What year was the new land discovered? new earth

And that same morning at 11:32 a.m. over Novaya Zemlya at an altitude of 4000 m above the land surface, a bomb with a capacity of 50 million tons of TNT was exploded.
The light flash was so bright that, despite the continuous cloudiness, it was visible even at a distance of a thousand kilometers. The swirling giant mushroom has grown to a height of 67 km. By the time of the explosion, while the bomb was slowly descending on a huge parachute from a height of 10,500 m to the calculated point of detonation, the Tu-95 carrier aircraft with the crew and its commander, Major Andrei Egorovich Durnovtsev, was already in the safe zone. The commander returned to his airfield as a lieutenant colonel, Hero of the Soviet Union.

Slavsky and Moskalenko, being congress delegates, specially flew to the northern test site early in the morning on the day of the experiment to observe the preparation and implementation of the explosion. From a distance of several hundred kilometers from the epicenter, being on board the Il-14 aircraft, they saw a fantastic picture. The impression was completed by the shock from the shock wave that overtook their plane.

One of the groups of participants in the experiment, from a distance of 270 km from the point of explosion, saw not only a bright flash through protective tinted glasses, but even felt the effect of a light pulse. In an abandoned village - 400 km from the epicenter - wooden houses were destroyed, and stone houses lost their roofs, windows and doors.

For many hundreds of kilometers from the test site, as a result of the explosion, the conditions for the passage of radio waves changed for almost an hour and radio communications ceased. Those who were at the airport Kola Peninsula near Olenya, the creators of the bomb and the leaders of the experiment, headed by the chairman of the State Commission, Major General N. I. Pavlov, for 40 minutes did not have a clear idea of ​​​​what happened and in what condition the crews of the carrier aircraft and the laboratory aircraft accompanying it Tu-16. And only when the first signs of radio communication with Novaya Zemlya appeared, from the command post near Olenya, they asked in plain text for information about the height of the cloud's rise. In response, they reported: about 60 km. It became clear that the design of the bomb had not failed.

In the meantime, the crews of the two planes taking off on a mission, and the documentary filmmakers who were filming at other points, experienced, by the will of circumstances, the most vivid and strong impressions. The cameramen recalled: “It’s creepy to fly, one might say, riding a hydrogen bomb! What if it works? Although it’s on fuses, it’s still ... And there won’t be a molecule left! Unbridled power in it, and what! The flight time to the target is not very long , but it stretches... We are on a combat course. The bomb bay doors are open. Behind the silhouette of the bomb is a solid cotton wool of clouds... And the bomb? Pilots in afterburner are leaving the drop point... Zero! Under the plane from below and somewhere in the distance, the clouds are illuminated by a powerful flash. What an illumination! Behind the hatch, light-sea simply spilled out, an ocean of light, and even the layers of clouds were highlighted, manifested. .. At that moment, our plane left between two layers of clouds, and there, in this gap, from below, a huge light-orange balloon appears! It, like Jupiter - powerful, confident, self-satisfied, - slowly, silently creeps up .. Breaking the hopeless, it would seem s, cloudiness, it grew, everything increased. Behind him, as if into a funnel, it seemed that the whole Earth would be drawn in. The spectacle was fantastic, unreal ... in any case unearthly "

The time of the origin of the name Novaya Zemlya is not exactly known. Perhaps it was formed as a tracing-paper from the Nenets Yedei-Ya "Novaya Zemlya". If so, then the name could have arisen during the very first visits to the islands by Russians in the 11th-12th centuries. The use of the name Novaya Zemlya at the end of the 15th century is recorded by foreign sources.

Pomors also used the name Matka, the meaning of which remains unclear. Often it is understood as "nurse, rich land."

And the land there is really rich, but not in plants, but in animals, which were hunted by hunters. Here, for example, as the artist A. Borisov wrote about the riches of the Arctic at the end of the 18th century, having visited Yugorsky Shar and Vaigach:

“Wow, how good it would be to live here in the regions rich in crafts! In our places (Vologda province), look how a peasant works all year round, day after day, and only barely, with all his modesty, can feed himself and his family. Not here! Here, sometimes one week is enough to provide for oneself for a whole year, if the merchants did not exploit the Samoyeds in such a way, if the Samoyeds were at least somewhat able to preserve and dispose of this rich property ... "

Based on the Pomeranian uterus (compass), the name is associated with the need to use a compass for sailing to Novaya Zemlya. But, as V. I. Nemirovich-Danchenko wrote, “Svenske, in his description of Novaya Zemlya, says that the name of the Matochkin Shar strait comes from the word - matochka (small compass). This is not true: the Matochkin ball is called matochkin, unlike other small Novaya Zemlya balls, since it crosses the entire Uterus, that is, the hardened land of this archipelago.

In Finnish, Karelian, Vepsian matka means “way, road”, in Estonian matk “journey, wandering”. The term is widely represented in the toponymy of the North (cf. Matkoma, Matkozero, Irdomatka, etc.), it was mastered by the Pomors, and, perhaps, the name Matka is associated with it.

Novaya Zemlya is located on the border of two seas. In the west it is washed by the Barents Sea, and in the east by the Kara Sea.

The archipelago consists of two large islands and many smaller ones. In general, we can say that Novaya Zemlya is two islands: South and North, separated by a narrow strait Matochkin Shar.

The distance from the northernmost point of Novaya Zemlya (Cape Zhelaniya) to the North Pole is only about one and a half thousand kilometers.

Cape Flissingsky of the North Island is the easternmost point of Europe.

Novaya Zemlya belongs to the Arkhangelsk region, as well as another Arctic archipelago adjacent to it, Franz Josef Land. That is, the inhabitants of the Arkhangelsk region, having visited Novaya Zemlya, in fact, will not even leave their subject, despite the fact that from Arkhangelsk to Novaya Zemlya in a straight line is about 900 kilometers, almost the same as to Moscow, Estonia or Norway.

The Barents Sea, which had been traversed by Russian coast-dwellers for several centuries, was visited in 1594, 1595 and 1596 by expeditions led by the Dutch navigator Willem Barents and, although he was not even the first foreign traveler, who visited Novaya Zemlya, the sea in 1853 was named after him. This name has been preserved to this day, despite the fact that in Russia this sea in the old days was called the Northern, Siver, Moscow, Russian, Arctic, Pechora and most often Murmansk.

Something about the geology and climate of the archipelago

Novaya Zemlya in the west is washed by the relatively warm Barents Sea (compared to the Kara Sea), and due to this, the weather there can be quite warm, and even, oddly enough, sometimes even warmer than on the coast. The weather forecast for Novaya Zemlya now (in Belushya Guba), as well as for comparison on the coast (in Amderma):

Very interesting and remarkable is the so-called "Novaya Zemlya bora" - a strong cold gusty local wind, reaching up to 35-40 m/s, and sometimes 40-55 m/s! Such winds near the coast often reach the strength of a hurricane and weaken with distance from the coast.

The word Bora (bora, Βορέας, boreal) is translated as a cold north wind.

Bora occurs when a stream of cold air encounters a hill on its way; having overcome the obstacle, the bora with great force falls on the coast. The vertical dimensions of the bur are several hundred meters. Affects, as a rule, small areas where low mountains directly border the sea.

Novaya Zemlya bora is due to the presence of a mountain range stretched from south to north along the island. Therefore, it is celebrated on the western and eastern coasts of the South Island. The characteristic features of the "bora" on the west coast is a strong gusty and very cold wind, northeast or southeast directions. On the east coast - winds of the western or north-western direction.

The highest frequency of Novaya Zemlya bora is observed in November - April with a duration of 10 days or more. During bora, all visible air is filled with thick snow and resembles smoking smoke. Visibility in these cases often reaches its complete absence - 0 meters. Such storms are dangerous for people and equipment, and require foresight and caution from residents when moving in case of emergency.

The Novaya Zemlya Range affects not only the direction, but also the speed of the wind crossing it. The mountain range contributes to an increase in wind speed on the leeward side. With an east wind, air accumulates on the windward side, which, when crossing the ridge, leads to air collapses, accompanied by a strong gusty wind, the speed of which reaches 35-40 m/s, and sometimes 40-45 m/s (in the area of ​​the Severny village up to 45-55 m/s).

Novaya Zemlya is covered with "thorns" in many places. If I'm not mistaken, this is slate and phyllite (from the Greek phýllon - leaf) - a metamorphic rock, which in structure and composition is transitional between clay and mica schist. In general, almost everywhere in the south of NZ where we visited, the land is like this. That is why here the paws of the running dogs were constantly injured.

Previously, when Europeans had boots with leather soles, they constantly risked tearing their shoes. There is a story on this topic, told by Stepan Pisakhov in his diary: “In the early days, I was going to go away from the camp. Malanya saw, swayed, hurried, caught up. - Where are you going? - To Chum-mountain. Malanya looked at my feet - I was wearing boots - How are you going back? Are you going to roll yourself sideways? - Malanya explained that the shoes would soon break on sharp stones. - I'll bring you pima. Waited.

Malanya brought new seal pima with sea hare soles. - Dress up. In these pims, it is good to walk on pebbles, and you can walk on water. How much do pimas cost? - One and a half rubles. It seemed cheap to me. Surprise resulted in a question: - Both? Malanya laughed a long laugh, even sat down on the ground. Waving her hands, she swayed. And through laughter she said - No, one pim! You will wear one, I will wear one pim. You step foot and I step foot. So let's go. Malanya laughed and told an old Nenets tale about people with one leg who can only walk with their arms around each other - They live there loving each other. There is no malice there. They don’t cheat there, - finished Malanya and fell silent, thoughtful, stared into the distance of the told fairy tale. Malania was silent for a long time. The dogs have calmed down, curled up in balls, sleeping. Only the ears of dogs flinch at every new sound.

Modern life on Novaya Zemlya

First of all, many people associate Novaya Zemlya with a nuclear test site and testing of the most powerful hydrogen bomb in the history of mankind - the 58-megaton Tsar Bomba. Therefore, there is a widespread myth that after nuclear tests on Novaya Zemlya it is impossible to live because of radiation. In fact, everything, to put it mildly, is not at all like that.

On Novaya Zemlya, there is a town for the military - Belushya Guba and Rogachevo, as well as the village of Severny (without a permanent population). In Rogachevo there is a military airfield - Amderma-2.

There is also a base for underground testing, mining and construction and installation works. On Novaya Zemlya, the Pavlovskoye, Severnoye and Perevalnoye ore fields with deposits of polymetallic ores were discovered. The Pavlovskoye field is so far the only field on Novaya Zemlya for which balance reserves have been approved and which is planned to be developed.

2149 people live in Belushi Guba, 457 people live in Rogachevo. Of these, military personnel - 1694 people; civilians - 603 people; children - 302 people. Currently, personnel also live and serve in the village of Severny, at the Malye Karmakuly weather station, at the heliports of Pankovaya Zemlya, Chirakino.

Novaya Zemlya has the House of Officers, a soldier's club, the Arktika sports complex, a secondary school, kindergarten Bunochka, five canteens, a military hospital. There is also a grocery store "Pole", a department store "Metelitsa", a vegetable store "Spolohi", a cafe "Fregat", a children's cafe "Skazka", a store "Sever". The names are just mi-mi-mi :)

Novaya Zemlya is considered a separate municipality with the status of an urban district. The administrative center is the village of Belushya Guba. Novaya Zemlya is ZATO (closed administrative-territorial entity). This means that you need a pass to enter the city district.

Website municipality"New Earth" - http://nov-zemlya.ru.

Until the early 1990s. the very existence of settlements on Novaya Zemlya was a state secret. The postal address of the village of Belushya Guba was "Arkhangelsk-55", the village of Rogachevo and "points" located in the south - "Arkhangelsk-56". The postal address of the "points" located in the north is "Krasnoyarsk Territory, Dikson Island-2". Now this information is declassified.

The Malye Karmakuly meteorological station also operates on Novaya Zemlya. And in the north of Novaya Zemlya (Cape Zhelaniya) there is a stronghold of the Russian Arctic National Park, where its employees live in the summer.

How to get to Novaya Zemlya

Regular planes fly to Novaya Zemlya. Since November 5, 2015, Aviastar Petersburg has been operating passenger and cargo flights on the route Arkhangelsk (Talagi) - Amderma-2 - Arkhangelsk (Talagi) on An-24 and An-26 aircraft.

For questions about purchasing tickets, booking tickets, the date and time of departure for regular civil aviation flights to Novaya Zemlya, you can contact the representatives of Aviastar Petersburg LLC on weekdays from 9.30 to 19.00.

Representative of Aviastar tel. +7 812 777 06 58, Moscow highway, 25, building 1, lit. 8 921 488 00 44. Representative in Belushya Guba tel. 8 911 597 69 08.

Also, Novaya Zemlya can be reached by sea - by boat. Personally, we went there just like that.

History of Novaya Zemlya

It is believed that Novaya Zemlya was discovered by the Russians already in the 12th-15th centuries. The first written evidence of the presence and fishing activities of Russians in the archipelago dates back to the 16th century and belongs to foreigners. Indisputable material evidence of the long stay of the Russians in the archipelago was recorded in 1594 and 1596-1597. in the diaries of De Fer - a member of the Dutch expeditions led by Willem Barents.

By the first arrival of Europeans to Novaya Zemlya, the unique spiritual and fishing traditions of the Russian Pomors had already developed here. Novaya Zemlya was visited by hunters seasonally to hunt sea animals (walruses, seals, polar bears), fur-bearing animals, birds, as well as collect eggs and fish. Hunters hunted for walrus tusks, polar fox, bear, walrus, seal and deer skins, walrus, seal, beluga and bear “fat” (blubber), omul and loaches, geese and other birds, as well as eider down.

The Pomors had fishing huts on Novaya Zemlya, but they did not dare to stay there for the winter. And not so much because of the harsh climate, but because of the terrible polar disease - scurvy.

Industrialists for the construction of huts brought wood and bricks themselves. The dwelling was heated with firewood brought with them on the ship. According to surveys conducted among industrialists in 1819, “there are no natural inhabitants; any indigenous inhabitants of Novaya Zemlya were unknown to the fishermen.

Discovery of Novaya Zemlya by foreign sailors

Due to the fact that Spain and Portugal dominated the southern sea routes, in the 16th century English sailors were forced to look for a northeastern passage to the countries of the East (in particular, to India). So they got to the New Earth.

First unsuccessful expedition:

In 1533 X. Willoughby left England and apparently reached the southern coast of Novaya Zemlya. Turning back, the two ships of the expedition were forced to spend the winter at the mouth of the Varsina River in eastern Murman. The following year, the Pomors accidentally stumbled upon these ships with the corpses of 63 English wintering participants.

The following unfinished expeditions, but without casualties:

In 1556, an English ship under the command of S. Borro reached the shores of Novaya Zemlya, where he met the crew of a Russian boat. The accumulation of ice in the Yugorsky Shar Strait forced the expedition to return to England. In 1580, the English expedition of A. Pete and C. Jackman on two ships reached Novaya Zemlya, but solid ice in the Kara Sea also forced them to sail home.

Expeditions with victims, but also goals achieved:

In 1594, 1595 and 1596 northeast passage three trading sea expeditions to India and China. One of the leaders of all three expeditions was the Dutch navigator Willem Barents. In 1594, he passed along the northwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya and reached its northern tip. Along the way, the Dutch repeatedly met material evidence of the Russians' presence in Novaya Zemlya.

August 26, 1596 northeast coast archipelago, in Ice Harbor. The Dutch had to build a dwelling on the shore from driftwood and ship planks. During the winter, two members of the team died. On June 14, 1597, leaving the ship, the Dutch set sail in two boats from Ice Harbor. Off the northwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya, in the area of ​​Ivanov Bay, V. Barents and his servant, a little later another member of the expedition, died.

Off the southern coast of the archipelago, in the area of ​​​​the Kostin Shar Strait, the Dutch met two Russian boats and received from them rye bread and smoked birds. On boats, the surviving 12 Dutch reached Kola, where they accidentally met with the second ship of the expedition and arrived in Holland on October 30, 1597.

Subsequent expeditions:

Then, in 1608, the English navigator G. Hudson visited Novaya Zemlya (during the landing on the archipelago, he discovered a Pomor cross and the remains of a fire), in 1653 three Danish ships reached Novaya Zemlya.

Further, the Danes, the Dutch, the British visited Novaya Zemlya until 1725-1730, and on this the voyages of foreign ships to the archipelago ceased until the 19th century. The most outstanding of the expeditions were two Dutch expeditions by V. Barents. The main merit of Barents and De Fer is the compilation of the first map of the western and northern coasts of Novaya Zemlya.

Exploration of Novaya Zemlya by Russians

It all started with two unsuccessful expeditions:

In 1652, by decree of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, an expedition of Roman Neplyuev set off to Novaya Zemlya to search for silver and copper ores, precious stones and pearls. Most of the 83 participants and Neplyuev himself died during the winter south of Dolgiy Island.

In 1671, an expedition led by Ivan Neklyudov was sent to Novaya Zemlya to search for silver ore and build a wooden fortress on the archipelago. In 1672, all members of the expedition died.

Finally, relative luck:

In 1760-1761. Savva Loshkin traveled by boat from south to north along the eastern coast of Novaya Zemlya for the first time, spending two years on it. One of his winter huts, apparently, was built at the mouth of the Savina River. Loshkin rounded the northern coast and went south along the western coast.

In 1766, helmsman Yakov Chirakin sailed on the ship of the Arkhangelsk merchant A. Barmin from the Barents Sea to the Kara Strait Matochkin Shar. Upon learning of this, the Arkhangelsk governor A.E. Golovtsyn agreed with Barmin to send a ship with an expedition.

In July 1768, an expedition led by F.F. Rozmyslova set off on a three-masted kochmar to the western mouth of the Matochkin Shar strait in order to map the strait and measure its depth. The tasks of the expedition included: to go, if possible, through Matochkin Shar and the Kara Sea to the mouth of the Ob River and study the possibility of opening a route from the Kara Sea to North America. From August 15, 1768, the expedition carried out measurements and research of Matochkin Shar. In the eastern mouth of the strait - Tyulenya Bay and on Cape Drovyanoy, two huts were built, where, divided into two groups, the expedition spent the winter. During the winter, Yakov Chirakin died. Of the 14 people on the expedition, 7 died.
Returning to the western mouth of the Matochkin Shara, the expedition met a Pomeranian fishing vessel. The rotten kochmara had to be left at the mouth of the Chirakina River and returned on September 9, 1769 to Arkhangelsk on a ship of the Pomors.

Of course, the name of Rozmyslov should take one of the first places among the outstanding Russian sailors and explorers of the Arctic. He not only measured and put on the map the semi-legendary Matochkin Shar Strait for the first time. Rozmyslov gave the first description of the natural environment of the strait: the surrounding mountains, lakes, some representatives of the flora and fauna. Moreover, he carried out regular observations of the weather, fixed the time of freezing and opening of ice in the strait. Fulfilling the assignment given to him, Rozmyslov built the first winter hut in the eastern part of the Matochkin Shar strait. This winter hut was later used by industrialists and explorers of the archipelago.

In 1806, Chancellor N.P. Rumyantsev allocated funds for the search for silver ore in Novaya Zemlya. Under the leadership of the mining official V. Ludlov, in June 1807, two mining masters and eleven members of the ship's crew set off for the archipelago on the single-masted sloop "Pchela". The expedition traveled to Mezhdusharsky Island, visiting the famous Pomeranian camp of Valkovo. Studying the islands in the Costin Shar Strait, Ludlov discovered deposits of gypsum.

In 1821-1824. Lieutenant F.P. Litke led four expeditions on the military brig Novaya Zemlya. Expeditions led by Litke made an inventory of the western coast of Novaya Zemlya from the Kara Strait to Cape Nassau. Close-knit ice did not allow them to break further to the North. For the first time, a whole complex of scientific observations was carried out: meteorological, geomagnetic and astronomical.

In 1832, difficult ice conditions in the Kara Gates forced the expedition of P.K. Pakhtusov to put up a single-mast deckless large karbas “Novaya Zemlya” for wintering near the southern shores of the archipelago, in the Kamenka Bay. For the construction of housing, the remains of a Pomeranian hut and a driftwood found here were used. As soon as all the members of the expedition moved to the rebuilt winter hut, from the second decade of September they began to keep a meteorological log, entering into it every two hours the readings of the barometer, thermometer and the state of the atmosphere. With the end of winter, many-day hiking routes began to describe and survey the southern shores of the archipelago. The results of the expedition - the first map of the entire eastern coast of the South Island of the archipelago. Thanks to his subsequent expeditions, outstanding results were achieved. Pakhtusov described South coast Matochkina Shara, the eastern coast of the archipelago from the Kara Gate to the Far Cape.

Then they were in 1837 on the schooner “Krotov” and a small boat “St. Elisha” expedition of the Imperial Academy of Sciences under the leadership of Academician K. Baer. Ensign A.K. Tsivodka commanded the ship.
In 1838, under the command of Ensign A.K. Tsivolka, an expedition was sent to Novaya Zemlya on the schooners Novaya Zemlya and Spitsbergen. The second schooner was commanded by Ensign S.A. Moiseev. As a result, a number of important studies were made, and well-known domestic and Western European scientists repeatedly addressed various scientific results of the Tsivolka-Moiseev expedition.

In subsequent years, the Pomors, who continued to fish on Novaya Zemlya, at the request of the famous Siberian industrialist M.K. Sidorov, landed in the places indicated by him, collected rock samples and set up application posts. In 1870, Sidorov published a project “On the benefits of a settlement on Novaya Zemlya for the development of marine and other industries”.

Commercial development of Novaya Zemlya

The history of the creation of fishing settlements on Novaya Zemlya has purely "political roots". For a long time this region was "Russian", but unfortunately there was not a single permanent settlement here. Even the first Russian settlers in the North and their descendants, the Pomors, went here to fish. But the “rustic Russians” for some reason believed that their Arctic paradise would always be inaccessible to the “nemchure”, “Germans” - foreigners (“Germans”, that is, dumb, not speaking Russian, the Pomors called all foreigners). And they were clearly wrong.

It is known that as early as the 16th century, shortly after the visit of the Dutchman Willem Barents and his associates to the region, Europe was interested in this particular “corner of the Russian Arctic”. And in confirmation of this, “in 1611, a society was formed in Amsterdam that established hunting in the seas near Spitsbergen and Novaya Zemlya,” and in 1701 the Dutch equipped up to 2,000 ships to Svalbard and Novaya Zemlya to “beat the whales”. According to the famous Siberian merchant and philanthropist M.K. Sidorov, who spent his whole life and fortune just to prove that Russia's strength was in the development of Siberia and the North, "before Peter the Great, the Dutch freely hunted whales in Russian territory."

At the end of the 18th - the first third of the 19th century, when the North Atlantic whale and fish stocks had already dried up, and the beaches and shoals of Jan Mayen and Bear, Svalbard and other islands lost their once familiar appearance - walruses and seals, polar bears, our the eternal competitors in the development of the North, the Norwegians, turned their attention to the undeveloped eastern expanses of the Barents Sea - the islands of Kolguev, Vaigach and Novaya Zemlya, the icy Kara Sea, which were still "teeming" with Arctic life. The main period of their exploitation of the Novaya Zemlya fisheries covers approximately a 60-year period - from the end of the second third of the 19th century to the end of the 1920s.

Although the Norwegian industrialists appeared in the Novaya Zemlya fisheries several centuries later than the Russian sea animal hunters and the Nenets, the presence of the Scandinavians in the region was very large, and the nature of exploitation natural resources- predatory, poaching. In a few years, they mastered the entire area of ​​Russian crafts on the Barents Sea side of both islands of Novaya Zemlya, penetrated into the Kara Sea through Cape Zhelaniya, the Yugorsky Shar and Kara Gates straits and onto the eastern coast of the archipelago. Well-equipped and financially secure Norwegian sea animal industrialists who have long hunted whales and seals in North Atlantic and at Spitsbergen, skillfully used the experience of the Arkhangelsk coast-dwellers.

In voyages along the coast of the archipelago, the Norwegians relied on the navigational and perceptible signs (houris, crosses) set by the Pomors, used the old Russian camps or their remains as strongholds. These camps also served as a signal to the Norwegians that the crafts were somewhere nearby, since the Pomors usually built camps and huts near them. By the beginning of the XX century. they even organized several winter quarters in the archipelago.

A whole branch of the Norwegian economy quickly matured in Russian crafts, and small villages in the northern region of our Scandinavian neighbor, from where fishing expeditions were equipped to the Arctic, turned into prosperous cities in a matter of years, creating a good financial foundation for the entire twentieth century.

“The development by Norwegians of crafts in the Barents and Kara Seas, on Vaigach and Kolguev contributed to the development of the outlying cities of Norway. Thus, the small town of Hammerfest, one of the northernmost cities in the world in the middle of the 19th century, in 1820 had no more than 100 inhabitants. After 40 years, 1750 people lived in it. Hammerfest developed his trades on Svalbard and Novaya Zemlya, sent in 1869 27 ships with a displacement of 814 tons and 268 crew members for fishing.

Knowing about the existence in Russia of the laws of "coastal law, which prohibit foreigners from settling the shores of the islands without the permission of the government," the Norwegians quite cleverly circumvented this legal obstacle. In particular, according to the famous Arkhangelsk Pomor F.I. Voronin, who worked on Novaya Zemlya for 30 years, he knew cases when “agents of Norwegian merchants, having their relatives as colonists on the Murmansk coast, extended their plans not only to the island of Novaya Zemlya, but also to Kolguev and Vaigach.

And so, in order to somehow protect themselves from Norwegian expansion in the Russian North, in the 1870s, a plan ripened in the bowels of the Arkhangelsk provincial administration - to create settlements on Novaya Zemlya, denoting national interest in this region of the Arctic. Naturally, the good idea was supported in the capital. From St. Petersburg to Arkhangelsk comes "good" for the beginning of the colonization of the Arctic island. The beginning of the existence of the Novaya Zemlya island hunting economy should be considered the second half of the 1870s, when the first permanent settlement, the Small Karmakuly camp, was founded on the archipelago by the Arkhangelsk provincial administration with state support.

From the very beginning of the creation of settlements on the Arctic archipelago, both the state and the provincial authorities believed that the main occupation of the Nenets on Novaya Zemlya would be fishing activities. The provincial administration even developed and implemented a number of measures stimulating the involvement of the Nenets in resettlement to Novaya Zemlya and supporting their fishing activities.
In the initial period of the colonization of Novaya Zemlya, according to the royal decree, each male industrialist pioneer was entitled to 350 rubles from the state treasury as "lifting" or compensation. At the same time, the settlers were exempted from all state and zemstvo fees for 10 years, and those who wished to move back to the mainland in five years could return to their former place of residence without prior permission.

In 1892, by order of the Minister of the Interior, 10% of the gross proceeds from the sale of craft products were to be "credited to a special reserve colonization capital, and the net profit of individual colonists was to be paid into a savings bank on special personalized books." Each Samoyed hunter was entitled to a special book signed by the governor, in which "the amount belonging to the owner of the book is indicated." The reserve capital was used to help the first settlers - to bring them from the tundra to Arkhangelsk, to live there for several months, to provide them with clothes and tools for crafts, to bring them to Novaya Zemlya, to issue a gratuitous cash allowance, etc.

Settlement of Novaya Zemlya (its inhabitants)

The residence of indigenous Samoyeds on Novaya Zemlya until the 19th century, unlike Vaigach (an island located between Novaya Zemlya and the mainland), is not confirmed.

Nevertheless, when in 1653 (already after the Barents and other foreign predecessors) three Danish ships reached Novaya Zemlya, the ship's doctor of this expedition, De Lamartinier, in the description of the voyage to the archipelago, pointed to a meeting with local residents - "New Landers". Like the Samoyeds (Nenets), they worshiped the sun and wooden idols, but differed from the Samoyeds in clothing, jewelry, and face painting. Lamartinière indicates that they used boats that resembled light canoes, and that spear and arrowheads, like their other tools, were made of fish bones.

In the literature, there are also references to the attempts of Russian families to settle in the archipelago in the 16th-18th centuries. There is a legend that the Stroganov Bay, located in the southwestern part of Novaya Zemlya, is named after the Stroganov family, who fled from Novgorod during the persecution of Ivan the Terrible. Two hundred years later, in 1763, on the coast of Chernaya Bay ( South part archipelago) settled 12 people of the Paikachev family of the Old Believers. They were forced to flee from Kem, refusing to renounce their faith. Both families died, apparently from scurvy.

However, it is reliably known that Novaya Zemlya became inhabited only at the end of the 19th century. In 1867, the Nenets Foma Vylka with his wife Arina and children sailed to the southern coast of Novaya Zemlya on two karbashes. The Nenets accompanying them went back in the fall, while Vylka, his family and the Nenets Samdey stayed for the winter. At the end of the winter, Samdey died. Vylka became the first known permanent resident of the archipelago. He lived on Goose Land, in the Small Karmakuly and on the coast of Matochkin Shara.

In 1869 or 1870, an industrialist brought several Nenets (Samoyeds) for the winter, and they lived on Novaya Zemlya for several years. In 1872, the second Nenets family arrived in Novaya Zemlya - Pyrerka Maxim Danilovich. The Nenets proved that a person can live on Novaya Zemlya.

“In 1877, a rescue station was set up in the Malye Karmakuly camp in order to provide industrialists with a reliable shelter both for the time of fishing and in case of an unforeseen wintering, and at the same time to provide assistance to the crews of ships in case they crash near this island.
In addition, to protect the erected buildings and to engage in crafts there, five Samoyed families from the Mezen district, including 24 people, were then delivered to Novaya Zemlya and settled in the Malokarmakulsky camp; they were provided with warm clothes, shoes, guns, gunpowder, lead, food supplies and other tools for hunting and crafts.

Commanded to Novaya Zemlya to set up a rescue station, lieutenant of the corps of naval navigators Tyagin met there the same two Samoyed families, consisting of 11 people, who had been roaming around Moller Bay for eight years.

These Samoyeds were sent here by a Pechora industrialist, and were provided with good means for crafts, but they squandered them and, not risking returning to their homeland, completely got used to Novaya Zemlya. Having found themselves in complete economic dependence on one of the Pomor industrialists, who supplied them with the necessary supplies, in return for this - of course, at fabulously cheap prices - taking away their crafts, the Samoyeds asked Tyagin to include them in the Samoyed artel brought at the expense of the Water Rescue Society " . A. P. Engelhardt. Russian North: Travel notes. St. Petersburg, published by A.S. Suvorin, 1897

Expedition of E.A. Tyagin. built a rescue station in the Small Karmakuly and carried out hydrometeorological observations during the winter. Tyagin's wife gave birth to a child who became one of the first children born on Novaya Zemlya.

The families of the Nenets colonists who settled in the Small Karmakuly elected Foma Vylka as the first inhabitant of the island, the headman. He was entrusted with the care of the people-colonists, the duties of maintaining order, as well as organizing the unloading and loading of ships. In the performance of his official duties, Foma put on a white round tin badge over a patched and greasy blubber coat, which meant a foreman. After the departure of Tyatin, the entire management of the rescue station passed into the hands of Foma. He faithfully fulfilled this duty for many years.

The first known inhabitant of Novaya Zemlya - Thomas Vylka

Foma Vylka is an interesting personality. He was born on the banks of the Hungry Bay at the mouth of the Pechora River, in the poorest family. At the age of seven, left an orphan, he went to work as a farm laborer to a rich reindeer herder and worked only for the fact that he was fed.

The owner had a son who was taught to read, forced to read and write. Thomas saw it all. He asked the young owner - they were the same age - to teach him to read and write. They went further into the tundra or into the forest, where no one saw them, there they drew letters in the snow or sand, added words, read in syllables. So Foma learned Russian letters. And once, when the owner beat Foma severely, he ran away from home, taking with him the master's psalter...

Moving from pasture to pasture, where many reindeer herders gathered, Foma looked after himself a beautiful girl and decided to marry. Violating the ancient rites of matchmaking, he asked the girl if she wanted to become his wife. And only when he received her consent, he sent matchmakers. Several years have passed. Foma came to the ancient capital of the European Nenets Pustozersk for a fair. Here he was persuaded to accept Christianity, to marry his wife according to the Christian rite, and to baptize his daughter. Thomas himself had to take confession in the church. It was then that something unexpected happened. The priest asked the confessor, "Have you stolen?" Foma became agitated, upset, even wanted to run away, but finally admitted that in childhood he had taken the psalter from the owner...

The new owner, to whom Foma was hired for this job, suggested that he go to Vaigach Island at the head of the owner’s fishing artel to hunt the sea animal. So for three years Foma went on karbass across the sea to Vaigach and always brought good booty to the owner. For Thomas, the reputation of a successful hunter, a skilled pilot and a good headman of a fishing artel was strengthened. After some time, he began to ask the owner to send him with an artel to fish for sea animals on Novaya Zemlya. The owner approved this plan, assembled an artel, equipped two sailing karbas. On the way to Novaya Zemlya, they were met by a strong storm, the rudder of one karbas was torn off, Foma was washed into the sea. Miraculously, the assistant dragged him on board by the hair. One karbas turned back, the second, led by Foma Vylka, safely reached the shores of Novaya Zemlya. So Foma Vylka with his wife and daughter first came to Novaya Zemlya. A year later, their second daughter was born there.

Once Foma was returning from fishing and saw a large polar bear near the hut-hill, where his wife and children were. The polar bear among the Nenets was considered a sacred animal. Hunting for him was not forbidden, but the hunter, before killing this beast, must mentally advise the bear to leave in good health. If the bear does not leave, then he himself wants death. Foma killed the polar bear, went up to him, apologized, bowed as to the owner of the Novaya Zemlya and the sea. According to ancient Nenets customs, only men were allowed to eat bear meat. The carcass of the sacred animal could be brought into the tent not through the door, which was considered an unclean place, but only from the front side of the tent, lifting its cover. Women could eat bear meat if they drew mustaches and beards with charcoal. Such a "cunning move" with a deviation from the ancient rites, apparently, helped many Nenets women escape from starvation.

Foma Vylka's family had to endure many hardships in Novaya Zemlya. Harsh, endlessly long winters, loneliness. Food was obtained with great difficulty, clothes and shoes were sewn from animal skins. There was not enough firewood to heat and light the tent a little, they burned blubber - the fat of a sea animal.

Once, when the family of another Nenets, Pyrerka Maxim Danilovich, was already living on the island next to the Vylka family, such an event happened. In late autumn, Norwegian sailors from a wrecked ship came to the plagues of the Nenets. Their appearance was terrible: exhausted to a pulp, in tattered clothes and shoes. Foma and Pyrerka gladly accepted them into their tents, fed them, warmed them, provided them with the best places in the tent. The wives sewed warm fur clothes and shoes for them. The Norwegians did not eat seal meat, and the Nenets had to specially go hunting in the mountains, kill wild deer there and feed the guest with fresh boiled meat. When one of the Norwegians fell ill with scurvy, Foma and Pyrerka forcibly forced him to drink the warm blood of animals and eat raw reindeer meat, rubbed his legs and body, forced him to walk, did not let him sleep much, and thus saved him from death.

In the spring, the Nenets gave the Norwegian sailors a boat, and they left for their homeland. The parting was very touching: they cried, kissed, hugged, the sailors thanked the Nenets for saving them from inevitable death. We exchanged gifts. Foma was given a pipe, and he gave them a walrus tusk.

Several years have passed since the sailors left. Once a sea steamer came to Small Karmakuly. All Nenets colonists were invited to it. The Swedish envoy read out and presented a letter of gratitude signed by the Swedish king. Then gifts began to be distributed. The first gift to Foma Vylka was a rifle and cartridges. Showed how to use it. Foma could not resist with joy and immediately smashed the head of a floating loon with a shot from his hand, thereby violating the order of the solemn ceremony ...

Exploration of Novaya Zemlya

In 1880, M.K. Sidorov, together with the shipowners Kononov, Voronov and Sudovikov, submitted a report to the Minister of the Interior on improving the situation in the Northern Territory. It proves the need for proper organization of the resettlement of Russian industrialists to Novaya Zemlya. By the summer of 1880, the armed sailing schooner “Bakan” was transferred from the Baltic to protect the northern lands of Russia. Starting from this year, regular steamboat flights from Arkhangelsk to Malye Karmakuly are being established.

In 1881, the regulation on the colonization of Novaya Zemlya was approved. From September 1, 1882 to September 3, 1883, continuous observations on meteorology and terrestrial magnetism are carried out in the Small Karmakuly under the program of the First International Polar Year.

The work of the polar station was supervised by a hydrograph, lieutenant K.P. Andreev. In late April - early May 1882, an employee of the station, doctor L.F. Grinevitsky, accompanied by the Nenets Khanets Vylka and Prokopy Vylka, made the first exploratory crossing of the Southern Island of Novaya Zemlya from Malye Karmakul to the eastern coast in 14 days (round trip).

In 1887, a new encampment was founded in the Pomorskaya Bay, Matochkin Shar Strait. Here, a member of the Russian Geographical Society K.D. Nosilov stayed for the winter, who carried out regular meteorological observations. Hieromonk father Jonah arrived in Small Karmakuly with a psalmist. Prior to this, the diocesan spiritual authorities annually sent a priest to Novaya Zemlya in the summer to officiate trebs and services in a small chapel.

In 1888, the Arkhangelsk governor, Prince N.D. Golitsyn, arrived in Novaya Zemlya. In Arkhangelsk, a wooden church was built specially for Novaya Zemlya, which the governor delivered along with the iconostasis to Malye Karmakuly. In the same year, Father Jonah made two trips. One in Matochkin Shar for the baptism of two residents. The second - to the eastern coast of the South Island, to the Kara Sea. Here he found and destroyed a Nenets wooden idol, personifying the patron god of deer hunting. Idols were discovered and destroyed by Father Jonah in other places of the South Island. Father Ion began to teach Nenets children to read and write, and their parents to pray.

On September 18, 1888, the new church was consecrated. The church was supplied with magnificent icons, valuable church utensils and bells. In 1889, in the Small Karmakuly, the Nikolo-Karelsky Monastery was established, with the permission of the Holy Synod, a monastic skete. The task of the monks included not only preaching among the Nenets, but also helping to change the prevailing way of life during the transition from nomadic to settled life. The long-term activity of Jonah's father has borne fruit. The German colonists willingly visited the temple, and their children read and sang in the church during worship.

In 1893, Russian industrialists Yakov Zapasov and Vasily Kirillov with their families moved from the mouth of the Pechora to Novaya Zemlya for permanent residence.

By 1894, the permanent population of Novaya Zemlya was 10 families of Nenets in the amount of 50 people. This year, Novaya Zemlya was visited by Arkhangelsk Governor A.P. Engelgard, who brought 8 more families, including 37 people, who expressed a desire to settle in the archipelago, on the Lomonosov steamer.

On the ship, a six-room house was delivered in disassembled form for the school and the residence of Jonah's father and the psalmist. This house was assembled in Small Karmakuly. Another house was brought to the camp in Matochkin Shar. So, in Small Karmakuly in 1894 there was a church building, a school, two houses in which the Nenets lived, a building in which a paramedic lived and a supply depot, a barn where spare building materials were stored, and in winter - a rescue boat. There were three small houses where the Nenets lived.

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The archipelago consists of two large islands - North and South, separated by a narrow strait (2-3 km) Matochkin Shar and many relatively small islands, the largest of which is Mezhdusharsky. The northeastern tip of the North Island - Cape Flissing - is the easternmost point of Europe.



It stretches from the southwest to the northeast for 925 km. The northernmost point of Novaya Zemlya is the eastern island of the Greater Orange Islands, the southernmost point is the Pynina Islands of the Petukhov Archipelago, the western one is an unnamed cape on the Gusinaya Zemlya peninsula of the South Island, and the eastern one is Cape Flissingsky of the Severny Island. The area of ​​all the islands is more than 83 thousand km2; the width of the North Island is up to 123 km, the South - up to 143 km.

In the south, the Karskie Vorota strait (50 km wide) is separated from Vaygach Island.

The climate is arctic and harsh. The winter is long and cold, with strong winds (the speed of katabatic (katabatic) winds reaches 40-50 m/s) and blizzards, which is why Novaya Zemlya is sometimes referred to in the literature as the "Land of Winds". Frosts reach?40 °C. The average temperature of the warmest month - August - is from 2.5 °C in the north to 20 °C in the south. In winter, the difference reaches 4.6°. The difference in temperature conditions between the coasts of the Barents and Kara Seas exceeds 5°. Such a temperature asymmetry is due to the difference in the ice regime of these seas. There are many small lakes on the archipelago itself; under the rays of the sun, the water temperature in the southern regions can reach 18 ° C.

About half of the area of ​​the North Island is occupied by glaciers. On the territory of about 20,000 km? - a continuous ice cover, stretching almost 400 km in length and up to 70-75 km in width. The thickness of the ice is over 300 m. In a number of places, the ice descends into the fjords or breaks off into the open sea, forming ice barriers and giving rise to icebergs. The total glaciation area of ​​Novaya Zemlya is 29,767 km², of which about 92% is cover glaciation and 7.9% is mountain glaciers. On the South Island - areas of arctic tundra.

The material was found and prepared for publication by Grigory Luchansky

Source:Novaya Zemlya excursion. Collection edited by R. L. Samoilovich and M. M. Ermolaev. Part one. General. International Geological Congress. XVII session of the USSR 1937 Leningrad, Glavsevmorput publishing house, 1937

Physical and geographical outline of Novaya Zemlya

V. D. Aleksandrova and A. I. Zubkov

I. Climate

The insular position of Novaya Zemlya gives its climate a maritime character, which manifests itself in cold summers with frequent fogs and light rain and relatively light frosts in winter, as well as somewhat higher precipitation than in the more continental parts of the Arctic. In addition, the presence of the Barents Sea warmed by the Gulf Stream in the west, and the cold Kara Sea in the east leads to great weather variability and causes some difference in the climate of the western and Kara coasts of Novaya Zemlya.

1. Wind mode

The most characteristic feature of Novaya Zemlya's climate is the frequent recurrence of strong winds.

Changes in wind strength by months are shown in the table at the end of the text. From its consideration it follows that the highest average annual wind speed is observed in the Small Karmakuly; in second place is Cape Desire. But with regard to the frequency of lulls, these two stations change places. An intermediate position is occupied by Matochkin Shar and Russkaya Gavan, which are characterized by lower wind speeds and more calms. In terms of wind strength, Novaya Zemlya ranks first in the Union, only in some mountainous areas the wind speed exceeds Novaya Zemlya (for example, the Marchotsky Pass, where bora rages).

The strongest winds fall on the winter months - from November to March.

The most frequently repeated wind is the bora. The direction of the wind during the bora is perpendicular to Novaya Zemlya, i.e. on its western coast, in various places along the coast it is respectively: EtN, ESE and SSE, and on the east - WtN, WNW, NNW (The first observations of the bora were made in the Small Karmakuly camp , on the western coast of the southern island, where its direction is from the east. Hence its local name - "drain"). The wind blowing from the side of the mountains reaches the strength of a hurricane in the coastal strip. With the distance from the coast, it noticeably weakens, and at a distance of 10-15 miles, in the open sea, it calms down completely. These features of the Novaya Zemlya bora forced us to consider it a local phenomenon, but the studies of V. Yu. Vize showed that bora depends on general movements atmosphere in the area of ​​the Barents and Kara Seas, deformable mountain range New Earth. The wind crossing the Novaya Zemlya Rise changes its strength and direction: it turns perpendicular to Novaya Zemlya (passing along the shortest path) and intensifies from the leeward side. The origin of the bora on the west coast is predominantly cyclonic and is usually caused by the appearance of a baric depression to the west of Novaya Zemlya.

The course of meteorological elements during bora is currently sufficiently studied and in most cases allows us to suggest its appearance 6-8 hours before the onset of the storm (V. Yu. Vize). The air pressure gradually drops 10 hours before the bora. When the wind is already blowing from the coast, characteristic motionless clouds appear over the mountains, similar to pieces of cotton wool, while the overall cloudiness noticeably decreases. At the same time, there is a sharp drop in the relative humidity of the air. At the height of the storm, cloudiness, humidity and pressure increase again. The air temperature during bora usually decreases. Significantly less pronounced hair dryers are observed, which are accompanied by a slight increase in temperature.

The wind speed during bora is very high. The highest speed measured by the anemometer was 38.5 m/s. average speed pine forests in the Small Karmakuly is 14.4 m/sec. However, these data poorly reflect the true nature of the wind during bora, distinctive feature which is an extraordinary impetuousness (as well as inconstancy of direction), and individual impulses, separated by intervals of relative calm, reach enormous strength. During such gusts, the wind rolls heavy barrels, throws karbas into the sea, raises and carries dust, sand and small stones. In winter, during strong storms, the air is filled with snow, and therefore visibility is reduced to a few meters.

Bora lasts on average about a day, but there were cases when the most severe storm lasted up to 6 days or more. So, for example, according to the Karmakulskaya station, in 1935. bora, which began on February 20, continued until March 3 at a speed of up to 40 m/sec.

2. Temperature

Despite its northern location, Novaya Zemlya has warm winters compared to other parts of the Soviet Arctic.

The average annual temperature at the northernmost point of Novaya Zemlya - at Cape Zhelaniya - is only - 9 °.3, while at the mouth of the Lena, that is, at a point located 6 ° south of Cape Zhelaniya, the average annual temperature is - 17 °.

Average monthly air temperatures in Novaya Zemlya are presented in Table. 12, which shows that at Cape Zhelaniya the average monthly air temperature stays below 0°C for 10 months, and in Russkaya Gavan, Matochkin Shar and Malye Karmakuly - 8 months.

The coldest month on Novaya Zemlya is March, the average temperature of which is - 21°.4, and in the Small Karmakuly - 15°.5.

The warmest month is August, with an average temperature of 7°.0 for Small Karmakuly, and only 2°.1 for Cape Zhelaniya.

The minimum temperature on Nozoy Zemlya was observed during the wintering of G. Sedov in Foka Bay - 50 °.2. In January 1913 in the Small Karmakuly, during the entire observation period, the temperature did not fall below -39°.6. Maximum temperature, observed in the Lesser Karmakuly, was 23°.0.

The absolute minima for all months of the four stations turn out to be negative, and the absolute maxima (except for 3 months of Cape Zhelaniya) are positive. Therefore, a thaw is possible in all months, but on the other hand, we do not have a single month without frost.

3. Harsh weather

Due to the extremely strong winds, the severity of the weather on Novaya Zemlya is very high, despite the relatively high temperatures.

Let us point out that Verkhoyansk, which lies near the cold pole, has half as severe weather as Novaya Zemlya, and therefore winter in Verkhoyansk is easier for a person than on Novaya Zemlya, despite the fact that the average January temperature in Verkhoyansk is -50 °, 1 , and the absolute minimum reaches -69°.8.

This is due to the calmer state of the atmosphere in Verkhoyansk, where the probability of calm in January reaches 69%. while for the Small Karmacules it does not exceed 7% (V. Yu. Vize, 1928). In general, in terms of weather severity, Novaya Zemlya is in the first place in the Soviet Arctic.

4. Precipitation

The amount of precipitation falling on Novaya Zemlya is relatively small. The average annual precipitation is expressed in numbers:

Cape Desire - 115 mm

Russian Harbor - 156 mm

Matochkin Ball - 224 mm

Small Karmakuly - 238 mm

It follows that the amount of precipitation decreases markedly from south to north. June, August, September are the largest in terms of precipitation, and March, April, and May are the least. At the same time, it should be added that precipitation falling in winter is not fully taken into account, since snow from the rain gauge is partially blown out by strong winds.

5. Relative humidity

Below are the data regarding the relative humidity of the air and cloud cover.

Average annual humidity:

Cape Desire - 89%

Russian Harbor - 81%

Matochkin Shar - 82%

Small Karmakuly - 83%

6. Cloudy

Cloudiness on Novaya Zemlya is high: overcast skies with low clouds are observed most often. The maximum average cloudiness at Cape Zhelaniya occurs in June, the minimum - in February. In the Small Karmakuly, the maximum cloudiness falls in July. In general, the period from December to May has less cloudiness, which coincides with the period of low temperatures. With the onset of spring, when melting begins, cloudiness increases; at this time on Novaya Zemlya clear days are only occasionally, but usually the sky is overcast with low clouds; fogs are quite frequent.

Average annual cloudiness:

Cape Desire - 7.9%

Russian Harbor - 7.6%

Matochkin Shar - 7.8%

Small Karmakuly - 7.6%

II. Vegetation of Novaya Zemlya

1. General remarks

Short summers with low temperatures and high air humidity, long cold winters, and most importantly, strong winds that create extreme weather severity and an extremely uneven distribution of snow, determine, in general, the poor development of vegetation on Novaya Zemlya.

The mountainous nature of the country also contributes to this, since with an increase in altitude, the conditions of existence worsen. On Novaya Zemlya, stony placers, bare rubble areas, polygonal soils with sparse vegetation predominate, and only in the flat parts of the southern island, on moraine deposits washed out by the sea, do we observe swamps with a continuous moss-herbaceous cover and spotted tundras with a variegated composition of vegetation.

Due to the harsh conditions of existence, mosses and lichens prevail over flowering ones. Flowering plants are undersized, their height in most cases is in the range of 10 - 15 cm. Pillow-shaped (for example, Silene acaulis), turf, creeping forms are extremely developed, most adapted for protection from the wind and use of the warm surface layer of air. Unfavorable climatic conditions are an obstacle to the propagation of plants by seeds, therefore all representatives of the Novaya Zemlya flora are perennials. Many species have a highly developed ability for vegetative reproduction.

Currently, 208 species of vascular plants are known on Novaya Zemlya (including 2 species of ferns, 3 species of horsetails, 1 club moss and 202 flowering plants) and about 400 species of mosses, lichens, and fungi. With the advancement to the north, the flora of the Novaya Zemlya Islands becomes poorer, and north of 75 ° N. sh. there are already only 78 flowering species.

2. Age of flora

The flora of Novaya Zemlya is relatively young. It was formed in geologically recent times, since the settlement of plants became possible only at the time when Novaya Zemlya began to free itself from the ice sheet that covered it during the era of maximum glaciation. This is also confirmed by the absence of pre-glacial relics on Novaya Zemlya and the very weak development of endemism. Purely Novaya Zemlya forms are only three species of dandelion and one race of the polar poppy - plants generally prone to very rapid formation and isolation of new forms.

The flora of Novaya Zemlya, represented mainly by circumpolar or very common species in the Arctic, is generally similar in composition to the flora of Vaigach and, together with it, to the flora of the parts of polar Siberia closest to Vaigach, i.e., it is predominantly Siberian. A small group of species common with Eastern Siberia is absent from Vaigach and the nearest parts of the Arctic. At the same time, some plants are common to Novaya Zemlya with Svalbard, Franz Josef Land, and Greenland and are either absent or rarely found in the nearest parts of the European and Asian North. Some of these plants were found on Novaya Zemlya only on the northern island. Analyzing these features of the Novaya Zemlya flora, A. Tolmachev suggests that the settlement of Novaya Zemlya proceeded in different ways: the largest number species penetrated from the south, through Vaigach, in addition, there was an older way of settlement through Svalbard, and, finally, some plants migrated directly from Eastern Siberia at a time when land existed in the Kara Sea, now hidden by water.

3. Botanical-geographical zones

On Novaya Zemlya, as mentioned above, plants usually do not form a continuous cover. A well-developed vegetation cover, consisting of a number of associations, we find only in the flat parts of the southern island, where there are favorable conditions for the existence of vegetation; on the northern island and in the mountains, open groups play the main role in the landscape. Depending on the distribution of plant formations, we distinguish the following botanical and geographical zones on Novaya Zemlya: in the south, in the flat parts of the southern island, formations of the tundra zone are developed, in the form of its northern subzone of the arctic tundra, characterized by the absence of shrub cenoses, dominance of patchy tundra in upland conditions and the development of flat-hilly peat bogs.

Finally, on the northern island, at a latitude of about 75°, we observe a transition from the tundra zone to the zone of arctic deserts or the American authors' Barren ground.

Due to the mountainous nature of the country, on Novaya Zemlya, in addition to latitudinal, vertical zonality is manifested. In the subzone of the Arctic tundra, a belt of upland arctic tundra stands out, in the zone of arctic deserts - a belt of upland arctic desert. Upland arctic tundras are developed in the mountainous part of the southern island up to the latitude of Pankova Land, where, due to its more northerly position, as well as due to the increase in altitude, it shifts to the coast and is replaced, in the central part, by a belt of upland arctic deserts. Upland-arctic tundra is moving along the coast northern island to latitude 75°. The belt of upland arctic deserts begins at the highest points of the northern part of the southern island and extends to the north, occupying the southern part of the northern island up to a latitude of 75 ° and spreading to all mountain areas free of ice cover.

Subzones of the arctic tundra. In the arctic tundra subzone, on heavy loams containing only a small admixture of small pebbles and boulders, spotted grass-shrub-moss tundras are found. Vegetation occupies 65 - 75% of the area, the rest of the surface is occupied by bare loamy patches.

Moss-lichen spotted tundras are developed on rubble-loamy soils.

Spotted tundras are often found on polygonal soils. Polygonal soils are diverse in nature, depending on the ratio of stony and loamy parts, on the position in the relief, on the conditions of moisture, the depth of the snow cover, etc. Here we find the so-called cellular soils, stone nets, stone rings, stone strips. In the arctic tundra subzone, patchy tundras develop on polygonal soils, and both the stony part (stone bands) and the bulges of fine earth between them are usually devoid of vegetation (except for scale lichens on stones). The vegetation forms a ridge around bare rubble-loamy patches and is located in hairs and clumps along the stone strips. Here, mainly moss-lichen associations develop.

On elevated areas of relief that remain free of snow in winter, on the tops of hills, on steep bends of slopes, along the edges of high banks of rivers, plants do not form a continuous cover, but grow scattered in separate specimens or small fragments of phytocenoses on a gravel surface. Freed early from the snow, these places are already in mid-June pleasing to the eye with lovely lilac flowers of saxifrage, blue - forget-me-nots, yellow - cinquefoil, poppy, etc.

Under conditions of good drainage and favorable exposure to solar radiation, small areas of meadow tundra develop with a variegated cover of grasses and herbs. Meadows often develop in burrowing areas for lemmings and arctic foxes.

In depressions, hypnum-sedge and hypnum-cotton grass species are developed, occupying the western coast and the southern tip of the southern island. large areas. Grass Diipontia Fischerii sometimes dominates in herbage, grass Arctophyla fulva usually grows near the shores of lakes. In swamps, flat peat mounds are often observed with a mineral core of loam containing ice inclusions. Often there are relic peat bogs with peat, thickness more than a meter that are in the stage of degradation, erosion and re-bogging. They are witnesses of the climatic optimum that used to be here. In modern peatlands, the thickness of peat usually does not exceed 25-30 cm.

On the Kara side, lichen tundras are widespread. On the western side, lichen tundra occurs in small areas.

Moving inland from the coast, we enter into mountain country. The predominant landscape of the upland belt of the Arctic tundra is stony placers and stone fields with sparse vegetation. On mountain slopes, in hollows and saddles on loamy-stony polygonal soils, tundras develop with a sparse and open vegetation cover of poor species composition. Scale lichens and mosses predominate. In some of the most favorable conditions, in well-protected areas on polygonal soil, spotted moss-lichen tundra with moss, lichens, and oxen develops. On loamy soils, polygonal tundras develop, the surface of which is divided into polygons; willows and saxifrage grow in the depressions between the latter. Occasionally there are hypnum-cotton grass and hypnum-sedge marshes. Above 250 - 300 m above sea level, they are replaced by tussocks on moist loam. In the case of good water flow, grass settles on a bare loamy substrate.

The vegetation of the river valleys in the lower and middle reaches of the rivers is much richer. Here we observe well-developed swamps and spotted tundras on deluvial soils with a richer species composition, as well as tundra meadows. Along the river valleys and the most protected parts of the slopes, the types of vegetation characteristic of the flat parts of the coast penetrate quite far into the interior of the island and to the north.

The Arctic desert subzone is characterized by an almost complete absence of plant associations. Rare and sparse vegetation is scattered by single specimens, and fragments of phytocenoses are found only in small areas. Polygonal soils predominate; swamping processes are absent. In the distribution of vegetation, the main role is played by the nature of the snow cover, which is determined by the position in the relief in relation to the prevailing winds. On the tops of bottom moraines, along gentle slopes, wherever during the winter the snow cover is blown away by strong winds, single specimens of saxifrage and a few other species grow under the protection of the microrelief on the leeward side. On the slopes, in places of accumulation of snow cover, the vegetation has the character of small fragments of phytocenoses. Here, mainly, we meet lichens with a few flowering species, such as, for example, single specimens of saxifrage, saxifrage, grains, etc., and Cetraria hiascens, scale lichens and mosses from the genus Drepanocladus develop along the edges of polygons and on stony rings. In highly moist areas of the relief, there are small fragments of Deschampsia arctica tussock bush or grass-hypnum associations.

In the mountainous part of the northern island, devoid of ice cover, and at the highest altitudes of the northern part of the southern island, we enter the belt of the upland Arctic desert, characterized by the complete absence of plant associations. Here, associations of crustaceous lichens on stones and exposed rocky spaces with single specimens of flowering vegetation are developed, the number of species of which is insignificant: at an altitude of 400–500 m above sea level, at the latitude of Russian Harbor, only two or three species of flowering plants are found. The last two species are pioneers in settling new spaces, penetrating far inland along the nunataks.

III. Animal world

1. General remarks

The fauna of Novaya Zemlya is not distinguished by a wide variety of forms. The fauna of terrestrial mammals and birds of Novaya Zemlya is represented by the following biological groups: 1) terrestrial mammals and birds biologically associated with vegetation; 2) predators; 3) birds - inhabitants coastal rocks and islands biologically linked by the sea.

Within the limits of the plant subzones and belts that we have identified, the fauna of terrestrial mammals, as well as some representatives of the avifauna, are concentrated mainly in the subzone of the arctic tundra and in the coastal parts of the upland arctic tundra. The arctic desert subzone is less populated; the highland arctic desert belt is almost uninhabited. The subzone of the Arctic tundra, having the richest vegetation, is also the most favorable station for representatives of these groups of fauna. However, human influence is forcing some species to leave areas more favorable for existence and move north. Here we are referring to the reindeer, which is now found mainly in the arctic desert subzone.

2. Land mammals

Of the representatives of land mammals on Novaya Zemlya, only five species are found: reindeer, arctic fox, two species of lemmings and a polar bear.

The reindeer used to live on Novaya Zemlya in numerous herds, living mainly in the Arctic tundra subzone. Deer hunting occupied one of the prominent places, providing meat and skins to the local population, in addition, a significant number of skins were exported to the mainland. Irrational fishing was the main reason for the decline in the number of reindeer. At present, deer are kept in small numbers, mainly on the northern tip in the area of ​​Cape Zhelaniya and on the Kara side of both islands. In the arctic tundra subzone, reindeer are quite rare; Reindeer make their migrations within the islands depending on the state of pastures. In winter, on the southern island, deer roam on the Kara side, moving south of the river. Savina, where in the interfluve spaces they find more favorable conditions for obtaining food than in the northern part of the island. In spring, deer migrate to the north, as well as to the mountainous regions. On the northern island in winter, deer roam along the Kara side and in the area of ​​Cape Zhelaniya. In spring and summer, they keep to glacier-free spaces on both coasts.

Currently, in order to protect deer from final extermination, the Committee for Reserves under the All-Russian Central Executive Committee has banned deer hunting for a period of five years.

The arctic fox is distributed throughout Novaya Zemlya, and most of it lives in the Arctic tundra subzone, where there are great opportunities for obtaining food both in winter and summer, since in winter the arctic fox finds more lemmings here, and in summer many birds nest here and, moreover, here more favorable conditions for burrowing. Novaya Zemlya arctic fox belongs to the subspecies Alopex lagopus spitzbergensis Barr. The number of arctic foxes on Novaya Zemlya is subject to large fluctuations from year to year, depending on the state of the food supply. In some years, the Arctic fox is found on the islands in large numbers, and in other years, the Arctic fox is scarce. Years abundant in polar fox are repeated on Novaya Zemlya in two years.

The Arctic fox arranges holes near the seashore on the dry slopes of the hills, as well as along the coastal slopes. Puppies appear in May - June in the amount of 3 - 12 pieces.

During the spring period, arctic foxes molt. Molting ends in June, at which time the Arctic fox has a brown color. The summer cover changes to winter cover in September. In December, the polar fox has a winter coloration; from that time on Novaya Zemlya the fox fishing season begins.

Polar bear. The polar bear off the coast of Novaya Zemlya appears mainly in winter, when the ice is approaching. Previously, the bear was distributed along the coast of the entire island, now it is found at the northern tip and on the Kara side. In summer, bears are a rather rare sight on Novaya Zemlya. Sometimes in summer you can meet on the Kara coast and the northern tip of the bears left after the retreat of the ice, which stay near the bays, sometimes going far inland. Bears feed mainly on seals, lying in wait for them on the ice of the bays near the vents.

3 Marine Mammals

Of the marine mammals off the coast of Novaya Zemlya, there are walrus, seal, bearded seal, harp seal and white whale.

The walrus, which was previously distributed in large numbers in the Barents and Kara Seas, suffered greatly from predatory fishing in the pre-October period, therefore, at present, walruses are found in small numbers off the coast of Novaya Zemlya. In autumn, small herds of walruses appear on rookeries at the southern tip, as well as in the north of Novaya Zemlya.

The bearded seal and the seal are distributed off the coast of Novaya Zemlya in fairly significant numbers. These two species are the main objects of the coastal hunting of the local population. In spring, herds of harp seals appear off the coast of Novaya Zemlya, which also enter the bays during migration.

In autumn, large herds of white whales come to the shores of Novaya Zemlya.

4. Avifauna

With the onset of spring, the coast and tundra come alive with migratory birds. Guillemots and gulls appear in the bazaars, the tundra resounds with the cries of geese, swans and loons, couples of waders fly along the shores of lakes and bays.

The avifauna of Novaya Zemlya is represented by 40 species, of which only the snowy owl, the black gull and two species of gulls are permanent residents. The rest of the bird population arrives at Novaya Zemlya for the nesting period. In the spring in May, as soon as the first thawed areas appear, huge flocks of geese fly here, most of which nest in the subzone of the Arctic tundra (Goose Land, Mezhdusharsky Island, Kara side), where there are the most favorable conditions for their life (an abundance of lakes, rich vegetation ). Here we meet the white-fronted goose, gray goose. In addition, the black goose and barnacle goose nest in the mountains and on small islands.

At the end of July, during molting, in the area of ​​​​their mass habitat, on Gusinaya Zemlya, Rogacheva Zemlya, geese gather on the shores of lakes in thousands of flocks. The swan also nests in the arctic tundra subzone, arranging its nests on the tops of hills near lakes.

Particularly rich in quantitative terms is the bird population of coastal cliffs, the so-called bird colonies.

The main population of bird colonies is formed by guillemots, in relatively small numbers kittiwakes are found here. Bird colonies on Novaya Zemlya are spread all over west coast, there are about 45 of them. The largest bazaar is located in Bezymyannaya Bay, the population of which reaches up to 1,500,000 birds. Guillemots arrive at Novaya Zemlya at the end of May. Egg laying begins in mid-June. Kaira lays one egg on a small bare rock ledge. The chicks appear at the end of July and remain in the bazaar until the end of August, when the guillemots leave the bazaars with their offspring.

The eider nests on the small islands of the Novaya Zemlya archipelago. Eider flies to the shores of Novaya Zemlya in May and stays until the end of October. This bird, which is very important in terms of trade, is distributed along both coasts of Novaya Zemlya. The eider nests in colonies, sometimes together with the black goose. Quite significant eider colonies are concentrated on the islands in the southern part of Novaya Zemlya. In addition to the sea eider, on Novaya Zemlya there is a comb eider that nests on the shores of lakes in the tundra.

Of the other representatives of the avifauna of Novaya Zemlya, we should note the long-tailed ducks living in huge numbers in the bays and bays, then the mergansers.

5. Fish fauna

The ichthyofauna of fresh water bodies of Novaya Zemlya is poor. Here we find one representative of salmonids - char, which is found in lakes, as well as in large rivers, where it spends the winter, and in the spring goes to sea and returns to the lakes at the end of August. Charr is also common in closed water bodies, devoid of runoff, sometimes located high above sea level (for example, in the Rogachev mountains).

From marine fish to the west coast, cod comes in large numbers. Cod appears at the end of June and stays in the coastal strip until mid-October. In autumn there is a mass approach of Arctic cod.

In 1936 The ichthyological expedition of the Arctic Institute found herring, mackerel, saithe and haddock off the western coast of Novaya Zemlya. The appearance of these heat-loving fish, belonging to the boreal element of the ichthyofauna, in the Barents Sea is an indicator of the warming of the waters of the Atlantic current.

IV. Population and industry

1. History of colonization on Novaya Zemlya

Novaya Zemlya has long been visited by Russian industrialists. It is impossible to say for sure when the Russians first appeared on Novaya Zemlya, since historical documents about this have not been preserved, and on the basis of the available historical material relating to a later time, one can only speak presumably. The movement of Russians to the north to the shores of the Arctic Ocean began in the XII century.

Veliky Novgorod, in pursuit of expanding its colonies, gradually founded its settlements in Pomorye and the Pechora Territory, where in the 15th and 16th centuries. there were already significant centers of Novgorod colonization. Access to the sea, of course, was the impetus for the development of navigation, and the rich hunting trades forced industrialists to undertake long-distance voyages in the Arctic Sea. During these voyages, brave Russian industrialists discovered Novaya Zemlya.

In 1556 English navigator Stephen Borro, following from the mouth of the Pechora to the east, reached unknown island, where he met Russian industrialists, and one of them, the feeder Loshak, told him that the coast of the “large islands” visible from the island is called Novaya Zemlya and that there is a high mountain on Novaya Zemlya.

In 1594, when the Barents expedition visited Novaya Zemlya, they discovered in the Stroganova Bay Russian settlement The Stroganovs, who moved to Novaya Zemlya and soon died of scurvy. In addition, the expedition found traces of the presence of Russians at various points on the western coast of Novaya Zemlya. All this indicates that in the XVI century. Novaya Zemlya was quite well known to the Russians, who, obviously, penetrated there at the beginning of the 15th century, when navigation and fur hunting were significantly developed and the Novgorodians “passed further on Novaya Zemlya and even to the Kara Bay”.

Until the end of the last century, there was no permanent population on Novaya Zemlya. The industrialists who visited Novaya Zemlya worked mainly summer season, sometimes hibernated and in exceptional cases stayed for a longer time. Above, we pointed out that in the XVI century. there was a settlement of the Stroganovs on Novaya Zemlya, there are other cases when a person moved to Novaya Zemlya and tried to settle there for a permanent settlement, but all these attempts ended in the death of the settlers.

In 1763 from Kem, the Paikachev family moved to Novaya Zemlya in Chernaya Bay, forced to leave their homeland "because of the persecution they had from the priests." Soon after the resettlement, the Paikachevs died of scurvy.

Shortly before the start of government colonization in 1896. from the Bolshezemelskaya tundra, the Nenets Foma Vylka moved in a boat to Novaya Zemlya.

In 1877 Seven Nenets families (35 people) were resettled in the Small Karmakuly, and in the same year a rescue station was founded here. Later, two more camps were opened - in the Pomorskaya Bay (1894) and in the Belushya Bay (1897), where eleven Nenets families settled. Finally, in 1910 on the northern island in the Krestovaya Bay, the fourth camp was founded, where 11 Russians from the Shenkur district were resettled. Thus, in 1910 The population of Novaya Zemlya in four camps was 108 people. To supply the colonists, since 1880. steamship flights were established to Novaya Zemlya. The undertaking of the tsarist government in the field of colonization of Novaya Zemlya was extremely frivolous. Hunting equipment and vehicles of industrialists were primitive and did not provide sufficient opportunities for using the island's fishing wealth. The fox fishing, for example, was carried out mostly with the help of wooden traps - "sack", traps were rarely used. They also practiced a predatory method of extracting arctic fox by poisoning it with strychnine, which was supplied to industrialists by the Norwegians. Connected almost all seasons of the year with the sea, the industrialists had, in the form of vehicles, only small shooting boats. During the period of fishing, the chum or tiny huts built by the industrialists themselves from driftwood served as a dwelling.

Fishing was carried out unevenly, its course was uneven throughout the seasons. Both the primitive methods of extraction and the absence or poor quality of processing reduced the quantity and value of the extracted products. The lack of proper transport led to the fact that industrialists often left their products on the Kara side, unable to deliver them to settlements. This situation led to the plunder of natural productive resources, which was facilitated by the lack of protection of natural resources: birds were rapaciously exterminated in the bazaars for food for dogs, eider down was collected from a dead bird, etc. Private entrepreneurs, both Norwegian and Russian, who visited Novaya Zemlya , soldered the local population, exchanging fishery products for a pittance. As a result of such colonial activity, the industries fell, and the Novaya Zemlya population was indebted to merchants and kulak industrialists.

2. Population of Novaya Zemlya and development of fisheriesafter the October Revolution

After the October Revolution, when intervention was eliminated in the Northern Territory, an era of economic and cultural prosperity began on Novaya Zemlya. Along with improving the living conditions of local industrialists, the Soviet government took steps to settle the Novaya Zemlya Islands. If before 1925 there were 4 camps on Novaya Zemlya, of which the Krestovaya Bay was the northernmost, now there are 10 fishing camps, 9 of them are located on the western coast from the southern tip of Novaya Zemlya to Cape Zhelaniya and one on the Karskaya side (Pakhtusov Islands).

The table below gives an idea of ​​housing and industrial construction in Novaya Zemlya.

Housing and industrial construction

1. Russkaya Gavan - the camp was founded in 1932. – 1 house, 5 rooms, 95 sq.m

2. Arkhangelsk Bay - camp was founded in 1932. – 1 house, 6 rooms, 95 sq.m

3. Smidovich - the camp was founded in 1930. – 1 house, 7 rooms, 95 sq.m

4. Krestovaya - the camp was founded in 1910. – 2 houses, 9 rooms, 188 sq.m

5. Camp camp was founded in 1933. – 3 houses, 20 rooms, 344.3 sq.m

6. Karmakuly - camp founded in 1877 – 4 houses, 17 rooms, 331.6 sq.m

7. Selushya - camp was founded in 1897. – 4 houses, 14 rooms, 234.81 sq.m

8. Krasino - camp was founded in 1925. – 1 house, 3 rooms, 39 sq.m

9. Rusanovo camp was founded in 1927. – 3 houses, 11 rooms, 175 sq.m

10. Pakhtusovo camp was founded in 1933. – 1 house, 3 rooms, 32 sq.m

In the fishing areas, in addition, 56 fishing houses and huts were built for living during the fishing season, 13 of them - on the Kara side.

In 1937 for the construction of the islands of the Arctic Ocean, the Main Directorate of the Northern Sea Route allocated 434,000 rubles. A large office house will be built in the camp of Lagernoe, 9 industrial houses (2 of them on the Karskaya side); in Lagerny they are equipping a mechanical workshop, on about. Kolguev will build a house of culture. In addition, 54 000 r. released for the overhaul of existing industrial buildings.

Before the revolution, there was one meteorological station in Novaya Zemlya in the Small Karmakuly, where observations were made by a psalmist or a priest of the local church.

There are currently eight meteorological stations(Cape Zhelaniya, Russian Harbor, 3 stations in Matochkin Shar, in Small Karmakuly, Iron Gates and the Bay of Prosperity), equipped with radiotelegraph. Over the past 3 years, Glavsevmorput has organized four radio meteorological stations.

The population on Novaya Zemlya has grown significantly. If in 1910 there were only 108 people on Novaya Zemlya, and in 1927 - 187 people, then in 1935. the population increased to 398 people. The distribution of the population by camp and by nationality is shown in the table below.

Novaya Zemlya is governed by an island council elected at the congress of delegates from all the camps that gather in Belushya Bay on May 1 of each year. The native inhabitant of Novaya Zemlya, the Nenets Ilya Konstantinovich Vylka, was unanimously elected chairman of the island council every year, holding this honorary post for eleven years. The administrative center of Novaya Zemlya is Belushya Bay. In connection with the advancement of the fishery far to the north of Novaya Zemlya, it became necessary to transfer the administrative center to Matochkin Shar (in the camp of Lagernoe).

National composition of camps

Russian Harbor: Russians - 18

Arkhangelsk Bay: Russians - 20

Smidovich: Russians - 17

Cross: Russians - 33

Matochkin Shar: Russians - 80

Pakhtusovo: Russians - 11, Nenets - 27

Small Karmakuly: Russians - 38

Belushya: Russians - 48, Nenets - 49

Krasino: Russians - 36, Nenets - 6

Rusanovo - 26, Nenets - 9

There is a boarding school in Belushya Bay. Every autumn, children of industrialists come to study in Belushya Bay from all camps. The policy of the Soviet government, aimed at steadily improving the culture of the small peoples of the North, was also reflected in Novaya Zemlya. Semi-savage and downtrodden, almost without exception illiterate in tsarist time During the existence of Soviet power, the inhabitants of our northern outskirts have come a long way towards culture. Before the revolution, none of the 26 peoples of the North had their own written language, Russian literacy was taught in churches in Russian, such schools numbered in a few and covered an insignificant percentage of the population. Now almost all the peoples of the North have their own written language, developed by the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, they have not only primers and textbooks in their native language, but also their own national literature, as well as translations of Russian classics (mainly Pushkin). In 1925/26 there were 35 schools in the North, in 1929/30 there were 132 schools with an enrollment of 20% of school-age children, in 1933/34 - 338 schools with an enrollment of 60.5% of school-age children, in 1936 . - 500 schools, in 1937. 50 more schools will be built; literacy rose from 6.7% in 1926 to up to 24.9% in 1933/34. After graduating from a local school, young people go to study at technical schools or at a specially organized Institute of the Peoples of the North in Leningrad, where only representatives of small peoples of the North study. On about. Kolguev Nenets children study at a seven-year school. On Novaya Zemlya, illiteracy of local residents has been completely eliminated, all the children of industrialists study at the Novaya Zemlya school (in 1935 there were 43 students).

Culture touched not only education, but also everyday life. Chum and tiny makeshift fishing huts were replaced by spacious clean houses.

In each camp there is a paramedic's station, in the camp of Lagernoe there is a hospital with 30 beds and an office for physical methods of treatment. The doctor and paramedic have great authority among the population.

All industrialists are united in collective farms, each of which is assigned a fishing area. Artels are equipped with appropriate fishing tools, motor boats, karbas. The fishing fleet in 1935 consisted of 46 floating units with motors of various power and 70 units of karbas and kungas.

In 1937 Glavsevmorput allocates 204,000 rubles for the construction of the industrial fleet. Will be built:

25 HP motor bots - 3 pcs.

motor boats of 12 HP - 2 pcs.

motor boats of 6 HP - 4 pcs.

unloading karbasov 35 tons - 7 pcs.

karbas of different sizes - 30 pcs.

An illustration of the growth of commercial and cultural construction of the island economy are the amounts of capital investments:

1932 - 100 000 p.

1933 - 200 000 rubles

1934 - 300 000 rubles

1935 - 540 000 p.

1936 - 670,000 rubles

(Since 1935, the island economy has been under the jurisdiction of the Glavsevmorput).

3. Current state crafts

Fishing, which is the basis of the economy of Novaya Zemlya, is carried out all year round, only the composition of fishing objects changes. Fishing objects are arctic fox, sea animal, fish, eiderdown, as well as polar bear, guillemot eggs and moulting birds.

The arctic fox plays the main role in the fishing economy of Novaya Zemlya. Arctic fox is hunted in all fishing points from December to March 15. The fishing tool is exclusively a trap, which replaced the wooden traps used in the old days (paws or kulems). Seal carcasses, animal meat and lard, fish, carcasses of guillemots and their eggs are used as bait. The production of arctic fox has greatly increased in comparison with the pre-revolutionary period, both as a result of the development of new fishing areas, and due to the rationalization of fishing and the Stakhanov methods of industrialists.

Sea animals (nerpa, hare, beluga whale, walrus) are hunted with rifles, or net fishing gear is used. In winter, they beat the beast from the fast ice, in the spring - the seal and the bearded seal on the ice near the holes. The walrus is beaten in autumn on haulouts. The fat of the sea animal is transported to Arkhangelsk, belts are cut from the skins of the hare, the carcasses are used for fox baits or for dog food. The production of sea animals has increased significantly over last years, so: belt mining from 1927 to 1932 . increased from 274 to 7055, fat - from 4781 to 48706, skins - from 2257 to 3040 (in monetary terms).

The table gives an idea of ​​the growth in the production of sea animals in recent years:

Extraction of shelega lard on Novaya Zemlya (in centners)

1932-33 – 791.3

1933-34 – 1610.7

1934-35 – 2154.2

Fishing continues all summer and autumn until October. In the rivers and bays they catch char, in the coastal strip of the sea - cod. Until recent years, char fishing was carried out exclusively on the western coast (mainly in Nekhvatova, Gusina, Krestovaya and Poohovaya), and in recent years also on the Kara side (pp. Abrosimova, Savina). Char is caught during its annual move from the rivers to the sea and back; thus, there are 2 periods of fishing: spring, when they hunt with draft and fixed nets, and autumn, when set nets and fences are used, with the main role played by autumn fishing (August - September). Local residents also practice ice fishing for char in the lakes in winter. The charr, whose production is expressed in several tens of tons, serves mainly for local consumption, and the fishery has no prospects for significant expansion. However, it started in 1934. Coastal fishing for cod, approaching the shores of Novaya Zemlya in summer, promises great prospects. Cod production is expressed by the numbers presented in the table:

Mining by Novaya Zemlya industrialists (in tons)

1934 – 7

1935 – 120

1936 – 255

Plan for 1937 - 310

Cod fishing was carried out along the western coast of the southern island of Novaya Zemlya, and in 1936 . all 255 t were caught by hooking. With the use of more advanced fishing gear (longlines, set nets, twin fishing), as well as with the expansion of the fishing area to Mount Krestovaya, cod production per season can be increased to 10,000 tons (according to G. N. Toporkov).

Eider down is harvested by industrialists in the spring in June in all fishing areas on small islands. Most of all, down is mined in the Rusanovo camp on about. Downy, where there are more than 1000 nests. Data characterizing the growth of eiderdown production in Novaya Zemlya are given in the table:

Extraction of eider down (in rubles)

1927 – 2530

1928 – 803

1929 – 5797

1930 – 3677

1931 – 4740

1932 - 8771

The collection of murre eggs was carried out until 1932. in small sizes, only for local consumption. Since 1932 a specially equipped egg expedition annually collects eggs for their export to Arkhangelsk, and at present the egg industry plays a prominent role in the island's marketable products. So (in value terms): in 1932. egg fishing accounted for 26% of all production (62,409 rubles), in 1934. - 34.7%. In 1936 350,000 eggs were collected, in 1935 - 300,000 eggs. Guillemot eggs are much larger than chicken eggs, not inferior to the latter in taste and nutritional value.

For local consumption, geese are taken in large numbers, mainly during the molting season. The stocks of this bird in some areas (for example, on Gusinaia Zemlya, on Mezhdusharsky Island) are large.

The polar bear is also an object of fishing, although its number on Novaya Zemlya has greatly decreased and it has been completely ousted from some of the most populated fishing areas. Currently, the bear is hunted on the Kara side and on the northern island.

In the past, Novaya Zemlya was inhabited by wild deer in such numbers that per industrialist often reached more than 100 heads per year, and deer hunting not only provided the local population with meat and skins, but also served as an export item.

The table shows the number of reindeer skins exported from Novaya Zemlya from 1891 to 1923.

1891-1895, 1898-1906 - 2580 skins

1907 - 384 skins

1908 - 115 skins

1909 - 90 skins

1910 - 210 skins

1911 - 480 skins

1917 - 200 skins

1919 - 475 skins

1920 - 295 skins

1921 - 3242 skins

1922 - 271 skins

1923 - 377 skins

Total 8620 skins

The following data also give an idea of ​​the change in the number of wild deer on Novaya Zemlya: in the winter of 1881/82, on the Kara side, 7 industrialists hunted 700 deer, in 1918 an industrialist on Gusinaya Zemlya hunted 170 deer, and in 1932/33 deer hunting throughout the island was expressed in 90 heads, and 70 deer were killed on the northern island and only 20 - on the southern one. A sharp decline in the number of wild deer occurred in 1920/21, when, according to industrialists, there was ice on Novaya Zemlya; irrational fishing also played an important role. In order to preserve and increase the reserves of wild deer, at the request of the Arctic Institute, by a special resolution of the Northern Regional Executive Committee of the Council of the R. K. and K. D., any hunting for wild deer has been prohibited since 1934. to 1939

4. The cost of marketable products

In 1930/31, the total value of the marketable products of the fishery for all the islands (Novaya Zemlya, Kolguev, Vaigach) was 125,874 rubles. In 1933 goods worth 340,549 rubles were exported from Novaya Zemlya alone, and in 1936 - for 1,200,000 rubles.

To supply the local population with food and fishing tools, as well as to export fishing products from Novaya Zemlya, three regular steamship voyages have been established. During the navigation season, they serve all fishing camps, delivering everything necessary to Novaya Zemlya, from food, cultural equipment to building materials and buildings. The rapid rate of growth in output has a positive effect on the earnings and economic well-being of industrialists. Thus, in 1935/36, the earnings of individual Stakhanovist industrialists reached several tens of thousands of rubles. For example, Kosenkov, an industrialist in Matochkin Shar, earned 33,048 rubles over the course of 3 1/2 months; Pypepko, a Nenets industrialist, earned 28,382 rubles.

Stakhanovite Pyrerko Akim Grigorievich (Nenets) since October 1, 1935 to October 1, 1936 delivered the following products:

Arctic fox - 174 pcs.

Seal skins - 66 pcs.

Hare belt - 443 m

Shelegi fat - 700 kg

Eider down - 16 kg

Guillemot eggs - 980 pcs.

In total for the amount - 30737 rubles.

The Pyrerko family consists of a wife and 6 people. children. He handed over 30% of his earnings to the artel, 7537 rubles. 12 k. spent on his own needs, therefore, his annual balance is equal to + 13978 rubles. 79 k.

Among the items that the Stakhanovite industrialists buy with the money they earn, in addition to the products necessary to satisfy the urgent needs of the family, there are such things as watches, binoculars, cologne, silk stockings, ladies' shoes, etc., etc.

5. Reindeer herding

In order to supply meat to the local population on Novaya Zemlya in 1928. An experimental reindeer farm was organized. From o. Kolguev, a small herd of deer was delivered to Novaya Zemlya, which was then replenished with new herds of Kolguev deer over the course of three years. Despite the harsh climatic conditions, the experience of breeding domestic reindeer on Novaya Zemlya gave excellent results. In 1934 in the experimental herd there were 550 deer, and in 1935. the number of the herd reached up to 809 heads. At present, there are about 1,000 reindeer heads in the experimental reindeer herding farm. The annual increase in livestock is on average 25%; in this respect, the Novaya Zemlya Olensovkhoz does not differ from the deer farm in Alaska during the heyday of reindeer breeding (before the crisis), where the herd doubles in 3-4 years. The further development of Novaya Zemlya reindeer breeding will make it possible to supply the local population with its products; the latter will also be subject to commodity exportation. The products of the Novaya Zemlya deer sovkhoz are of especially high quality, because, thanks to the excellent conditions for summer grazing, the slaughter weight of reindeer is much higher than average (the average weight of the carcass of an olelensovka in the fall of 1934 is 65 kg), and due to the complete absence of gadflies, the skins are devoid of fistulas and can be used as raw hides (for the production, mainly, haberdashery leather or for dressing first-class suede).

In the arctic tundra subzone, especially on the Kara side south of the river. Savina, there are large areas of reindeer pastures that can serve as a base for increasing the deer population up to 4000 heads.



In 1937 The All-Union Arctic Institute is organizing a scientific-research trade-biological station on Novaya Zemlya, which will be engaged in the study of hunting, fishing and animal slaughter, as well as reindeer breeding.

Thus, Novaya Zemlya has dramatically changed its appearance in recent years. Radio meteorological stations, fishing camps with spacious bright houses were built, schools, a hospital, first-aid posts and other buildings were built, the output of marketable products of crafts is steadily growing, and the cultural and economic well-being of the local population has significantly increased.

Outline of the geomorphology of Novaya Zemlya

R. L. Samoilovich

ChapterI

Coastline and horizontal dissection

The western coast of Novaya Zemlya is indented much more than the eastern one, which is a characteristic feature of many other Arctic islands.

The southern part of Novaya Zemlya is also distinguished by the presence of fiords deeply protruding into the coast. Along with small bays, like the Kalesnik Bay, which extends only 2 miles NW, we have here a number of typical fiords that cut the coast parallel to the strike of the rocks. These are the Loginov Bay, stretching in a northwest direction for 15 miles, the Reinecke Bay, cutting into the coast for 10-15 miles, the vast Sakhanikha Bay, filled with big amount islands, and, finally, Black Bay, which is big bay over 10 miles long. Having a width of about 1200 m at the entrance, this bay widens at a distance of 4.5 miles from the entrance to 5.5 miles. On the eastern side there is a bay bordered by hills. In the northwestern side of Chernaya Bay there are two bays, elongated to the northwest, separated by Cape Tizenhausen, of which the western bay, about 2 miles long, is called Pestsovaya. In addition, in the western part of the Black Bay there are heavily indented bays - Domashnaya and Voronina. At the exit to the lip are located about. Rosé and Fr. Black.

The most extensive islands off the western coast of Novaya Zemlya should include about. Mezhdusharsky (an area of ​​747.4 sq. km), which stretched from north to south, for about 28 miles with a width of two to one mile. It is separated from Novaya Zemlya by a rather wide but shallow Kostin Shar strait, impassable for large ships. It contains numerous islands. From the side of the strait, large bays protrude deep into Novaya Zemlya, from which it is necessary to mention the lips of Propaschey, Neznaynaya, Pomorka on the eastern shore of the strait.

On the northern coast of the strait, there is Belushya Bay, which protrudes into the land in the N - NW direction for 6.5 miles, and Rogachev Bay.

The western coast of Novaya Zemlya proper starts from Cape South Gusiny Nos (the southwestern cape of Gusinaya Zemlya) and is a typical coastal plain 43 miles long.

One of the vast bays on the western coast is Pukhovy, which extends in a latitudinal direction, cuts into the coast for 10 miles. From the sea side, the entrance to the bay is closed. Pukhov.

To the north of it is Bezymyannaya Bay, completely open from the sea, into which the r. Nameless, which is the southern boundary of the modern Novaya Zemlya glaciation.

A vast coastal plain extends even further north, bearing the name Pankova Land, adjoining directly to Samoylovich Bay, and further north to the Matochkin Shar Strait.

To the north of the latter are the Serebryanka and Mityushikha inlets, the width of the latter varies from 4.5 to 2.5 miles.

Among other bays on the western coast of Novaya Zemlya, one should point out Melkiy Bay and the vast Krestovaya Bay, which cuts into Novaya Zemlya 13.5 miles to SO. It is followed by the southern and northern Sulmeneva lips, then the Mashygin lip, which extends 18 miles deep into the mainland.

Behind the peninsula of the Admiralty west coast Novaya Zemlya acquires a northeasterly direction. Here are located: Glazov Bay, Krivoshein Bay, Gorbovy Islands, consisting of about. Berha, oh Lichutin and the islands of the Big and Small Hare.

This archipelago covers the Arkhangelsk Bay from the sea.

To the north of the Gorbovye Islands are the Krestovye Islands, to the east of which the Pankratiev Peninsula protrudes into the sea, with Pankratiev Island adjacent to it from the north. To the northeast of the latter lies the group of Barents Islands.

Inconspicuous on the northwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya is Cape Nassau, gently descending to the sea. From it to the very Russian Harbor stretches a coast inaccessible for landing.

Russkaya Gavan Bay is one of the most convenient anchorages on the northwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya. The entrance to Russkaya Gavan, 4 miles wide, lies between two capes, the high Cape Makarov in the west and the rather low Cape Consolation in the east.

The most noticeable point at the entrance to the Russian Harbor is Mount Ermolaeva, 275 m high and about. Rich with a sign, 41 m above sea level.

The Schmidt Peninsula is separated from Russkaya Gavan by Chaev Bay, in the depths of which Cape Conglomerat is located.

To the north of Russkaya Gavan there are no convenient campsites, although there are several fairly significant bays here - Legzdina, Maka and Inostrantseva.

Finally, in the extreme northwest, the beautiful bay juts out into the shore, the width of which reaches three miles.

As for the eastern coast of Novaya Zemlya, starting from Cape Menshikov and up to the area of ​​Matochkina Shara, we have here several rather significant bays. Such are the wide, but shallow Abrosimov Bay, the bay at the mouth of the river. Galla, r. Savina, Litke Bay, etc. However, these bays, surveyed by R. Samoylovich, do not have convenient anchorages.

In this regard, the Stepovoy Bay and further the Schubert, Brandt and Klokov Bays, which, like the bays of the western coast, are of fiord character, are of greater interest.

On the northern island, directly behind Cape Vykhodny, which lies at the exit from the Matochkin Shar Strait, there is Kankrina Bay, and to the north - Chekina Bay, about 6 miles long in a north-westerly direction, branching into two bays. Further - the Neznaniy or Rozmyslova Bay, from which you can go through the Rusanov Valley to the Krestovy Bay. Behind it comes Bear Bay, which extends 18 miles into the coast with a width of 2 to 3.5 miles. To the north of it there are a number of fairly significant bays, not yet mapped, to which the Pakhtusovy Islands archipelago adjoins from the sea.

From Cape Vikulov to Cape far shore extends in general to NO and has three bays, discovered by the expedition of R. Samoilovich in 1925 - the bays of Sedov, Neupokoev and Rusanov.

Further to the northeast, an inaccessible coast stretches, partly representing a cliff of the central ice sheet, and 17 miles from Cape Edward is the vast Bay of Prosperity, surrounded by mountains with heights from 240 to 300 m. This bay cuts in a direction from south to north 10 miles deep into the northern island of Novaya Zemlya.

To the north of Cape Dangerous, at the entrance to the Bay of Prosperity, the elevations gradually decrease and have a height of 145 - 190 m. This coast is distinguished by the absence of any bays, except for Whitney Bay, which protrudes into the coast for only 0.3 miles.

To the east of it is Cape Sporiy Navolok, and to the north of it is Ice Harbor, where in 1596. wintered Willem Barents.

From here to Cape Zhelaniya, the coast of Novaya Zemlya is slightly indented, and there are no convenient anchorages. The northern coast of Novaya Zemlya from Cape Zhelaniya to Cape Carlsen is distinguished by the same calm coastline, which is a terraced surface gradually rising towards the central part of the island. Off the northern coast lies a small group of the Orange Islands.

ChapterII

Relief, orography and hydrographic network

Novaya Zemlya can be divided into three parts according to its orographic features:

1) The region of the southern part of the island, approximately up to the line Bezymyannaya Mountain - Savina Bay, which is a hilly plain, intensively rising from south to north to a height of 300 - 500 m.

2) The region located to the north of Bezymyannaya Bay, occupying the entire space of Novaya Zemlya from 73 to 76 ° N. sh.

The southern plain gradually turns into a mountain plateau with heights of 500 - 800 m, extending to Matochkin Shara.

The area of ​​Matochkina Shara and the central part of Novaya Zemlya to the north of it are a plateau strongly indented by glacial and erosional processes with individual heights of sharp, but mostly smoothed nunataks, reaching 1100 m above sea level.

3) Finally, the extreme northern part of Novaya Zemlya is a hilly plain, heavily indented by river valleys, gradually decreasing to the north, from high ridges Lomonosov and TsAGI in the western part.

1. Southern region. As we stated above, South coast Novaya Zemlya has a skerry nature with many large and small islands. Their heights, as well as the coasts, in the extreme south of the island range from 9 - 12 m (Britvin Island near B. Oleniy Island) to 40 m above sea level (M. Oleniy Island on the eastern outskirts of Petukhovsky Shara).

The region of the southern island of Novaya Zemlya, adjacent to Petukhovsky Shar, is an abraded surface with several ancient marine erosion terraces.

Above the lowlands with numerous lakes of glacial origin, isolated rocky hills rise up to 30 m in height. Between the individual rocky capes of the coast, which are typical cliffs 10 - 30 m high, there are wide marshy valleys plowed by glaciers, bearing the names "chevruev".

Alluvial shafts and spits are widespread along the coast, which M. Ermolaev, referring to the class of hydrogen formations associated with the configuration of the coast, divides into two main types: a) coastal shafts that do not violate the main direction of the coastline (having a direction parallel to the coastline , they separate relict lakes), and b) spits that violate the original direction of the coast. Like ramparts, spits can separate relict lakes or represent an isthmus connecting the islands with the native coast. Applying the theory of gross alluvial formations, Ermolaev calculated the time of formation of some shafts and spits on Novaya Zemlya. So, for example, the consideration of alluvial formations near the Barents Islands led this author to the conclusion that in the indicated area the horizontal growth of the earth is 80 times greater than the vertical one, due to which it can be expected that in about 100 years the western island will be connected to Novaya Zemlya and that no more 400 years ago, the Barents Islands were a group of three islands, two of which merged together, forming one island.

But even at present, the growth of braids occurs in short periods of time. As Alferov points out, a few years ago, small fishing vessels and boats could enter the creek, crashing into the western coast of Valkova Bay; at present, it can only be reached by boat.

The presence of spits and ridges is an undoubted proof of epeirogenic processes in the area of ​​Novaya Zemlya, expressed in the negative movement of its coasts.

The southwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya is notable for the consistent orientation of both individual sections of the coast, and especially the strike of bays, bays, the location of islands and peninsulas, which coincide with the general strike of rocks from southeast to northwest. Positive landforms - ridges and ridges - also correspond to the dominant strike of rocks to the northwest (B. Alferov, V. Chernyshev and R. Getsova, V. Lazurkin, R. Samoilovich, V. Kuznetsov).

The orography of the central part of the southern island of Novaya Zemlya can be drawn from the data obtained as a result of crossings of its Acad. F. Chernyshev, V. Lazurkin and E. Freiberg, V. Kuznetsov.

Between the lip of the Lost and pp. The Savina and Butakova region of the southern island is a hilly peneplainized plain, which can be divided into three sections according to orographic features: 1) western part, 2) central part and 3) the eastern part (V. Lazurkin).

The western part is a gentle rise with a wavy, slightly hilly surface. As the central watershed is approached, the relief becomes more dissected; there are prominent smoothed hills covered with deluvial scree and isolated sharp rocks. Round isolated hills ("loaves" in the local language), resembling sheep's foreheads, are typically glacial. The highest point of the region is Mount Propashchaya, located 8 km southeast of Yunko Bay. Composed of igneous rocks, it has an absolute height of 120 m. Individual smoothed peaks have an absolute height of up to 80 m.

According to V. Kuznetsov, western slopes the central Novaya Zemlya watershed is a gradual gentle rise, complicated by undulation, giving rows of ridges (rise and fall). The depressions take place in the valleys of small rivers and streams and in marshy, grassy areas. The elevations represent in some places a smooth, as if rolled surface, on which scallops of denser rocks are extended. In some places there are prominent circumferential hills and individual sharp rocks. The latter are usually composed of limestones. When approaching the central watershed, the relief becomes more dissected, especially near the river. Nakhvatova. Sharp, bare ridges and small ridges with steep and sometimes steep slopes create a picture of a mountain landscape. The destruction of rocks is very intensive, the entire surface is covered with huge blocks, chaotically piled on top of each other. Blocks often reach several meters in diameter, have a plate-like shape with an uneven surface. Such a stone sea, starting at the approach from the west to the central Novaya Zemlya ridge, occupies a wide strip of the ridge and descends about 5 - 6 km to the eastern slope.

The central part is a flat, slightly undulating plain, 8-10 km wide (V. Kuznetsov), which gradually rises from south to north. According to the observations of V. Lazurkin and E. Freiberg, it is represented by several ridges, each about 600 m wide, composed of sandstone, elongated in accordance with the general strike of rocks in a northwestern direction. The absolute mark reaches 110 m. Primary outcrops of rocks have been preserved only in places, a significant part of the surface is covered, thanks to arctic weathering, with huge blocks, chaotically piled on top of each other, and deluvial scree.

The highest parts of the relief are confined to outcrops of solid massive limestones or to outcrops of igneous rocks, near which the area takes on the appearance of a mountain landscape. Such are the Rogachev Mountains, stretching in narrow peaked ridges along the coast of Kostin Shar. The slopes of the ridges are set quite steeply, in some places sheer, their foothills are usually covered with a plume of sharp-angled debris.

The highest points of the region are the tops of the diabase ridges: Mount Nekhvatova (133 m), Pornei massif (209 m), Mount Purig (176 m) (B. Alferov).

According to Acad. F. Chernyshev, to the south of Bezymyannaya Mountain lies an area of ​​flat elevation, the orography of which is simple: both inland from the shores of the sea and from river valleys, the terrain rises in terraces, on which short ridges protrude, elongated along the strike of the rocks. In this area, the absolute heights are already much higher than in the more southern parts of the island, and reach a height of 600 m.

The region of Novaya Zemlya, adjacent to the eastern coast, is a flat plateau descending in four terraces to the Kara Sea and turning into swampy tundra. There are no separate hills on it. To the east of the central ridge, sinkholes of karst genesis are strongly developed, almost completely covering vast areas, apparently formed due to the peculiarities of the thermal regime of the soil.

The entire space of the southern island of Novaya Zemlya up to the river. Nameless is devoid of glaciers, only extensive firn fields were encountered by Acad. F. Chernyshev during his crossing of Novaya Zemlya from the Small Karmakuly and the river. Abrosimova, and the firn ice, descending in steep walls to rivers and streams, is apparently completely immobile.

The southern part of Novaya Zemlya is occupied by the coastal plain ( Strandflat), which extends over a vast space between the western and eastern coasts from the southern cape to about 71º 20 "N. Starting from here, the coastal plain is divided by the central upland of the island, absolute height which is 200 meters or more, into two wide strips running along the western and eastern coasts towards the north. On the western coast, the plain includes about. Mezhdusharsky and the Gusinaya Zemlya peninsula, to the north of it, the Strandflat narrows to 5–10 km wide, then to expand to 20–30 km near Pankovo ​​Zemlya. The coastal plain is located in a wider strip along the eastern coast of Novaya Zemlya, stretching as a spherical triangle with a base that has a length of 50 - 60 km at 79 ° 20 "N and with its top located at Matochkin Shara. Although the coastal plains are also observed north of Matochkin Shara, but they do not reach such a strong development here as to the south of it.Only at 76° along the northeastern coast, the coastal plain widens again, has a width of 15 - 20 km, is cut in places by glaciers and, narrowing, then turns along the coast to Cape Zhelaniya and further west from it. In the coastal plain of the southern part of Novaya Zemlya, two large steps can be distinguished. The first step is up to 50 m in height. The outlines of the relief are rounded, the surfaces of the hills are smoothed. The second step is at a height of 100 m, moreover, according to M. Klenova , the surface of the plain was apparently subjected to less intense erosion.The hydrographic network of the southern island, due to milder climatic conditions than in the northern part of the island, it is much more developed. Originating on the central watershed, which, apparently, is located closer to the western coast, the consequent rivers flow towards the western and eastern coasts, having their general direction - latitudinal. However, some of them, which are among the largest in their length, such as the Nekhvatova or the river. Savina, are tortuous in nature. The last of them in its upper reaches flows in a latitudinal direction, changes it to the southeast, and then, turning to the east, pours its waters into the Kara Sea. Among the largest rivers in Novaya Zemlya are: r. Savina and R. Nameless on the western bank and river. Nakhvatov on the east, from the source to the lake. Fresh about 35 km (according to Kuznetsov). The river along its length has a significant number of tributaries flowing into it from the right and left banks, cutting through deep ravines with hanging valleys.

The Savina River in its upper reaches has a tributary of the river. Malaya Savina, after the confluence with which it flows as a high-water river with significant depths (Kuznetsov). The mouth of the river Savina lies in a large basin with gentle slopes. 18 km from Malaya Savina river. Bolshaya Savina merges with the r. Deep (Iore-yaga), high-water and rapids, flowing in a narrow gorge.

The total length of the river is 64.5 km.

Of the rivers on the western coast of Novaya Zemlya, the largest is the river. Nameless. When it flows into the bay of the same name, it forms a vast delta, turning into a shallow and occupying the entire southeastern part of the Nameless Bay for several kilometers up to the island. The latter in the near future should turn into only a small hill above the plain formed by river sediments. The largest channels of the delta have a free cross section of 100 - 150 m. As you move away from the coast, the fall of the river becomes steeper, and at the same time the river valley narrows, the bottom of which is filled with blocks of bedrock. In this part of the river flow, lateral erosion is replaced by deep erosion. The mountain ranges bordering the valleys rise to the central part of Novaya Zemlya and already 10 - 15 km from the sea coast reach 200 - 250 m in height. The general direction of the river flow is from northeast to southwest, but in some areas the river flows in sharp bends. R. length. Nameless 76.5 km.

The rivers of Novaya Zemlya in terms of hydrogeographic characteristics can be classified as mountain-flat (Ogievsky), with snow-glacier and partly rain feeding.

According to morphological features, Novaya Zemlya rivers should be divided into two groups. The first group includes rivers flowing directly into the sea (not into bays). These are on the western bank of the Pan'kov River, and on the eastern - pp. Kolodkina, Butakova, Kazakova and others. The second group consists of rivers flowing into bays, and only some of the rivers, like the river. Nameless, form wide deltas with shallow branches. Others, like R. Nakhvatov, form a lake-river system. Lake belongs to this system. Rassolnoye, located to the north in 3 - 4 square meters. km from small lake, located to the northeast of the Nakhvatova Bay. Lake Rassolnoye is about 15 km long and 3-5 km wide and is elongated in a northeasterly direction. The water in the lake is salty, partially desalinated by the rivers flowing into it. A wide strip of sediments of the river. This steep lake is connected to the lake. fresh, having fresh water. This lake is 15 km long and 2-3 km wide. It is curved in an arc with a bulge facing the east (Kuznetsov).

2. The central region, located between Bezymyannaya Bay to the Admiralty Peninsula, up to approximately 76 ° N. sh. The coastline of the western coast, as already mentioned above, is much more indented than the eastern one. Here We have the most extensive bays and coves of Novaya Zemlya. All of them have the character of transverse fiords located in the beds of ancient tectonic valleys, which were further affected by glacial and water erosion. In particular, Matochkin Shar, which is not the boundary of any landscape zone, was formed as a result of the connection of two fiords.

The coastal plain in this area does not have such a development as in the more southern part of Novaya Zemlya, although it is observed almost along the entire western coast and near the Dry Nose, in the Krestovaya Bay. In the east, it is located along the coast of such bays as Chekina, Neznaniy and Medvezhiy bays.

The eastern and western shores of the northern island are interconnected by several through valleys, of which the Rusanov valley, which runs from Krestovaya Bay to the Neznaemoi Bay on the eastern shore, is especially characteristic.

According to the observations of M. Lavrova, who passed through this valley in 1925, its western coastal part is extended for 15.5 km and breaks off to sea level with cliffs 10–20 m high, being a typical coastal plain, well preserved here. Further to the east, it rises to a height of 250 - 300 m, and as you move deeper into the island, the total height of the mountains increases, reaching up to 1 km above sea level.

As M. Lavrova points out, here we have three valleys connecting the western coast of Novaya Zemlya with the eastern coast for 39.5 km.

The observations of this researcher showed that the modern glaciation of the valleys is only an insignificant remnant of the ancient one, which spread over the entire island. Even the highest elevations of the island, such as Mount Velikaya, reaching 943 m above sea level, bear traces of glacial influence. According to M. Lavrova, the thick ice cover in this area reached at least 1000 m, and the entire Rusanova valley was filled with ice.

Relief decrease is observed towards both the Barents and Kara seas. Between the individual ridges there is a small, up to 100 m long, lake. Watershed, whose height above sea level does not exceed 80 m; towards the west - Long and to the east of the watershed - Lake. Average.

3. Northern region. The northernmost part of Novaya Zemlya is occupied by a hilly plain, which has a width of 14.5 km in the area of ​​​​Cape Zhelaniya, expanding near the northeastern coast of Novaya Zemlya and reaching 76 ° 20 "N to a width of 35 km. This plain is strongly indented by rivers and streams originating from the ice sheet and flowing to the northern and northeastern shores.

Significant mountain heights are concentrated mainly along the western and northwestern coasts of this part of Novaya Zemlya. Along the northwestern coast, we have a group of the Lomonosov Ridge with altitudes of 1000 - 1100 m, with spurs running in a southwestern direction, called TsAGI Ridge by M. Ermolaev.

In the central part of Novaya Zemlya, only isolated nunataks up to 1100 m high are observed, which were well observed during a zeppelin flight in 1931.

According to the observations of I. Pustovalov, the Lomonosov Ridge, separated from the coastal plain by a sharp ledge, is a highly dissected weedy upland, which sharply differs in its orographic features from the surrounding plain. It stretches from Inostrantsev Bay to Legzdina Bay

The highest peaks of the Lomonosov Ridge are located, according to the observations of this geologist, in the central part of the region in the vicinity of Mak's harbor. Here the ridge comes closest to the sea, and its highest peak is Mount Blednaya, which has 1052 m above sea level. It stands out sharply above the surrounding area with its flat top with a residual ice sheet located on it.

In the region of Inostrantseva Bay, the highest peaks - Mount Astronomicheskaya and Mount Iskaniy - have a height of 753 and 616 m, respectively.

To the south-west of Maka Harbor, individual nunataks that protrude from the ice sheet reach a height of 650-700 m.

The Lomonosov Ridge is connected by a number of nunataks with the aforementioned TsAGI Ridge.

With distance to the north, a decrease in the elevations of this ridge is observed, and near the northern coast of Novaya Zemlya it passes into a low area, which is an abrasion coastal plain, without any sharp relief elements, descending in large steps to the sea and completely free during the summer period from snow, which accumulates mainly in the gorges of rivers and ravines.

As B. Miloradovich points out, in the northeastern region of Novaya Zemlya the valleys are diagonal, with alternating longitudinal and transverse sections. In limestone, the slopes of the valleys are often sheer and form canyons, and in the lower reaches of the rivers, according to the observations of this researcher, the valleys are often asymmetric and do not have deltas when they flow into the sea, but in some cases they fill negative relief forms, forming small alluvial plains.

Also on the east coast, north of Cape Middendorf, the mountains are high and hinder continental ice move towards the shore (Grenley).

The hydrographic network of the northern island of Novaya Zemlya is much less developed than on the southern island. The rivers are fed mainly by the ablation of glaciers. They are especially full-flowing in spring and early summer. Flowing first along an icy channel, the river then flows on the surface of the soil, making a shallow path for itself among the deluvial deposits. Permafrost, which thaws in Novaya Zemlya to a depth of 50 to 70 cm in different places, prevents rivers from deepening their channels significantly.

The further north, the more reduced the number and size of river flows. However, even at the northernmost tip of Novaya Zemlya, near Cape Mauritius and Cape Zhelaniya, significant furrows are observed, along the bottom of which minor streams flow, increasing in size only on days of more significant ablation of the central glaciers.

ChapterIII

Glaciation

Modern glaciation of Novaya Zemlya is developed mainly on its northern island. By type, glaciers can be divided into wind-blown, valley, cirque and reticulate. Insular glaciation is distributed mainly on the northern island.

1. Wind-blown glaciers, which also persist during the summer period, can be observed in various regions of Novaya Zemlya, including the most southern ones.

This type of glacier is widespread within the coastal plain. They are found in relief depressions, as well as along the ledges of the coastal plains, often abruptly dropping off to the sea.

In the Matochkina Shara area, glaciation becomes more intense. Appearing at first as separate spots along this strait, spreading to the east and west, as well as to the south from Matochkin Shar, it gives rise to individual valley glaciers, which do not descend to sea level even in the strait itself.

As you move north, the number of glaciers and their size increase. Even in the area of ​​Mount Mityusheva, glaciers descend to a height of 180 m, and the largest of them are up to 70-75 m above sea level. But further north, both to the western and eastern shores of Novaya Zemlya, the glaciers reach the very sea, forming producing barriers from which individual icebergs break off. However, the latter never reach the size of the icebergs of the Franz Josef Land region.

The dominating place among the forms of glaciation in this part of Novaya Zemlya is occupied by valley-type glaciers, which are widespread and most thoroughly studied by M. Lavrova in the area of ​​Krestovaya Bay. Most of these valley glaciers descend to the main valley and have distinct lateral and terminal moraines, which are often located in the form of separate parallel ridges, corresponding to individual stages of the gradual reduction of glaciers.

In the central region of this part of the northern island, glacial cirques descending to the foot of the slopes are widespread. M. Lavrova at the same time points out that there is no continuous network of valley glaciers passing between the nunataks, as Grenley pointed out, but there are more or less isolated individual snow fields that serve as feeding basins for independent glaciers of various types.

If it can be said that the area of ​​Matochkin Shara and to the north from it to the Admiralty Peninsula is subject to alpine-type glaciation, then further north, in the central part of Novaya Zemlya, we have a net ice cover, from which glaciers flow in the eastern and western directions and reaching sea level. Glaciers of this kind are especially widespread in the area of ​​Arkhangelskaya Bay, in Russkaya Gavan and to the north of it, and on the eastern coast of the Nordenskiöld glaciers, in Rusanov Bay and in Medvezhye Bay. The longitudinal profile of such glaciers, according to the observations of I. Pustovalov, is a slightly wavy line, gradually rising from the edge of the glacier to the feeding area, where the glaciers, losing their mesh character, form a continuous ice field, also gently rising to the center of the island. The transverse profile of such glaciers has a convex shape with a gradual decrease towards the lateral moraines.

The marginal parts of the glaciers descending into the sea are highly fractured, and the cracks are both longitudinal and transverse in nature, increasing in number and size depending on the relief underlying the bed.

All glaciers, descending to the sea, form steep cliffs, rising above sea level from 5 to 20 m.

Often, glaciers are connected to each other, as, for example, in Inostrantsev Bay, forming a median moraine at the confluence. The total width of the glacier in this area reaches 11 km (I. Pustovalov).

Other glaciers in this region, such as the Karbasnikov glacier, are 7.5 km wide, the Vize glacier is 4.5 km wide, and the Anuchin glacier is 3.75 km wide.

All these glaciers, as I have already pointed out, receive their food from the central ice dome covering the northern island of Novaya Zemlya and originate on its ice sheet.

According to the observations of M. Ermolaev, the central shield of Novaya Zemlya has no snow supply. When crossing the island, they did not encounter an accumulation of firn snow anywhere. I. Pustovalov also claims the same, pointing out that all glaciers in the area of ​​Inostrantsev Bay are devoid of snow cover.

The slight accumulation of snow in this area is apparently due to its removal from higher places by strong Novaya Zemlya winds.

According to Grenley's observations, the snow line in the area of ​​Matochkina Shara is located, apparently, at an altitude of 580 - 590 m, in the area of ​​Mashigin Bay at an altitude of 450 m.

M. Ermolaev's observations in Russkaya Gavan showed that the glaciers in this region exist at the expense of old accumulated reserves, and due to the absence of firn, these reserves are not renewed in the future, which contributes to the rapid retreat of glaciers.

Not only are individual glaciers shrinking in size, but also the insular cover of Novaya Zemlya is shrinking significantly, occupying a much smaller space now than it was relatively recently.

Also, a number of facts observed by various researchers indicate an intensive retreat of glaciers on Novaya Zemlya at the present time. Particularly characteristic in this respect is the presence of lateral moraines in Inostrantsev Bay, which currently extend 1.5 km from the glacier edge towards the sea. Another moraine of the same type stretches for 3 km along the southwestern coast of the bay from the edge of the glacier.

During the last ice age, Novaya Zemlya was covered with a continuous ice sheet, which is confirmed by the nature of the relief of both islands. Even the highest peaks of the Novaya Zemlya mountain heights are of a flattened character, and erratic boulders are scattered on their surface. So, on Mount Wilchek, which has a height of about 900 m, we find a small flat area. In particular, it was possible to observe the ancient flattening plain from the Zeppelin airship during the author's flight over Novaya Zemlya in 1931.

Almost all the highlands of the central part of Novaya Zemlya, like the Lomonosov Ridge, nunataks and the ice cover, are on the same level.

The fact that the southern island of Novaya Zemlya is now almost completely free of ice indicates that the southern island was freed from the ice cover much earlier than the northern one. Accordingly, Matochkin Shar was freed from the ice cover earlier than the Rusanov valley in Krestovaya Bay.

Modern glaciation of Novaya Zemlya not only occupies most of the surface of the northern island, but the soil itself contains a significant amount of ice, sometimes forming accumulations in the form of so-called fossil glaciers. The latter are widespread on Novaya Zemlya and were found both on its western and eastern shores.

According to the observations of G. Gorbatsky, the coastal plains of the Krestovaya Bay are dotted with a very large number of fossil glaciers that cannot be accurately counted, since in places they merge with each other. According to G. Gorbatsky, these glaciers formed part of the insular ice sheet during the last glaciation and, spreading from the hills surrounding the Krestovaya Bay, united at the foot of the mountains, for the most part, into one glacial tongue, which descended directly to the sea.

ChapterIV

Ancient glaciation and transgressions

The general picture of the influence of the cover of the glacial and post-glacial periods on Novaya Zemlya was drawn by Granley in his well-known work on the Quaternary geology of Novaya Zemlya.

According to this researcher, the masses of ice probably crossed the boundaries of the land that existed at that time, partly following in their movement along the existing valleys and fiords, and their movement should have been delayed by a less mobile ice barrier near the mouths of the fiords.

It is difficult to ascertain the number of glaciations that Novaya Zemlya has undergone, but in all likelihood, Granley thinks, some of its periods coincided with periods in Northern Europe. In his opinion, it is possible that during the great ice age in Europe, the glaciation of Novaya Zemlya was moderate. It increased here as it weakened in Europe, and the last period here is the most intense. Apparently, the glaciation on Novaya Zemlya corresponds to its last period in northern Europe, namely the Mecklenburg period according to A. Penk.

Granley believes that the depression during the last glaciation of the islands was at least 370 m, but it is possible that it reached 400 m.

In reality, it was probably much more significant, since M. Ermolaev discovered a sea terrace in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe Russian Harbor at an altitude of 420 m. On this terrace he discovered a fin. Thus it is possible that the depression was the same as that seen in Svalbard and Greenland.

According to Granley, the course of ice melting can be traced along Matochkin Shar in the following way: in the wide bay between Cape Stolbov and Dry Nose, the leading part of the ice was probably preserved for quite a long time. The sea had no approach to the northern end of Mount Matochka, where the ledge indicates the lowering of the left side of the ice cliff until the time when the land rose to a height of 215 m above sea level. Large masses of ice here probably appeared due to the position of the bay near the mouths of large tributaries - Matochkina Bay and Serebryanka Bay, located in the very highlands on New Earth.

No traces of the 215-meter terrace were found on the eastern bank. Here, the ice probably still descended into the sea in the form of a continuous barrier.

The edge of the ice, according to Granley, when the wave-cutting line was developed at a height of 215 m and at a height of 198 m, was between Mount Litke and Mount Matochka.

The eastern part of Matochkina Shara was released a little earlier. Here the terrace is observed at an altitude of 204.8 m above sea level. At that time, the end of the glacier occupied the strait at Cape Poperechny, remaining for a long time in the same place.

This stage of the state of the glaciers Granley conditionally refers to the stage " Ra Salpausselka».

To the northeast of Serebryanka Bay, on the eastern slope of the valley of the same name, Granley found two very distinct coastlines, one of which was at an altitude of 180 m above sea level. The strait, apparently, was still filled with ice at that time, at least in part, probably because the Litke and Lozhkin mountains protected the glacier from the sea. He ate through the river valleys. Chirakin and r. Shumilikha, and from the east across the strait. These valleys were undoubtedly filled with ice during this period. The Matochkina valley at this time, according to Granley, and later was filled with ice south of the moraine ridges. In the period following this, the ice retreated on the western side of the strait beyond the mouth of the river valley. Shumilikha, and to the east the glacier in the strait advanced west of Belushya Bay and the river. Gubina, into the narrow part of the strait, west of the Baer valley, where he stopped for a while. This retreat was followed by a rise of land along the coastline by 146 m. The rise in the east was thus greater than in the west.

Granley points out that at the time when this coastline was designated, the edge of the glacier fell along the moraine ridges lying there.

Along the Baer valley, a large glacier descended into the strait in the form of a fan-shaped blade, almost blocking it, in the valley of the river. Chirakina and r. Shumilikha, undoubtedly, there were still large glaciers.

In the process of further melting, this ice disappeared, and the land rose to 121 m, since this level is the first that can be traced along the entire Matochkin Shar Strait.

As Granley points out, large glaciers still exited the strait. Such glaciers include, for example, big glacier Tretyakov, the Bera glacier and the glacier in the Shelonnik valley, where it is noticeable that the further retreat of the ice occurred intermittently. Three successive moraine scarps indicate not only a delay in retreat, but also give an idea of ​​the size of the glacier.

The time of intense ice melting Granley refers to the boreal time. As the ice cover was released, Novaya Zemlya was gradually uplifted, as evidenced by the presence of a number of ancient coastlines at various, gradually lowering heights.

At a time when the land was only a few meters above the current sea level, there seemed to be a change and climatic conditions. The retreat of the glaciers stopped, and the period of advance of the ice cover began.

It is not necessary to speak in this case of a new glaciation, because the old ice has not yet completely disappeared. New glaciers began to move along the old paths. In the north, the glaciers jutted out onto the coastal plain, so that, for example, the Arkhangelsk glacier, as Granley points out, crossed the upper coastlines, and the Pankratiev glacier gave a push to the moraine lying in front of it and caused the formation of folds in it. Apparently, the coastlines at that time were between 10 and 20 m.

The appearance of peat over fossil glaciers was discovered by Malyarevsky during the author's expedition to Novaya Zemlya in 1921. It contains Hy p num with y re r aceae. According to the late prof. Dokhturovsky, peat was formed, apparently, during the climatic optimum of the postglacial period.

However, as A. Zubkov proved, peat can form on Novaya Zemlya at the present time as well.

M. Lavrova, pointing to the fact that the peat horizon was covered by marine sediments, believes that two subsidences of land occurred after the last ice age. Two transgressions - the first late glacial, with the upper level of the coastlines, and the latest - postglacial, not exceeding a height of 54 m.

The New Earth is still in the process of being raised. Many circumstances point to the negative movement of the coastline. We have already had occasions to emphasize the importance of the formation of braids in this respect. At present, the uplift appears to be slow, as the recent coastline is better developed than the former.

Residential building of the station at Cape Zhelaniya

Polygon soils in winter. Arctic desert zone; Russian harbor


Upland arctic tundra.In the foreground, polygon tundra


Bird market in Small Karmakuly. (Photo by L.A. Portenko)

An old fishing hut on the Karskaya side of the southern fort of Novaya Zemlya. (Photo by V.D. Aleksandrova)

Part of the Lagerny camp: warehouses and workshops (Photo by G.N. Toporkov)

School Pioneer Group

Packing murre eggs

Deer from an experienced herd. (Photo by M. Kuznetsov)

The family of the Novaya Zemlya Nenets. Photo by V.D. Alexandrova)

Stanovishche Belushye; spit. Taken from a zeppelin. (Photo by Dr. Basho)

Nunataks of the ice sheet on the northern island of Novaya Zemlya. Filmed from a zeppelin. (Photo by Dr. Basho)

Terraced surface on the east coast south island. (Photo by Dr. Basho)

The southern boundary of the Novaya Zemlya glaciation, the upper reaches of the river. Nameless

Eastern part of Matochkina Shara.View from Cape Snezhnoy to Cape Zhuravlev

Schematic map of the vegetation of Novaya Zemlya. Compiled by A.I. Zubov.1 - glaciers; 2 - arctic tundra; 3 - upland arctic tundra; 4 arctic desert; 5 - highland arctic desert

The Novaya Zemlya archipelago is located in the Arctic Ocean between the Kara and. It consists of two islands - North and South - separated by the Matochkin Shar Strait. Severny Island is more than half covered with glaciers.

Discovery history

The Orange Islands - the northernmost in the archipelago - were discovered in 1594 by the Barents expedition, and got their name in honor of the Dutch prince Moritz of Orange. There is a large walrus rookery on the islands.

Novaya Zemlya during the Great Geographical Discoveries was a wintering place for expeditions that failed to break through the ice fields.
Even in the XII-XV centuries. On Novaya Zemlya there were temporary settlements of Pomors, who moved to the archipelago for the sake of fishing and hunting. They took with them everything they needed for wintering on the islands - from firewood to building material for huts. Over time, a peculiar culture of Pomeranian hunters was formed on the islands.
Discovery of Novaya Zemlya by Europeans in the 16th century. was associated with the search for a northeastern sea route to India as an alternative to the southern routes controlled by Spain and Portugal. The path was very difficult, ice blocked it beyond Novaya Zemlya, so many sailors had to spend the winter in the harsh conditions of the archipelago; There were also those who were never destined to return to their homeland.
One of the expeditions to the northeast passage was led by the navigator Willem Barents, who set off in the summer of 1594. The first attempt to find a trade route was unsuccessful, and in 1596 a new expedition was equipped. During another grueling journey, the team was forced to spend the winter on Novaya Zemlya, as the ship "Mercury" was icebound in Ice Harbor Bay on the northeastern tip of Severny Island in the archipelago. Only on June 14, 1957, the Barents team managed to continue the journey, but the navigator himself died at the northwestern tip of the archipelago.
Later, already in 1608, the English navigator Henry Hudson visited Novaya Zemlya, who also tried to find a northeast passage. In the middle of the XVII century. ships of the Danish expedition reached Novaya Zemlya with similar goals.
At the same time, Russian expeditions began to be sent to Novaya Zemlya, as the Russian Empire was interested in exploring new sources of silver and copper ores. However, at first they all ended in the death of most of their participants. One of the first successful trips to the archipelago was made by Savva Loshkin in 1760-1761: then he was able to overcome the path along the eastern coast of Novaya Zemlya.
The traveler who initiated the scientific exploration of Novaya Zemlya was Fyodor Rozmyslov (d. 1771). On July 10, 1768, he set off with his team from Arkhangelsk to Novaya Zemlya and reached the goal a month later. Here Rozmyslov was engaged in the search for mineral deposits, meteorological and geodetic research.
In addition, he compiled an inventory of the Matochkin Shar Strait.
Until the 19th century the archipelago remained uninhabited, it was used as a staging post and a place for fishing and hunting. However, in order to minimize the risks of capturing sparsely populated lands, by the end of the century, a gradual settlement of the islands began, however, mainly by Nenets families.
At the beginning of the XX century. there were still many blank spots on the map of Novaya Zemlya, so research expeditions were constantly working on the islands of the archipelago. In particular, the Novaya Zemlya expedition of 1911 is known, as a result of which old abandoned Pomor settlements were discovered.

nuclear test site

A nuclear test site was opened on Novaya Zemlya during the Soviet era, and since then access to the archipelago has been limited.
Currently, Novaya Zemlya is a closed administrative-territorial entity within the Arkhangelsk region. In order to visit the archipelago, a special pass is required. This practice has been preserved since Soviet times, when settlements on Novaya Zemlya were closed for security reasons and their existence was not known.
On September 17, 1954, a Soviet nuclear test site was opened on Novaya Zemlya, which included three sites: Black Guba, Dry Nose and Matochkin Shar (underground tests were carried out at the latter). Almost the entire Nenets population was expelled from the archipelago, the military and specialists who worked at the training ground were placed in the villages.
After the USSR and the USA signed an agreement in August 1963 banning nuclear tests in the atmosphere, under water and in space, the experiments at the Black Guba and Dry Nose sites were stopped. However, underground explosions in the Matochkina Shara area were carried out until 1990.

Population

The main settlement of the archipelago - Belushya Guba - was founded in 1897. With the opening of the nuclear test site, a completely new page opened in its history, since it was appointed the administrative center of this experimental complex. Today, the village retains its status, as the landfill continues to operate. Experiments are being carried out on it, including to ensure the safe storage of nuclear weapons. In addition, there is a military unit in the village.
However, the legacy of the Cold War is not limited to the nuclear test site. In some bays of Novaya Zemlya there are nuclear waste disposal sites. In order to avoid leakage of hazardous substances, they are constantly monitored by both Russian services and European specialists.
The second most important and populous point of Novaya Zemlya is the village of Rogachevo on the Gusinaya Zemlya peninsula. There are other settlements on the archipelago, but they do not have a permanent population. Among them is the village of Matochkin Shar, which has a seasonal commercial value.

Nature

Novaya Zemlya is a land of harsh nature. More than half of the territory of the archipelago is covered with glaciers, and this is mainly cover, and not mountain glaciation.

Novaya Zemlya is dominated by the natural world for the Arctic lands with a variety of bird and fish species. First of all, the archipelago is famous for its very large bird markets: here you can see gulls, guillemots, puffins. On the shores of Lake Gusinoye on the Gusinaya Zemlya peninsula, which is very rich in fish, many geese gather during the molting period.

Relatively heat-loving plants have been preserved on the archipelago, usually not found in such a harsh climate. Among them are cloudberries, blueberries, lingonberries, some types of sorrel, willow-herb and other plants. In addition, alien plants are found on the islands, including several species of buttercups, clover. The seeds got into the local soil with expeditions, merchant ships.

Man on Novaya Zemlya is constantly in contact with wildlife. A big threat to the local population is posed by polar bears, which, with the onset of cold weather, go to the villages in search of food. It is not uncommon for these predators to attack people.


general information

Archipelago in the Arctic Ocean.
Location: between the Barents and Kara seas.

Administrative affiliation: Russian Federation.
Administrative center of Novaya Zemlya: Belushya Guba - 2308 people (2015).

Status: closed administrative-territorial entity.
Russian language.
Ethnic composition: Russians.
Religion: Orthodoxy

Numbers

Area: 83,000 km2.
Population: 2429 people (2010).
The most high point : 1547 m.
Length: in length - 925 km, in width - from 32 to 144 km.

Climate and weather

Arctic.
Polar day length: 90 days.
duration of the polar night A: 70 days.
January average temperature: -14.2°C.
July average temperature: +6.9°С.
Average annual rainfall: 419.3 mm.

Economy

Fishing, hunting.

Attractions

Cult

    It is assumed that members of the Barents team were among the first Europeans to see a polar bear.

    On October 30, 1961, at the Dry Nose nuclear test site in the southwest of Severny Island, the most powerful explosive device in the history of mankind, the Tsar Bomb, a thermonuclear aviation bomb, was tested.

    Cape Zhelaniya got its name for a curious reason: on the map of Barents, it was marked as Zhelanny, but due to inaccuracies in the translation, according to the Russian tradition, it became known as Cape Zhelaniya.