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Read the letter written by Denmark’s ambassador to
Canada, Poul E.D. Kristensen, and published in The Ottawa Citizen.
Gain some insight into why Denmark is interested in Hans Island from this
article in the Canadian-American Strategic Review.
Read the U.N. treaty that oultines the border between Greenland
and Canada (PDF). Note
there is no border over or around Hans Island (66º29’0W, 80º49’2N
to 66º26’3W, 80º49’8N).
Dive into the Canadian Archipelago Study,
where Canadian and American scientists are measuring the flow of freshwater
through the Nares Strait, to monitor and predict climate change.
Find your bearings on a historical Map
of the Northern Regions by
Joseph Hutchins Colton (ca 1855). Note that the area north and east of Ellesmere
Island (where Hans Island is located) had yet to be mapped. For a more complete
set of historical maps, check out the Historical
Atlas of the Arctic by Derek Hayes (2003), which boasts
300 maps - both realistic and fanciful - from early Arctic expeditions.
Hans Hendrik accompanied American explorer Charles Francis Hall on his final
arctic expedition aboard the ill-fated Polaris - an expedition that
ended with Hall’s sudden and mysterious death. Ninety-seven years later,
Chauncey Loomis headed an expedition to Hall’s grave in northwestern
Greenland, exhumed the body and performed an autopsy that revealed mysterious
details about Hall’s death. Read all about it in Weird
and Tragic Shores: The Story of Charles Francis Hall, Explorer, (Chauncey Loomis,
2000).
Flip through the pages of this rare copy of Hans
Hendrik’s
autobiography.
The full text can be found in Hubert
Wenger’s Eskimo Database.
Hendrik’s biography also appears in the Canadian
Dictionary of Biography online.
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