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Nutepelmen

Nutepelmen (in English)
Нутэпэльмен (Russian)
Нутэпылмын (Chukchi)
-  Rural locality  -
Selo
Kolyuchin.PNG
Location of Nutepelmen in relation to Kolyuchin Island
Map of Russia - Chukotka Autonomous Okrug (2008-03).svg
Location of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in Russia
Nutepelmen is located in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Nutepelmen
Nutepelmen
Location of Nutepelmen in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Coordinates: 67°01′N 174°58′W / 67.017°N 174.967°W / 67.017; -174.967Coordinates: 67°01′N 174°58′W / 67.017°N 174.967°W / 67.017; -174.967
Administrative status (as of June 2009)
Country Russia
Federal subject Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Administrative district Iultinsky District
Municipal status (as of October 2010)
Municipal district Chaunsky District
Inter-settlement territory yes
Statistics
Population (2010 Census) 157 inhabitants
Population (January 2016 est.) 158 inhabitants
Time zone PETT (UTC+12:00)
Postal code(s) 689235

Nutepelmen (Russian: Нутэпэльмен; Chukchi: Нутэпылмын), is a village (selo) on the northern shores of Iultinsky District, Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, in the Far Eastern Federal District of Russia. The village is a traditional Chukchi and Yupik settlement in an area that has been inhabited for centuries. Whilst the village still exists, in 2010, a law was passed abolishing the municipal rural settlement of Nutepelmen, meaning that administration responsibilities passed to the central district administration.

The village, population 135, as of 2006:, is formed mainly of Chukchi people, and is located on a spit at the entrance to Pyngopylkhyn Lagoon (from the Chukchi, Pynopelgyn, lit. "sucking orifice").

Kolyuchin Island is found to the north east of the village.

Further along the coast, near the village, a stone circle can be found, dating from the sixteenth to seventeenth century when the Chukchi fought battles with the Cossack explorers. The skeletons of those killed in the battle can still be found on the surrounding tundra and the local Chukchi population regard the area as cursed. As well as the stone circle, on the eastern shore of Kolyuchinskaya Bay is the ancient Inuit village of Anayan (inhabitants transferred to Neshkan in the 1950s by Soviet authorities), where ruined houses still stand. the name of the village is derived from the Chukchi, meaning "Land in the Mist".


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