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The Kamchatka Peninsula hangs
from the northeast Russian coast
like a massive dagger pointing
southward. Rugged and mountainous,
it is pocked with active volcanoes
that dominate a gran landscape.
Avachinsky, Krasheninnikov, Kronotsky,
Uzon, and many more of Kamchatka's
stunning volcanoes are soaring
symmetrical peaks, with many active
calderas and steam and sulfur
springs.
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The Kamatchka Peninsula
is billed potentially as "Russia's
Yellowstone". The peninsula is
home to 414 glaciers, more than 100
volcanoes, 29 of them active, 20 climate
zones, 300 geysers and 100,000 lakes.
The peninsula is home to five parks
and reserves on the UN's natural heritage
list. It was opened to the world after
the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union
and "in theory" is a "source
of vital tourist income."[2]
The Kamchatka Peninsula
is a long body of land jutting dramatically
from Russia and Asia's northeastern
tip, with a length of 1,250 km and
an area of 270,000 km². It hangs
off eastern Siberia along a general
north-south axis, Florida-like, between
the Bering Sea to the east and the
Sea of Okhotsk to the west, each an
arm of the Pacific Ocean. About the
size of New Zealand, it is one of
the largest peninsulas in the world.
Its shape has also been compared to
a giant fish, with the head at the
south. There are just over 400,000
residents, but the population density
is one of the lowest in the world,
less than a person per square kilometer.
The peninsula's isolation, beauty,
and abundance of wildlife make it
a very likely long-term candidate
for tourism development, particularly
for an environmentally minded and
adventurous clientele.
History
In the seventeenth century, the Russians
began exploring what they claimed
as the eastern reaches of their dominions.
The first Russian maps showing Kamchatka
as a peninsula appeared in the 1680s,
and continued to improve in the next
decades following Bering's expeditions
to eastern Russia and Alaska.
Russian fur traders
first established posts on the Kamchatka
River, but they nearly brought the
indigenous tribes they were trading
with to extinction via encroachment,
warfare, and disease. Small native
groups still exist dispersed around
the peninsula, relying on fishing,
reindeer herding, and some tourism
for their livelihood.
Russian Orthodox missionaries
were close behind the traders and
worked in a large area that included
all the Aleutians. The faith and the
language they spoke remain the ones
in use on Kamchatka today.
During the Soviet era,
several military bases were located
across the peninsula, which prevented
all foreigners and even most Soviet
citizens from visiting. In addition,
the military tested the range and
reliability of their missiles by launching
them from other sites, using the peninsula
as the target area. When a Korean
Air Lines flight strayed deeply into
Soviet airspace in 1983, it first
crossed the Kamchatka Peninsula before
being shot down near Sakhalin. The
fighter jets that brought its demise
and that of all 269 aboard were scrambled
from a base on the peninsula.
It was not until 1991
and the fall of the Soviet Union that
Kamchatka started opening its doors
for tourism. As in Alaska, the contrasts
of nature—the snow and heat,
glaciers and greenery, the sea and
the clear sky—make the peninsula
a near-certain growing draw for tourists
and other visitors. A large military
presence remains on Kamchatka and
is blamed by some as the source of
small but growing pollution.
In the summer of 2005,
a Russian Navy submarine was disabled
in a submarine accident near the peninsula
and sank to the seafloor, requiring
an international effort to rescue
the crew.
Geography
The part of the Kamchatka Peninsula
that connects in the north to the
rest of Russia is only about 400 km
south of the Arctic Circle. The "Ring
of Fire", the belt of seismic
and volcanic activity that roughly
encircles the Pacific, passes directly
through the peninsula. More than 160
volcanoes dot and hold sway over the
landscape, 29 of them still active.
The cold climate and the volcanic
rumblings and eruptions have given
the peninsula the name of the "Land
of Fire and Ice." A volcano is
probably at least smoking or steaming
somewhere on Kamchatka at any given
moment, and though there are some
huge explosions (as recently as 2004),
they produce very few human victims
because of the summits' remoteness
and the sparseness of the peninsula's
population.
Topography of the Kamchatka
PeninsulaGreat differences in climate
appear along the length of the Kamchatka
Peninsula. While the northern reaches
clearly lie in the subpolar zone,
the central area has four distinct
seasons and the seacoasts are likewise
moderate.
The longest stream is
the Kamchatka River, running nearly
700 kilometers from south to north,
creating what's called the peninsula's
central valley, which is flanked by
large volcanic ranges. It is claimed
that here are the world's highest
density of volcanoes and associated
volcanic phenomena. The highest of
these is Klyuchevskaya Sopka (4,750
m), while the most striking is Kronotsky,
the perfect cone of which is considered
by some the world's most beautiful
volcano. In the center of Kamchatka
is the increasingly renowned Geyser
Valley, with its steaming fountains,
thermal lakes, and bubbling mud pots.
Most inhabitants live
in the regional capital, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
(named for saints Peter and Paul),
a seaside city of about 220,000 founded
on the southeastern side of the peninsula
by the explorer Vitus Bering, but
a traditional way of life can still
be seen in many scattered fishing
and mining villages.
The Kuril island chain
runs from the southern tip of the
peninsula to a short distance from
Japan's northern Hokkaido Island.
The Aleutian Islands arc thousands
of kilometers from southern Alaska
toward Asia. The westernmost islands
in the chain are Russian territory,
not American, and lie about 200 km
from the middle coast of the Kamchatka
Peninsula. Between the peninsula and
the Bering Sea runs the Kuril-Kamchatka
Trench, with a depth of 10,500 m,
similar to but not as deep as the
trench that parallels the southern
coast of the Aleutian chain. There
have been very strong earthquakes
that have shaken Kamchatka in the
past (1952 being the most recent),
all centered in the Kuril-Kamchatka
Trench.
Wildlife
Kamchatka is the land of volcanoes.Kamchatka
has been called one of the last untouched
places on earth. Its wildlife includes
brown bears, snow rams, sable, wolverines,
and golden eagles. The peninsula is
also the breeding ground for Stellar's
sea eagles, the largest eagles on
earth.
The world's largest
and densest population of brown bears
makes Kamchatka home, with a count
estimated around 10,000. They are
comparable in size to American grizzlies,
but are known as relatively docile.
The largest animals
in the world, blue whales, are abundant
near the coastline. As early as 1882,
the peninsula's sea otter population
came under protection. Currently about
2,000 sea otters inhabit parts of
southern Kamchatka's shoreline.
The peninsula is thought
to include the world's greatest diversity
of fish in the salmon family. Accordingly,
one lake, Kurilsky, is recognized
as the largest spawning ground for
salmon in Eurasia. There are also
many varieties of trout.[3]
Kamchatka is one of
the wildest places in Russia - an area
where fishing still drives the economy
and men drive their dogs through the
snow. Its a paradise for thrill-seeking
tourists and a sanctuary for its animals.
This is Kamchatka, Russias land of ice
and fire.