Greenland Essays

  • Greenland

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    Greenland The geography of Greenland is quite ironic considering its name. Greenland is Located in the northern part of North America. It is between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic Ocean, northeast of Canada. Greenland's area is approximately 2,715,600 square kilometers. Its area is slightly more than 3 times the size of Texas. It is the largest island in the world. It is also primarily by the Davis Strait and Baffin Bay and from Iceland on the east, by the Denmark Strait.

  • The Greenland Shark

    1285 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Greenland Shark Sharks live in almost every part of the oceans, from coastal environments to deep-sea habitats. They also live in the warm waters of the tropics to the cold frigid waters of the polar region. The Greenland shark, also known as “somniousus Microcephalus,” lives in the dark, cold waters of the North Atlantic (I 65). The Greenland shark belongs to the order Squaliforms, more usually known as dogfish sharks. There are 70 species in this order, which includes the spied sharks,

  • Collapse of Norse Greenland

    1147 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Collapse of Norse Greenland The collapse of Norse Greenland has been widely disputed; did this society truly collapse, or rather did they choose to leave for a better life elsewhere? Many books have been written on this subject; from Jared Diamond’s Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fair or Succeed to the corresponding Patricia McAnany and Norman Yoffee’s Questioning Collapse: Human Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of Empire. In Diamond’s Collapse, there are five main

  • Relationships Between Denmark and the Greenland

    1341 Words  | 3 Pages

    The colonization of Greenland by Denmark was unusual as due to the political structure of Greenland, which consisted of no unified structure of power that spanned wider than individual households, as such there was no one to contend with Denmark when the seized power in the 18th century in an attempt to compete with Dutch tradesmen and whalers, the colonization of Greenland included 70-80 miles beyond the coast, thereby allowing Denmark to monopolize trade and fishing rights. Due the historical context

  • Vikings in Iceland and Greenland - Exploring the Development of Viking Civilization

    1433 Words  | 3 Pages

    Iceland and Greenland are located at high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere and they face each other across the sea. Though Iceland is considered one of the five Nordic countries while Greenland belongs to North America, both of them were once colonies of Vikings and played important roles in Viking age. Viking civilization experienced from prosperity to decline during 8CE to 14CE on these two islands. It is very possible to find out the reasons for Viking’s ups and downs through studying the

  • Greenland Warming

    2133 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Greenland ice sheet is the second largest ice mass on Earth and is about one-tenth the volume of the Antarctic ice sheet. It is the only significant ice mass in the Arctic today. [ See Antarctica and Climate Change ; and Ice Sheets .] It is an ice-age relict that overlies a bowl-shaped continent almost completely fringed by coastal mountains. PHYSICAL-GEOGRAPHIC SETTING The ice sheet extends from about 60° to 83°N over a distance of 2,400 km in the North Atlantic Ocean. The ice sheet covers

  • Research Paper On Erik The Red

    673 Words  | 2 Pages

    many indiscretions, Erik still fulfills this definition without uncertainty. There are several prominent primary sources that amplify Thorwaldsson as a legend. These points are evident through Erik the red’s Discovery of Greenland as a result of his

  • Inuit Odyssey Summary

    886 Words  | 2 Pages

    This discovery was made by the Scandinavian explorer Hans Egede, 300 years ago when he went out in search of the lost Greenland colonies. Although Hans was unsuccessful at finding the lost colonies he did find the local Inuit. He recorded in his ship’s log his interaction with them. The ship’s log tells many oral stories from the Inuit people claiming that their Thule ancestors

  • COllapse by Jared Diamond

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    Although Greenland and Australia are thousands of miles apart and very different in geography, they also have many similarities. In his book “Collapse”, Jared Diamond shows that both countries have the five factors that can contribute to a society’s collapse. Greenland’s Norse society already collapsed a long time ago, while Australia is still a First World country going strong. If some things there don’t change, the country’s living standard will go down and there could be major problems.

  • Analysis of When the Vikings Reached the New World

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    commonly referred to by the Norse. Thule, which is now called Qaanaaq, is located in northwest Greenland, towards Canada and is part of the Kingdom of Denmark. It is believed the Thule people are the ancestors of the modern Inuit (Eskimo) as they are linked biologically, culturally, and linguistically. The Vikings were in contact with the Thule people, particularly in the 11th century when they explored Greenland and the edges of Canada where they referred to these people as both “Thule” and “Skræling

  • Chef

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    planned to enter a contest with this masterpiece, the prize being a cruise to Greenland. To Chef, this was the land of paradise. He would be the only man there to seduce and womanize the native females. The oven bell rang. The Salisbury steak was done to perfection. He rushed it to his finest Tupperware to the judges mouths. They chewed and gagged, but due to lack of contestants he won. He now had earned his passage to Greenland, and broke out in song. Time passed and the day of the cruise had arrived

  • Iceland Research Paper

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    History project; The country below is about Iceland. There is a myth that Iceland was named Iceland and Greenland was named Greenland, so people would go to Greenland more and Iceland would be hidden from the world. Iceland’s name was given by Flóki Vilgerdarson, and Greenland has nothing to do with Iceland’s name. He set sail and he made shore on the island at Vatnsfjord and he settled for the winter, fishing the rivers for food. However, because Floki didn’t gather fodder or winter food for the

  • My Friend from Denmark

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    religious ceremonies that are unique to his country. Talking with Soren made me want to learn more about the Kingdom of Denmark, so I began researching it. I scoured books and found that it is a very wealthy country, and that its territories include Greenland and the Faroe Islands. After questioning my father, I was surprised to learn that my family comes from Denmark. I was part Danish! I was very excited to tell Soren and could not wait to tell him the news the next day.

  • Iceland Research Paper

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    Iceland is a beautiful and volcanic island just in the North Atlantic Ocean, located east of Greenland and immediately south of the Arctic Circle. It is a small country with a population of 348,450 people. Although it is made up of a small population, it makes for a largely rural country, and a capital city which feels like a big small town. It has an area of 103,000 km sq. making it the most sparely populated country in Europe. In addition, the capital and most populated city of Iceland is Reykjavic

  • THE LITTLE ICE AGE IN THE NORTH AMERICAN CORDILLERA AS RECONSTRUCTED FROM DOCUMENTARY SOURCES

    1365 Words  | 3 Pages

    Earth is a constantly-changing planet. As humans have come to dominate the globe, we have changed the physical landscape to suit our own needs. This idea of change, through time, represents a key concept for the purposes of this thesis. Our present-day climate is not uniform over time, and several oscillations have occurred over the millennia. The “Little Ice Age,” taking place from approximately A.D. 1500 to 1850, was one such oscillation of climate. Furthermore, humanity tends to keep written

  • Denmark Immigration and Integration

    1603 Words  | 4 Pages

    Immigration to Denmark mostly consisted of people from Northern and Western Europe until the 1960’s and 1970’s when Pakistani, Turkish, and Slavic migrants sought out the demand for unskilled labor (“Immigration”). In 1973, Denmark’s government created strict immigration laws, which made it rather difficult for immigrants to enter into the country. However, even though the government had shut down the open immigration, they still allowed the entering of refugees into Denmark (“Denmark Shifts”). The

  • Field Notes From a Catastrophe by Elizabeth Kolbert

    1701 Words  | 4 Pages

    swept away. A man in Iceland who has monitored glaciers predicted that by the end of the century, Iceland will be ice free. Not something you would expect from a land that has had glaciers for over two million years. On the tips of glacier in Greenland, researchers found water in places there had not been water in maybe thousands of years. When she went to the Netherlands, she found that the rising sea level was expected to take up a large portion of the country. However, in areas where there

  • Effects of The Pleistocene Epoch on Colorado

    3006 Words  | 7 Pages

    accumulations. (Meeriam-Webster, 2000, p. 493). Glaciers can be classified into many categories. First they are divided into either Alpine or Continental. Alpine glaciers are those that are found in mountainous regions and Continental, such as Greenland,... ... middle of paper ... ...K.W. Porter: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, Denver, CO, p. 165-173. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (10th Ed): 2000, Merriam-Webster, Incorporated, Springfield, Massachusetts, p 493. Plummer

  • Pollution and Culture in Greenland

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    Greenland is contaminated with considerable amounts of pollution, caused by large-scale atmospheric circulations, especially in winter. The pollutants in the Arctic are primarily sulfur, which is highly acidic, in both gas and aerosol form. Most of these pollutants are from anthropogenic sources deriving mainly from industrialized areas in the Eurasian continent. In addition to threatening environmental stability, pollution is speeding the unraveling of traditional Inuit culture in Greenland.

  • Climate Change: A Greenland Perspective

    1335 Words  | 3 Pages

    Climate Change: A Greenland Perspective Works Cited Not Included Climate change is the alteration of temperature and precipitation patterns over an extended period of time. Across the globe, scientists are identifying climate change in relation to the greenhouse gas emissions and solar cycles. While most researchers believe that the increase of atmospheric CO2 is effecting global warming, others are endorsing the concerns of another Ice Age, which is likely to occur due to orbital variations