Diomede Islands

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Satellite photo of the Bering Strait, with the Diomede Islands at center
Satellite photo of the Bering Strait, with the Diomede Islands at center
Little Diomede Island (left) and Big Diomede Island
Little Diomede Island (left) and Big Diomede Island
Closeup satellite photo (in false color) of the Diomede Islands
Closeup satellite photo (in false color) of the Diomede Islands

The Diomede Islands (Russian: острова Диомида , ostrová Diomída), which in Russia is also known as Gvozdev Islands (Russian: острова Гвоздёва, ostrová Gvozdjova), consists of two rocky, tuya -type islands. The Russian island of Big Diomede (part of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug), which is also known as Imaqliq, Nunarbuk or Ratmanov Island and the US island of Little Diomede, which is also known as Krusenstern Island or Inaliq are located in the middle of the Bering Strait between mainland Alaska, US and Siberia, Russia, with the Chukchi Sea to the north and the Bering Sea to the south.

The islands are separated by an international border and the International Date Line which is approximately 1 km (0.6 mi) from each island. At the closest distance between the Little Diomede, US and the Big Diomede, Russia, the two islands are only about 4 km (2.4 mi) apart. The small habitation on the Little Diomede Island is centered to the west side of the island at the City of Diomede.[citation needed]

The Big Diomede Island is Russia's easternmost point and despite being the western one of the two islands, it is located what is considered east on the map. Same way the Little Diomede Island, US, despite of being eastern one of the two islands, is located what is considered west on the map. The confusion between the east and the west near the 180th meridian is due to the very definition of a geographic coordinate system. For geographical and political reasons, even if located on the 169th meridian west, Big Diomede Island is included in what we call the eastern part of the world. Yet further east than the Little Diomede Island, Alaska's Attu Island in the Aleutian Islands is the westernmost point of the United States even if located on the 173rd meridian east, also the westernmost point of the Earth.

There is a QuickTime VR Panorama done by students on Little Diomede in April of 2007. The QTVR files shows both the Russian and United States islands quite clearly, with the International Date Line tracing an invisible line on the ice between them.

15 km southeast is Fairway Rock, which is usually not considered part of the Diomede Islands.

The Diomede Islands are often mentioned as likely intermediate stops for a bridge or tunnel (Bering Strait bridge) spanning the Bering Strait.

[edit] History

The first European to reach the islands was the Russian explorer Semyon Dezhnev in 1648. A Danish navigator (in Russian service) Vitus Bering re-discovered the Diomede Islands on August 16, 1728, the day when the Russian Orthodox Church celebrates the memory of the martyr St. Diomede (hence, the name of the islands). In 1732, a Russian geodesist, Mikhail Gvozdev, plotted the islands on the map (hence, another name).

The text of the 1867 treaty finalizing the sale of Alaska uses the islands to designate the boundary between the two nations: The border separates "equidistantly Krusenstern Island, or Ignaluk, from Ratmanov Island, or Nunarbuk, and heads northward infinitely until it disappears completely in the Arctic Ocean."

Because the International Date Line runs down the 4-km (2.5-mi) gap between the two islands, you can look from Alaska into "tomorrow" in Russia.

During the Cold War, that gap constituted the border between the USA and the USSR, and became known as the "Ice Curtain". In 1987, however, Lynne Cox swam from one island to the other, and was congratulated jointly by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev.

In summer 1995, British television actor and documentary presenter Michael Palin started his counterclockwise circumnavigation of the Pacific Rim, encompassing 18 different countries, on Little Diomede Island, as part of the BBC series Full Circle. He intended to set foot on it again at the very end of his journey lasting nearly eight months, but was unable to do so because he was returning during the following winter (on the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro), and the sea became too rough to allow him and his film crew to land on the island.

Big Diomede Island was traditionally the easternmost landmass before the IDL, and the first landmass to enter new years, if using local solar time. When using official time, a large area in eastern Russia, as well as New Zealand, has the same time zone. New Zealand also has Daylight Saving time in December, not Russia. After 1995 however, parts of Kiribati count as being further east since the IDL is now going east of them, and also on a higher timezone (GMT+14).

The native population is gone from Big Diomede Island. They had to move to the mainland, in order to avoid contacts across the border. Little Diomede has an Inupiat Eskimo population of 170,[1] mostly in the City of Diomede. This village there has a school, and a local store. Some eskimos there are famous for their ivory carving. Mail is delivered by helicopter, weather-depending.

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[edit] External links

Coordinates: 65°47′N, 169°01′W