Cape Neupokoyev (, Mys Neupokoyeva) is a headland in Severnaya Zemlya, Russia.
Geography
Cape Neupokoyev is located north of the
Vilkitsky Strait and stretches out southwestwards into the
Kara Sea. This headland is the southernmost point of
Bolshevik Island and of Severnaya Zemlya.
There are
and swales close to Cape Neupokoyev, with the Neupokoyev Lagoon () located right to the east of the headland.
History
Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld, during the
Vega Expedition in 1878, sailed very close to this cape but did not notice it.
In 1882 Danish
Arctic explorer and naval officer Andreas Peter Hovgaard, leader of the Dijmphna Expedition, sailed the waters of the
Kara Sea in order to discover land north of the
Taymyr Peninsula, but was unable to reach the peninsula's shores owing to thick ice. Later Nansen's Fram expedition in 1895, as well
Eduard Toll's Russian polar expedition of 1900–02 on ship
Zarya failed to note any traces of land to the north of the strait between the Kara Sea and the
Laptev Sea.
[ Nicholas II Land, Bulletin of the American Geographical Society Vol. 46, No. 2 (1914), pp. 117-120]
The eastern shore of present-day Severnaya Zemlya was discovered by Boris Vilkitsky in 1913 during the Arctic Ocean Hydrographic Expedition, but he did not chart the western coast of Bolshevik Island.
This headland was finally surveyed, mapped and named during the 1930–1932 expedition to the archipelago led by Georgy Ushakov and Nikolay Urvantsev. It was named after Konstantin Neupokoev (1884—1924), a naval officer, hydrographer and explorer of the Russian Hydrographic Service in USSR.[ Синюков, В. В. Александр Васильевич Колчак : Учёный и патриот : в 2 ч. / В. В. Синюков; отв. ред. А. П. Лисицын; Ин-т истории естествознания и техники им. С. И. Вавилова РАН. — М.: Наука, 2009. — (ч. 2), С. 34]
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MODIS image of Severnaya Zemlya in 2001]]>