Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Oct 15, 2014 · Jan Mayen is approximately 34 miles long and a bit over a mile wide at its narrowest. On the map, it looks like a spoon with a thin handle to the southwest, the large bowl of the active 7,470-foot high volcano Beerenberg in the northeast, and a narrow saddle of land in the middle.

    • Norway

      Norway May Help Finland Reach New Heights. GEOGRAPHY An...

    • Whaling

      Jan Mayen, the Rarely-Visited, Most Northern Volcanic Island...

    • Arctic

      You could have heard a pin drop in the room, it was so...

    • Landscape

      Jim Bishop is the Associate Head of School at Bozeman Field...

    • Climate

      ENVIRONMENT Call it the Great Gulf Stream Slowdown: An...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jan_MayenJan Mayen - Wikipedia

    Jan Mayen ( Urban East Norwegian: [jɑn ˈmɑ̀ɪən]) [1] is a Norwegian volcanic island in the Arctic Ocean with no permanent population. It is 55 km (34 mi) long (southwest-northeast) and 373 km 2 (144 sq mi) in area, partly covered by glaciers (an area of 114.2 km 2 (44.1 sq mi) around the Beerenberg volcano ).

    • 377 km² (146 sq mi)
    • 0 (up to 35 non-permanent residents)
  4. arcticportal.org › the-arctic › 3556-jan-mayenJan Mayen - Arctic Portal

    The island is approximately 55 km long from southwest to northeast and covers an area of about 373 square kilometers (see map). The northeast part of the island, Nord-Jan, is home to Beerenberg, an active volcano that last erupted in 1985.

  5. Jan Mayen, island, part of the Kingdom of Norway, in the Greenland Sea of the Arctic Ocean, about 300 mi (500 km) east of Greenland. It is approximately 35 mi long and 9 mi across at its widest point, with an area of 144 sq mi (373 sq km).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Nov 14, 2023 · barren volcanic spoon-shaped island with some moss and grass flora; island consists of two parts: a larger northeast Nord-Jan (the spoon "bowl") and the smaller Sor-Jan (the "handle"), linked by a 2.5 km-wide isthmus (the "stem") with two large lakes, Sorlaguna (South Lagoon) and Nordlaguna (North Lagoon)

  7. Apr 28, 2022 · We’re on the remote arctic island of Jan Mayen, we’ve been awake for 22 hours, and just 200 vertical meters separate us from the summit of the world’s northernmost active volcano. It is 21...

  8. www.wikiwand.com › en › Jan_MayenJan Mayen - Wikiwand

    It has two parts: larger northeast Nord-Jan and smaller Sør-Jan, linked by a 2.5 km (1.6 mi) wide isthmus. It lies 600 km (370 mi) northeast of Iceland, 500 km (310 mi) east of central Greenland, and 900 km (560 mi) northwest of Vesterålen, Norway. The island is mountainous, the highest summit being the Beerenberg volcano in the north.

  1. People also search for