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Pole of inaccessibility: Encyclopedia BETA


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Pole of inaccessibility

The pole of inaccessibility marks a location that is the most challenging to reach owing to its remoteness from geographical features which could provide access. The term is a geographic construct, not an actual physical phenomenon, and is of interest mostly to explorers and conspiracy theorists.
* Northern Pole of Inaccessibility (). Located on the Arctic Ocean pack ice at a distance farthest from any land mass. It is 661 km (411 statute miles) from the North Pole, 1453 km (903 mi) north of Barrow, Alaska, and equidistant from the closest landmasses, Ellesmere Island and Franz-Josef Land, 1094 km (680 mi) away. It was reached by Sir Hubert Wilkins in 1927 by aircraft. Due to the constant motion of the pack ice, no permanent structure exists at the pole.
* Southern Pole of Inaccessibility (). A spot on Antarctica at a point most distant from the surrounding ocean. It is located 463 km (288 statute miles) from the South Pole. The surface elevation is 3718 m (12,198 ft). It was reached in 1958 by a Soviet Antarctic Expedition for International Geophysical Year research work: see Pole of inaccessibility (Antarctic research station). Today a building still remains at this site, marked by a statue of Vladimir Lenin, and is protected as a historical site. Note that there are several possible definitions [1], depending on whether the "coast" is measured to the grounding line, or to the ice shelves.
* Pacific Pole of Inaccessibility, also called Point Nemo () is the place in the ocean that is farthest from land. It lies in the South Pacific Ocean, 2688 km (1670 mi or 1451 NM) from the nearest lands: Ducie Island (part of the Pitcairn Islands) in the north, Motu Nui (part of the Easter Islands) in the north-east, and Maher Island (off the coast of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica) in the south. Chatham Island lies further west, and Southern Chile in the east.
* Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility () the place on land that is farthest from the ocean. It lies in northern China and is 2645 km (1645 mi) from the nearest coastline. It is located approximately 320 km (200 mi) from the city of Ürümqi, in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China, in the Dzoosotoyn Elisen Desert. The precise geographical point was reached on 27 June, 1986 by Nicholas Crane and Dr Richard Crane.

Coincidentally, the Eurasian and the Pacific poles have approximately the same radius.

See also

*pole
*North Pole
*South Pole
*Extreme points of the world

External links

*Point Nemo



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