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Ivanov Beach

Ivanov Beach (Bulgarian: Иванов бряг, romanizedIvanov bryag, IPA: [ivɐˈnɔv ˈbrʲak]) is a mostly ice-free beach on the Drake Passage stretching 5 km (3.1 mi) in southwest–northeast direction on the southeast coast of Barclay Bay in western Livingston Island, South Shetland Islands in Antarctica. It extends to Nedelya Point and Byers Peninsula on the southwest, Rowe Point and Etar Snowfield on the northeast, and the slopes of Rotch Dome on the southeast. Its ice-free area is ca. 144 hectares (360 acres).[1]

Location of Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands and Antarctica
Eastern Byers Peninsula in Livingston Island with left to right Lair Hill, Robbery Beaches, Sparadok Point, Tsamblak Hill and Negro Hill in the middle ground; and Rowe Point, Cutler Stack, Ivanov Beach, Nedelya Point, Urvich Wall surmounted by the slopes of Rotch Dome, and Clark Nunatak in the background

The beach features Bilyar Point 1.7 km (1.1 mi) northeast of Nedelya Point, Mneme Lake just west of Rowe Point and a minor point 1.1 km (0.68 mi) southwest of the latter. The beach is protected by shallows, and numerous offshore rocks and islets with the largest of them being Cutler Stack off Nedelya Point.

The feature is named for Lyubomir Ivanov, topographic surveyor in Antarctica during the 1994/95 and subsequent seasons, author of Antarctic topographic maps, and founding chairman of the Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria. In particular, he led the Tangra 2004/05 Survey noted by Discovery Channel, the Natural History Museum, the Royal Collection and the British Antarctic Survey as a timeline event in Antarctic exploration.[2][3]

Location edit

Ivanov Beach is centred at 62°36′22″S 60°56′14″W / 62.60611°S 60.93722°W / -62.60611; -60.93722. British mapping was carried out in 1822 and 1968, Chilean in 1971, Argentine in 1980, Spanish in 1991 and 1992, and Bulgarian in 2005, 2009 and 2017.[citation needed]

History edit

 
Fragment of George Powell's 1822 chart of the South Shetland Islands and South Orkney Islands; the depicted track of his sloop Dove indicates he sailed past Ivanov Beach (the strip along the left-side inscription 'Ice Bergs') on 11 November 1821

Following the discovery of Livingston Island by William Smith in 1819, the vicinity was visited by British and American sealers frequenting Cape Shirreff on Ioannes Paulus II Peninsula and nearby Robbery Beaches, South Beaches, and President Beaches on Byers Peninsula.[4] As the seals were killed onshore, the hunters spent protracted periods of time there, seeking refuge from the elements in purpose-built stone huts, tent bivouacs, or natural caves. Livingston Island became the most populous place in Antarctica for a time, its inhabitants exceeding 200 in number during the 1820–23 South Shetlands sealing rush.[5][6] The principal sealer ‘settlements’ on the island were situated on Byers Peninsula near Nikopol Point, Sealer Hill, Negro Hill, Rish Point, Sparadok Point, Lair Point and Varadero Point, as well as at Cape Shirreff and Elephant Point.[7]

Remnants of huts, boats and other sealer equipment and belongings are still present at a number of Byers Peninsula sites, which have become the subject of systematic archaeological research. Some 26 human shelter structures have been identified there, the nearest ones to Ivanov Beach situated east of Sparadok Point.[8] However, the beach itself is believed to have been visited only very rarely (one such visit was to Nedelya Point by a field party from the British base camp Station P during the season 1957/58[9]), and deemed free of non-native plants. In order to protect its pristine environment, the beach has been placed under a particularly strict biosecurity regime.[10]

Protection status edit

 
Antarctic Tern, one of the species for which the Important Bird Area Byers Peninsula merits protection

Except for its offshore islets and rocks, in 2016 Ivanov Beach was incorporated in an enlarged Antarctic Specially Protected Area ASPA 126 Byers Peninsula, and further designated within it as a restricted zone of scientific importance to Antarctic microbiology, with greater restriction placed on access with the aim of preventing microbial or other contamination by human activity.

Inland from the beach, the restricted zone includes also the northern part of the ridge Urvich Wall, and the adjacent glaciated area on the west and northwest slopes of Rotch Dome bounded on the east by longitude 60°53′45″W, on the south by latitude 62°38′30″S and on the west by longitude 60°58′48″W.[10]

Certain vectors of alien species transmission remain unchecked though, including the wood and plastic marine debris,[11] more abundant on northerly Livingston beaches due to their exposure to Drake Passage.[10]

Important Bird Area edit

The beach is part of the Important Bird Area (IBA) Byers Peninsula, Livingston Island identified by BirdLife International, which coincides territorially with the protected area ASPA 126 Byers Peninsula.[12]

Maps edit

 
Map of Byers Peninsula featuring Antarctic Specially Protected Area ASPA 126 and its two restricted zones including Ivanov Beach
 
Topographic map of Livingston Island and Smith Island
  • Chart of South Shetland including Coronation Island, &c. from the exploration of the sloop Dove in the years 1821 and 1822 by George Powell Commander of the same. Scale ca. 1:200000. London: Laurie, 1822
  • South Shetland Islands. Scale 1:200000 topographic map. DOS 610 Sheet W 62 60. Tolworth, UK, 1968
  • Livingston Island to King George Island. Scale 1:200000. Admiralty Chart 1776. UK Hydrographic Office, 1968
  • Isla Elefante a Isla Trinidad. Mapa hidrográfico a escala 1:500000 - 1:350000. Valparaíso: Instituto Hidrográfico de la Armada de Chile, 1971
  • Islas Shetland del Sur de Isla 25 de Mayo a Isla Livingston. Mapa hidrográfico a escala 1:200000. Buenos Aires: Servicio de Hidrografía Naval de la Armada, 1980
  • Islas Livingston y Decepción. Mapa topográfico a escala 1:100000. Madrid: Servicio Geográfico del Ejército, 1991
  • Mapa topográfico a escala 1:25000. Madrid: Servicio Geográfico del Ejército, 1992. (Map image on p. 55 of the linked study)
  • L.L. Ivanov et al. Antarctica: Livingston Island, South Shetland Islands (from English Strait to Morton Strait, with illustrations and ice-cover distribution). Scale 1:100000 . Sofia: Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria, 2005
  • L.L. Ivanov. Antarctica: Livingston Island and Greenwich, Robert, Snow and Smith Islands. Scale 1:120000 topographic map. Troyan: Manfred Wörner Foundation, 2010. ISBN 978-954-92032-9-5 (First edition 2009. ISBN 978-954-92032-6-4)
  • South Shetland Islands: Livingston Island, Byers Peninsula. Scale 1:50000 satellite map. UK Antarctic Place-names Committee, 2010
  • L.L. Ivanov. Antarctica: Livingston Island and Smith Island. Scale 1:100000 topographic map. Manfred Wörner Foundation, 2017. ISBN 978-619-90008-3-0
  • Antarctic Digital Database (ADD). Scale 1:250000 topographic map of Antarctica. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). Since 1993, regularly upgraded and updated

In fiction edit

 
Geography of the thriller novel
The Killing Ship by Simon Beaufort

Ivanov Beach is part of the mise-en-scène in the Antarctica thriller novel The Killing Ship authored by Elizabeth Cruwys and Beau Riffenburgh under their joint alias Simon Beaufort in 2016. A landmark locality in the course of a modern-day plot with action spreading westwards from Hannah Point, skirting Verila Glacier and Rotch Dome in the process, and eventually reaching Robbery Beaches and Villard Point on Byers Peninsula, the beach is shown on a sketch map of Livingston Island illustrating the book.[13][14]

Notes edit

  1. ^ L.L. Ivanov. Antarctica: Livingston Island and Greenwich, Robert, Snow and Smith Islands. Scale 1:120000 topographic map. Troyan: Manfred Wörner Foundation, 2009
  2. ^ Discovery Channel UK website, 2012
  3. ^ Discovery Channel UK website, 2012
  4. ^ E. Stackpole. The American Sealers and the Discovery of the Continent of Antarctica: The voyage of the Huron and the Huntress. Mystic, Connecticut, 1955. 86 pp.
  5. ^ B. Basberg and R. Headland. The 19th Century Antarctic Sealing Industry: Sources, Data and Economic Significance. SCAR Open Science Conference. St. Petersburg, 2008. 24 pp.
  6. ^ L. Ivanov. In: Bulgarian Antarctic Research: A Synthesis. Eds. C. Pimpirev and N. Chipev. Sofia: St. Kliment Ohridski University Press, 2015. pp. 17–28. ISBN 978-954-07-3939-7
  7. ^ R. Lewis Smith and H. Simpson. Early Nineteenth century sealers' refuges on Livingston Island, South Shetland Islands. British Antarctic Survey Bulletin 74 (1987). pp. 49–72
  8. ^ A. Zarankin and M. Senatore. Archaeology in Antarctica: Nineteenth-Century Capitalism Expansion Strategies. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 9 (2005) 1. pp. 43–56
  9. ^ G.J. Hobbs. Map showing the physiography, geological station numbers and the survey routes on Livingston Island. In: The geology of Livingston Island . Scientific Report No. 47. British Antarctic Survey, 1963. Figure 1
  10. ^ a b c Management Plan for Antarctic Specially Protected Area No. 126 Byers Peninsula. Measure 4 (2016), ATCM XXXIX Final Report. Santiago, 2016
  11. ^ D. Barnes. Biodiversity: Invasions by marine life on plastic debris. Nature 416 (2002). pp. 808–809
  12. ^ Byers Peninsula, Livingston Island. BirdLife data zone: Important Bird Areas. BirdLife International, 2019
  13. ^ S. Beaufort. The Killing Ship. Sutton, Surrey: Severn House Publishers, 2016. 224 pp. ISBN 978-0-7278-8639-2
  14. ^ The Killing Ship. Susanna Gregory Website, 2019

References edit

External links edit

  • Ivanov Beach. Adjusted Copernix satellite image

This article includes information from the Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria which is used with permission.

ivanov, beach, bulgarian, Иванов, бряг, romanized, ivanov, bryag, ivɐˈnɔv, ˈbrʲak, mostly, free, beach, drake, passage, stretching, southwest, northeast, direction, southeast, coast, barclay, western, livingston, island, south, shetland, islands, antarctica, e. Ivanov Beach Bulgarian Ivanov bryag romanized Ivanov bryag IPA ivɐˈnɔv ˈbrʲak is a mostly ice free beach on the Drake Passage stretching 5 km 3 1 mi in southwest northeast direction on the southeast coast of Barclay Bay in western Livingston Island South Shetland Islands in Antarctica It extends to Nedelya Point and Byers Peninsula on the southwest Rowe Point and Etar Snowfield on the northeast and the slopes of Rotch Dome on the southeast Its ice free area is ca 144 hectares 360 acres 1 Location of Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands and Antarctica Eastern Byers Peninsula in Livingston Island with left to right Lair Hill Robbery Beaches Sparadok Point Tsamblak Hill and Negro Hill in the middle ground and Rowe Point Cutler Stack Ivanov Beach Nedelya Point Urvich Wall surmounted by the slopes of Rotch Dome and Clark Nunatak in the background The beach features Bilyar Point 1 7 km 1 1 mi northeast of Nedelya Point Mneme Lake just west of Rowe Point and a minor point 1 1 km 0 68 mi southwest of the latter The beach is protected by shallows and numerous offshore rocks and islets with the largest of them being Cutler Stack off Nedelya Point The feature is named for Lyubomir Ivanov topographic surveyor in Antarctica during the 1994 95 and subsequent seasons author of Antarctic topographic maps and founding chairman of the Antarctic Place names Commission of Bulgaria In particular he led the Tangra 2004 05 Survey noted by Discovery Channel the Natural History Museum the Royal Collection and the British Antarctic Survey as a timeline event in Antarctic exploration 2 3 Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Protection status 4 Important Bird Area 5 Maps 6 In fiction 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksLocation editIvanov Beach is centred at 62 36 22 S 60 56 14 W 62 60611 S 60 93722 W 62 60611 60 93722 British mapping was carried out in 1822 and 1968 Chilean in 1971 Argentine in 1980 Spanish in 1991 and 1992 and Bulgarian in 2005 2009 and 2017 citation needed History edit nbsp Fragment of George Powell s 1822 chart of the South Shetland Islands and South Orkney Islands the depicted track of his sloop Dove indicates he sailed past Ivanov Beach the strip along the left side inscription Ice Bergs on 11 November 1821 Following the discovery of Livingston Island by William Smith in 1819 the vicinity was visited by British and American sealers frequenting Cape Shirreff on Ioannes Paulus II Peninsula and nearby Robbery Beaches South Beaches and President Beaches on Byers Peninsula 4 As the seals were killed onshore the hunters spent protracted periods of time there seeking refuge from the elements in purpose built stone huts tent bivouacs or natural caves Livingston Island became the most populous place in Antarctica for a time its inhabitants exceeding 200 in number during the 1820 23 South Shetlands sealing rush 5 6 The principal sealer settlements on the island were situated on Byers Peninsula near Nikopol Point Sealer Hill Negro Hill Rish Point Sparadok Point Lair Point and Varadero Point as well as at Cape Shirreff and Elephant Point 7 Remnants of huts boats and other sealer equipment and belongings are still present at a number of Byers Peninsula sites which have become the subject of systematic archaeological research Some 26 human shelter structures have been identified there the nearest ones to Ivanov Beach situated east of Sparadok Point 8 However the beach itself is believed to have been visited only very rarely one such visit was to Nedelya Point by a field party from the British base camp Station P during the season 1957 58 9 and deemed free of non native plants In order to protect its pristine environment the beach has been placed under a particularly strict biosecurity regime 10 Protection status edit nbsp Antarctic Tern one of the species for which the Important Bird Area Byers Peninsula merits protection Except for its offshore islets and rocks in 2016 Ivanov Beach was incorporated in an enlarged Antarctic Specially Protected Area ASPA 126 Byers Peninsula and further designated within it as a restricted zone of scientific importance to Antarctic microbiology with greater restriction placed on access with the aim of preventing microbial or other contamination by human activity Inland from the beach the restricted zone includes also the northern part of the ridge Urvich Wall and the adjacent glaciated area on the west and northwest slopes of Rotch Dome bounded on the east by longitude 60 53 45 W on the south by latitude 62 38 30 S and on the west by longitude 60 58 48 W 10 Certain vectors of alien species transmission remain unchecked though including the wood and plastic marine debris 11 more abundant on northerly Livingston beaches due to their exposure to Drake Passage 10 Important Bird Area editThe beach is part of the Important Bird Area IBA Byers Peninsula Livingston Island identified by BirdLife International which coincides territorially with the protected area ASPA 126 Byers Peninsula 12 Maps edit nbsp Map of Byers Peninsula featuring Antarctic Specially Protected Area ASPA 126 and its two restricted zones including Ivanov Beach nbsp Topographic map of Livingston Island and Smith Island Chart of South Shetland including Coronation Island amp c from the exploration of the sloop Dove in the years 1821 and 1822 by George Powell Commander of the same Scale ca 1 200000 London Laurie 1822 South Shetland Islands Scale 1 200000 topographic map DOS 610 Sheet W 62 60 Tolworth UK 1968 Livingston Island to King George Island Scale 1 200000 Admiralty Chart 1776 UK Hydrographic Office 1968 Isla Elefante a Isla Trinidad Mapa hidrografico a escala 1 500000 1 350000 Valparaiso Instituto Hidrografico de la Armada de Chile 1971 Islas Shetland del Sur de Isla 25 de Mayo a Isla Livingston Mapa hidrografico a escala 1 200000 Buenos Aires Servicio de Hidrografia Naval de la Armada 1980 Islas Livingston y Decepcion Mapa topografico a escala 1 100000 Madrid Servicio Geografico del Ejercito 1991 Peninsula Byers Isla Livingston Mapa topografico a escala 1 25000 Madrid Servicio Geografico del Ejercito 1992 Map image on p 55 of the linked study L L Ivanov et al Antarctica Livingston Island South Shetland Islands from English Strait to Morton Strait with illustrations and ice cover distribution Scale 1 100000 Sofia Antarctic Place names Commission of Bulgaria 2005 L L Ivanov Antarctica Livingston Island and Greenwich Robert Snow and Smith Islands Scale 1 120000 topographic map Troyan Manfred Worner Foundation 2010 ISBN 978 954 92032 9 5 First edition 2009 ISBN 978 954 92032 6 4 South Shetland Islands Livingston Island Byers Peninsula Scale 1 50000 satellite map UK Antarctic Place names Committee 2010 L L Ivanov Antarctica Livingston Island and Smith Island Scale 1 100000 topographic map Manfred Worner Foundation 2017 ISBN 978 619 90008 3 0 Antarctic Digital Database ADD Scale 1 250000 topographic map of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research SCAR Since 1993 regularly upgraded and updatedIn fiction edit nbsp Geography of the thriller novel The Killing Ship by Simon Beaufort Ivanov Beach is part of the mise en scene in the Antarctica thriller novel The Killing Ship authored by Elizabeth Cruwys and Beau Riffenburgh under their joint alias Simon Beaufort in 2016 A landmark locality in the course of a modern day plot with action spreading westwards from Hannah Point skirting Verila Glacier and Rotch Dome in the process and eventually reaching Robbery Beaches and Villard Point on Byers Peninsula the beach is shown on a sketch map of Livingston Island illustrating the book 13 14 Notes edit L L Ivanov Antarctica Livingston Island and Greenwich Robert Snow and Smith Islands Scale 1 120000 topographic map Troyan Manfred Worner Foundation 2009 Discovering Antarctica Overview Discovery Channel UK website 2012 14 November 2004 Tangra Discovering Antarctica Timeline Discovery Channel UK website 2012 E Stackpole The American Sealers and the Discovery of the Continent of Antarctica The voyage of the Huron and the Huntress Mystic Connecticut 1955 86 pp B Basberg and R Headland The 19th Century Antarctic Sealing Industry Sources Data and Economic Significance SCAR Open Science Conference St Petersburg 2008 24 pp L Ivanov General Geography and History of Livingston Island In Bulgarian Antarctic Research A Synthesis Eds C Pimpirev and N Chipev Sofia St Kliment Ohridski University Press 2015 pp 17 28 ISBN 978 954 07 3939 7 R Lewis Smith and H Simpson Early Nineteenth century sealers refuges on Livingston Island South Shetland Islands British Antarctic Survey Bulletin 74 1987 pp 49 72 A Zarankin and M Senatore Archaeology in Antarctica Nineteenth Century Capitalism Expansion Strategies International Journal of Historical Archaeology 9 2005 1 pp 43 56 G J Hobbs Map showing the physiography geological station numbers and the survey routes on Livingston Island In The geology of Livingston Island Scientific Report No 47 British Antarctic Survey 1963 Figure 1 a b c Management Plan for Antarctic Specially Protected Area No 126 Byers Peninsula Measure 4 2016 ATCM XXXIX Final Report Santiago 2016 D Barnes Biodiversity Invasions by marine life on plastic debris Nature 416 2002 pp 808 809 Byers Peninsula Livingston Island BirdLife data zone Important Bird Areas BirdLife International 2019 S Beaufort The Killing Ship Sutton Surrey Severn House Publishers 2016 224 pp ISBN 978 0 7278 8639 2 The Killing Ship Susanna Gregory Website 2019References editIvanov Beach SCAR Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Ivanov Beach GeoNames Database Bulgarian Antarctic Gazetteer Antarctic Place names Commission details in Bulgarian basic data in English Antarctic Digital Database Scientific Committee on Antarctic ResearchExternal links editIvanov Beach Adjusted Copernix satellite image This article includes information from the Antarctic Place names Commission of Bulgaria which is used with permission Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ivanov Beach amp oldid 1189646484, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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