumor spread that FDR had accidentally left his Scottish Terrier Fala on one of the Islands and had to send a destroyer to retrieve the dog costing taxpayers several million dollars The President made fun of these rumors during a talk with the Teamsters Union in Washington DC now known as the Fala Speech At this speech the President joked with the crowd saying Well of course I don t resent attacks and my family doesn t resent attacks but Fala does resent them 27 June 3 2002 was celebrated as Dutch Harbor Remembrance Day The governor of Alaska ordered state flags lowered to half staff to honor the 43 Americans who died during the two day Japanese air attack in 1942 The Aleutian World War II National Historic Area Visitors Center opened that month Recent developments Edit The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act became law in 1971 In 1977 the Ounalashka Corporation from Unalaska declared a dividend This was the first village corporation to declare and pay a dividend to its shareholders The Aleutian Islands were designated a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1976 The Aleutians were one of 17 biosphere reserves in the United States withdrawn by request of the U S government from the programme in June 2017 28 29 Nuclear testing EditMain article Amchitka The U S conducted underground tests of nuclear weapons on Amchitka Island from 1965 to 1971 as part of the Vela Uniform program The final detonation the Cannikin was the largest underground nuclear explosion by the U S Russian Aleutians EditMain article Aleutsky District Russian Aleutians is organized as Aleutsky District in Kamchatka Krai It comprises Commander Islands Bering Island Medny Island Sea Lion Rock Sea Otter Rocks Tufted Puffin Rock Kamen Toporkov or Ostrov Toporkov Kamen AriySee also Edit1946 Aleutian Islands earthquake 2014 Aleutian Islands earthquake Aleutian Islands Campaign Aleutians East Borough Alaska Aleutians West Census Area Alaska List of Aleutian Island volcanoes List of Aleutian Islands List of birds of Aleutian Islands List of extreme points of the United States Lists of islands Maritime fur trade Military history of the Aleutian Islands Peter the AleutReferences Edit a b The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 18 December 2015 Aleutian Islands Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 6 February 2017 Aleutian Islands Merriam Webster Merriam Webster Inc Retrieved 14 February 2016 Aleutian Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Retrieved 2016 01 22 Mark Nuttall ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the Arctic Routledge p 333 ISBN 0 203 99785 9 George Forchhammer 1863 Royal Society of London ed On the Constitution of Sea Water at different Depths and in different Latitudes Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Taylor amp Francis 12 131 The Aleutian Islands map showing locations of major island groups and islands mentioned in the text Samalga Pass via ResearchGate better source needed Klemperer S L Miller E L Grantz A Scholl D W 2002 Crustal structure of the Bering and Chukchi shelves Deep seismic reflection profiles across the North American continent between Alaska and Russia Special Papers Geological Society of America 360 1 24 ISBN 9780813723600 Retrieved 30 July 2018 Holbrook W S Lizarralde D McGeary S Bangs N Diebold J 1999 Structure and composition of the Aleutian island arc and implications for continental crustal growth PDF Geology 27 1 31 34 Bibcode 1999Geo 27 31H doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1999 027 lt 0031 SACOTA gt 2 3 CO 2 Retrieved 30 July 2018 i e east of 172 E and west of 163 W longitude straddling the antimeridian a b c d e f g h i j k One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Aleutian Islands Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 543 544 Alaska volcano erupts again sending up another ash cloud Fox News 2017 01 26 Retrieved 2017 01 27 Todd Ian 1974 Island Realm A Pacific Panorama Angus amp Robertson ISBN 9780207127618 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Wallace Alfred Russel 1879 Australasia The University of Michigan p 2 Retrieved 12 March 2022 Oceania is the word often used by continental geographers to describe the great world of islands we are now entering upon This boundless watery domain which extends northwards of Behring Straits and southward to the Antarctic barrier of ice is studded with many island groups which are however very irregularly distributed over its surface The more northerly section lying between Japan and California and between the Aleutian and Hawaiian Archipelagos is relived by nothing but a few solitary reefs and rocks at enormously distant intervals Kohlhoff Dean 2002 Amchitka and the Bomb Nuclear Testing in Alaska University of Washington Press p 6 ISBN 9780295800509 Retrieved 12 March 2022 The regional name of the Pacific Islands is appropriate Oceania a sea of islands including those of Alaska and Hawaii The Pacific Basin is not insignificant or remote It covers one third of the globe s surface Its northern boundary is the Aleutian Islands chain Oceania virtually touches all of the Western Hemisphere Oceania Definition Population amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Henderson John William 1971 Area Handbook for Oceania U S Government Printing Office p 5 Retrieved 11 March 2022 Interactive United States Koppen Geiger Climate Classification Map www plantmaps com Retrieved 2018 10 31 Rodionov S N Bond N A Overland J E November 2007 The Aleutian Low storm tracks and winter climate variability in the Bering Sea Deep Sea Research Part II Topical Studies in Oceanography 54 23 26 2560 2577 Bibcode 2007DSRII 54 2560R doi 10 1016 j dsr2 2007 08 002 a b Chisholm 1911 buldirbirds www mun ca dead link Aleutian Islands Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Estes James 2016 Serendipity An Ecologist s Quest to Understand Nature University of California Press ISBN 978 0520285033 a b THE WORLD QUESTION CENTER 2008 Page 9 Archived from the original on 2013 04 07 Retrieved 2010 09 04 War in the Pacific The First Year nps gov Archived from the original on 2019 05 09 Retrieved July 7 2021 Japan Invades the Aleutian Islands PBS Archived from the original on 2020 08 12 Retrieved July 7 2021 Battle of the Aleutian Islands history com Archived from the original on 2014 02 15 Retrieved July 7 2021 When the president came to dinner FDR in Alaska Anchorage Daily News 2014 09 12 Retrieved 2021 03 03 UNESCO Biosphere Reserves Konza Prairie Retrieved 6 September 2018 23 new sites added to UNESCO s World Network of Biosphere Reserves 14 June 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2018 Further reading EditGibson Daniel D and G Vernon Byrd Birds of the Aleutian Islands Alaska Cambridge Massachusetts Nuttall Ornithological Club 2007 ISBN 978 0 943610 73 3 Ivanov Viacheslav Vsevolodovich The Russian Orthodox Church of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands and Its Relation to Native American Traditions An Attempt at a Multicultural Society 1794 1912 Washington DC Library of Congress 1997 ISBN 0 16 048781 1 Jochelson Waldemar Archaeological Investigations in the Aleutian Islands Washington Carnegie Institution of Washington 1925 Morgan Lael September 1983 The Aleutians Alaska s Far out Islands National Geographic Vol 164 no 3 pp 336 363 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Aleutian Islands Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aleutian Islands U S Coast Pilot 9 Chapter 7 Aleutian Islands U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Aleutian Islands Seattle to Aleutian Island Expedition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aleutian Islands amp oldid 1149443348, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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