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  1. Jan Mayen; Isolated in the North Atlantic Ocean, the isle of Jan Mayen is located about 600 kilometers in the North of Iceland. Only some scientists live on the small volcanic island. However some cruise ships pass Jan Mayen in summer on their way from Iceland to Svalbard so that tourists can take a short look at the island.

  2. Oct 1, 2023 · Remote Jan Mayen Island, located in the Norwegian Sea along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge about 650 km NE of Iceland, consists of two volcanic complexes separated by a narrow isthmus. The large Beerenberg basaltic stratovolcano (Nord-Jan) forms the NE end of the 40-km-long island, which is ringed by high cliffs.

  3. The geology of Jan Mayen is part of the larger Jan Mayen Ridge, an undersea volcanic ridge that forms the boundary of the Iceland Plateau to the northeast. North of the island, the sea floor slopes steeply, plunging a depth of greater than two kilometers in the vicinity of Jan Mayen Rift Zone. The region is highly tectonically active, at the ...

  4. Mar 4, 2022 · GEOLOGICAL SETTING. Jan Mayen ( Figure 1) is a volcanic island that lies in the. Norwegian-Greenland sea at the junction between the Jan. Mayen ridge microcontinent, the Jan Mayen fracture zone ...

  5. Jan Mayen has no permanent residents and visits to the island are rare. In fact, we’re one of the few to attempt landings here. If conditions allow, you’ll be setting foot in one of Earth’s most remote places. Jan Mayen’s surreal, moss- and lichen-streaked landscape is dominated by the Beerenberg volcanic cone.

  6. Feb 25, 2012 · Data were acquired along two lines. Line 1 is nearly 220 km long, trends S–N and consists of two segments acquired separately, one south and one north of the island of Jan Mayen. Instruments were deployed once along this line and thus recorded shots from both parts, undershooting the island. Line 2 is nearly 165 km long and strikes NE–SW.

  7. Understand. Jan Mayen. This desolate, mountainous volcanic island was named after a Dutch whaling captain who supposedly discovered it in 1614 (though earlier claims have been reported). It was visited only occasionally by seal hunters and trappers over the following centuries, and the island came under Norwegian sovereignty in 1929.

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