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CANADIAN ARCTIC ARCHIPELAGO

World map depicting Canadian Arctic Archipelago
The 'Canadian Arctic Archipelago', also known as just the 'Arctic Archipelago', is an archipelago north of the Canadian mainland in the Arctic. Situated in the northern extremity of North America and covering about , this group of 36,563 islands comprises much of the territory of Northern Canada – most of Nunavut and part of Northwest Territories.
The archipelago extends some longitudinally and from the mainland to Cape Columbia, the northernmost point on Ellesmere Island. It is bounded on the west by the Beaufort Sea; on the north by the Arctic Ocean; on the east by Greenland, Baffin Bay and Davis Strait; and on the south by Hudson Bay and the Canadian mainland. The various islands are separated from each other and the continental mainland by a series of waterways collectively known as the Northwestern Passages. Two large peninsulas, Boothia and Melville, extend northward from the mainland.
The archipelago contains 94 major islands (greater than ), including three of the world's ten largest islands, and 36,469 minor islands. The sizeable islands of the archipelago (over , in order of descending size) are:
Name Location
Area Area rank Population
(2001)
World Canada
Baffin Island
Nunavut
NU
5 1 9,563
Victoria Island
Northwest Territories
NT,
Nunavut
NU
9 2 1,707
Ellesmere Island
Nunavut
NU
10 3 168
Banks Island
Northwest Territories
NT
24 5 114
Devon Island
NU
NU
27 6 0
Axel Heiberg Island
Nunavut
NU
32 7 0
Melville Island
Northwest Territories
NT,
Nunavut
NU
33 8 0
Southampton Island
Nunavut
NU
34 9 721
Prince of Wales Island
Nunavut
NU
40 10 0
Somerset Island
Nunavut
NU
46 12 0
Bathurst Island
Nunavut
NU
54 13 0
Prince Patrick Island
Northwest Territories
NT
55 14 0
King William Island
Nunavut
NU
61 15 960
Ellef Ringnes Island
Nunavut
NU
69 16 0
Bylot Island
Nunavut
NU
72 17 0

 NT = Northwest Territories, NU = Nunavut
After Greenland, the archipelago is the world’s largest high-Arctic land area. The climate of the islands is arctic, and the terrain consists of tundra except in mountainous areas. Most of the islands are uninhabited; human settlement is extremely thin and scattered, being mainly coastal Inuit settlements on the southern islands.
British claims on the islands were based on the explorations in the 1570s by Martin Frobisher. Canadian sovereignty, originally (1870-80) only over island portions that drained into Foxe Basin, Hudson Bay and Hudson Strait, over all of them was not established until the 1880 transfer by Britain to Canada of the remaining islands; the District of Franklin was established in 1895, which comprised almost all of the archipelago; the district was dissolved upon the creation of Nunavut in 1999. Canada claims sovereignty in a sector continuing to the North Pole, a claim that is not universally recognized. In addition, Canada claims all the waterways of the Northwestern Passages as Canadian Internal Waters; however the United States and most other maritime countries view these as international waters.[1] Disagreement over the passages' status has raised Canadian concerns about environmental enforcement, national security, and general sovereignty. Hans Island, in the Nares Strait east of Ellesmere Island, is a territory currently contested between Canada and Denmark.
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Contents
Map with links to islands
References
See also

Map with links to islands



King Christian
Borden
Lougheed
Brock
Mackenzie King
Helena
Cameron
Emerald
Prince Patrick
ÃŽle Vanier
Eglinton
Alexander
Bathurst
Melville
Byam Martin
Banks
Stefansson
Russell
Prince of Wales
Prescott
Somerset
Victoria
King William
Matty
Wales

Belcher
Long
Akimiski
Charlton
Reference map of Canadian Arctic Archipelago

Ellesmere
Meighen
Axel Heiberg
Ellef Ringnes
Amund Ringnes
Cornwall
Graham
North Kent
Baillie-Hamilton
Little Cornwallis
Cornwallis
Devon
Bylot

Baffin
Jens Munk
Koch
Bray
Rowley
Foley
Air Force
Prince Charles
Vansittart
White
Southampton

Resolution
Loks
Akpatok
Big
Salisbury
Nottingham
Mansel
Coats

'Islands not on map'

Beechey
Duke of York
Gateshead
Haig-Thomas
Hans
Killiniq

Jenny Lind
Ottawa
Prince Leopold
Skraeling
Trodeley
Weston

References


1. Northwest Passage gets political name change - Ottawa Citizen

Marsh, James H., ed. 1988. "Arctic Archipelago" ''The Canadian Encyclopedia''. Toronto: Hurtig Publishers.

See also



List of islands by area

List of islands of Canada

List of Canadian islands by area

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