Difference between revisions of "Map A.12 - High Greenland"

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[[File:A.12 - High Greenland.png|760px|thumb]]
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[[File:A.12 - High Greenland.png|right|680px|thumb]]
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'''Incomplete map'''.  Arctic region reaching from 82.34°N south to 72.51°N.
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__TOC__
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This vast, desolate expanse is dominated by the great ice sheet, an unbroken wilderness of wind-swept snow and shifting glacial ridges. [[Baffin Bay]] appears on the western side, while the [[Greenland Sea]] is evident on the east.
  
Click to enlarge. Shows latitude 72.51 to 82.34 north, including a small portion of Greenland's west coast and a significant length of Greenland's harsh, uninhabited eastern shore. The map exists as a placeholder until the coastline is plotted.
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Hexes are [[20-mile Hex Map|20 miles]] in diameter. Total area depicted equals 366,450 sq.m.
  
The orange line, showing at the center bottom and top right, gives the line of hexes that indicates 30°W. Numbers at the right indicate distance from the north pole in hexes; the direction of north is at the top right, so it must be noted the direction on the map turns 60° at the 30th meridian. Hexes are [[20-mile Hex Map|20 miles]] in diameter.
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== The Ice Sheet ==
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This stretches unbroken across the map's centre, a world of endless white shaped by centuries of wind and cold. This high, frozen plateau rises steadily from the coastal edges, its surface smooth in some places but fractured in others, where deep crevasses and pressure ridges form as the ice slowly shifts under its own weight. The terrain is deceptive — what appears from a distance to be a featureless plain is, in reality, a treacherous landscape of snow-covered fissures and wind-hardened drifts, where movement is slow, and orientation is difficult.
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See Also,<br>
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At this latitude, the ice is among the thickest on the continent, buried under countless generations of snowfall compacted into solid glacial mass. The air is bitterly dry, drained of moisture by the unrelenting cold, and the wind never truly stops, sweeping across the plateau in great, swirling gusts that carve long, sinuous ridges into the hardened snow. Temperatures remain far below freezing year-round, with only a brief reprieve in the height of summer when the surface softens slightly under the unsetting sun, though never enough to allow melting.
[[Sheet Maps]]<br>
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:East: [[Map A.01 - Greenland Sea|Greenland Sea]]<br>
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[[File:Map A.12 - High Greenland.jpg|right|350px|thumb]]
:West: [[Map A.11 - West Greenland|West Greenland]]<br>
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Storms arise suddenly, reducing visibility to near nothing, as the horizon vanishes into a featureless blur of ice and sky. Sound is muffled by the snow, and in the still moments between gusts of wind, the land is utterly silent, save for the occasional deep groan of ice shifting beneath its own immense weight. No permanent tracks exist here — only the faint, wind-swept traces left by passing storms or the rare expedition that dares to cross this frozen expanse.
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== Adjacent Maps ==
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; background-color:#d4f2f2;"
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|-
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! [[Map A.11 - West Greenland|A11: West Greenland]] !! [[Map A.12 - High Greenland|A12: High Greenland]] !! [[Map A.01 - Greenland Sea|A1: Greenland Sea]]
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|-
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! [[Map B.16 - Nuuk Coast|B16: Nuuk Coast]] !! [[Map B.17 - Denmark Strait|B17: Denmark Strait]] !! [[Map B.18 - Iceland|B18: Iceland]]
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|}
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See [[Sheet Maps]]
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[[Category: Reviewed]]

Latest revision as of 03:05, 6 February 2025

A.12 - High Greenland.png

Incomplete map. Arctic region reaching from 82.34°N south to 72.51°N.

This vast, desolate expanse is dominated by the great ice sheet, an unbroken wilderness of wind-swept snow and shifting glacial ridges. Baffin Bay appears on the western side, while the Greenland Sea is evident on the east.

Hexes are 20 miles in diameter. Total area depicted equals 366,450 sq.m.

The Ice Sheet

This stretches unbroken across the map's centre, a world of endless white shaped by centuries of wind and cold. This high, frozen plateau rises steadily from the coastal edges, its surface smooth in some places but fractured in others, where deep crevasses and pressure ridges form as the ice slowly shifts under its own weight. The terrain is deceptive — what appears from a distance to be a featureless plain is, in reality, a treacherous landscape of snow-covered fissures and wind-hardened drifts, where movement is slow, and orientation is difficult.

At this latitude, the ice is among the thickest on the continent, buried under countless generations of snowfall compacted into solid glacial mass. The air is bitterly dry, drained of moisture by the unrelenting cold, and the wind never truly stops, sweeping across the plateau in great, swirling gusts that carve long, sinuous ridges into the hardened snow. Temperatures remain far below freezing year-round, with only a brief reprieve in the height of summer when the surface softens slightly under the unsetting sun, though never enough to allow melting.

Map A.12 - High Greenland.jpg

Storms arise suddenly, reducing visibility to near nothing, as the horizon vanishes into a featureless blur of ice and sky. Sound is muffled by the snow, and in the still moments between gusts of wind, the land is utterly silent, save for the occasional deep groan of ice shifting beneath its own immense weight. No permanent tracks exist here — only the faint, wind-swept traces left by passing storms or the rare expedition that dares to cross this frozen expanse.

Adjacent Maps

A11: West Greenland A12: High Greenland A1: Greenland Sea
B16: Nuuk Coast B17: Denmark Strait B18: Iceland


See Sheet Maps