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Bear Island (Norwegian: Bjørnøya, pronounced [ˈbjø̀ːɳœʏɑ]) is the southernmost island of the Norwegian Svalbard archipelago. The island is located at the limits of the Norwegian and Barents seas, approximately halfway between Spitsbergen and the North Cape.
1 de nov. de 1979 · With Donald Sutherland, Vanessa Redgrave, Richard Widmark, Christopher Lee. On the remote Norwegian Bear Island, used as a submarine base by the Germans during World War II, U.N. scientist Larsen sends a distress signal using an emergency N.A.T.O. frequency, and is received by scientific vessel Morning Rose.
16 de nov. de 2023 · Bjørnøya (Bear Island) is the southernmost island of the Svalbard archipelago, halfway between Norway and Spitsbergen. The island is 178 km 2 large and relatively rarely visited, but fascinating. There is a permanently staffed Norwegian weather station at the north coast of ...
23 de ago. de 2023 · 37. 2.4K views 8 months ago BEAR ISLAND. "Bear Island is really one of the best kept secrets of the Svalbard archipelago,” says naturalist and certified photo instructor Jeff Litton. While...
What Bear Island Looks Like Up Close. “Shaped like a rounded triangle, Bear Island is a very remote place, way out there in the rugged seas, hundreds of miles from anywhere. Lindblad is able to make a stop here because it's on our route from Norway to Svalbard. It’s an amazing area to explore.
Bear Island, Norwegian Bjørnøya, is an islet in the Arctic Ocean, between Northern Norway and Svalbard. The island has no permanent population, except some meteorology crew. Remnants of whaling station at Kvalrossbukta. Bear Island is named after a polar bear and is the southernmost island in Svalbard.
Bjørnøya (Bear Island) is the southernmost part of Spitsbergen and is located at 74°30'N 19°Ø, about midway between the Norwegian mainland and Spitsbergen. Most of the island's 178 km2 are flat, with some mountainous areas in the south. The Miseryfjellet mountain is the tallest with 536 m.