Native name: остров Ярок | |
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Yarok and adjacent islands
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Geography | |
Location | Laptev Sea |
Coordinates | 71°32′N 137°40′E / 71.533°N 137.667°ECoordinates: 71°32′N 137°40′E / 71.533°N 137.667°E |
Archipelago | Yana River mouth islands |
Total islands | 27 |
Length | 38 km (23.6 mi) |
Width | 26 km (16.2 mi) |
Administration | |
Russia
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Republic | Sakha |
Demographics | |
Population | uninhabited |
Yarok Island (Russian: остров Ярок) is an island in the Laptev Sea, a marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean. The island is located off the mouths of the Yana river, only a few kilometres towards the east.
Administratively, Yarok Island is part of the Sakha Republic of Russia.
Yarok Island is large and flat. It has many small lakes, swamps and sandbars. Its length is 38 kilometers (24 mi) and its maximum breadth is 26 kilometers (16 mi).
The Yana delta, the coastal area off which Yarok Island lies, is an extensive wetland zone. It is subject to severe Arctic weather with frequent gales and blizzards. Further north, the sea in the Yana Bay is frozen with thick ice for about eight months every year, so that Yarok is merged with the mainland.
In 1712, Yakov Permyakov and his companion Merkury Vagin, the first recorded Russian explorers of the area, crossed the Yana Bay from the mouth of the Yana River to Bolshoy Lyakhovsky Island over the ice and explored the then unknown island. Unfortunately Permyakov and Vagin were killed on the way back from their exploration by mutineering expedition members.
In 1892–1894, Baron Eduard Toll, accompanied by expedition leader Alexander Bunge, carried out geological surveys in the Yana delta area on behalf of the Russian Imperial Academy of Sciences located in St. Petersburg.