Lemaire Channel
View from the south to the north entrance to the strait from the Hanseatic deck Glaciers and rocks reflecting in the waters at the southern end of the canal
Lemaire Channel - the Antarctic Strait between Kiev Peninsula and the continental part of the Graham Earth and the Booth Island. Sometimes called "Kodak Gap", because of the surrounding photogenic landscapes and the fauna that occurs here. For this reason, it has become one of the main goals of the commercial expedition to Antarctica. The banks surrounding it have the form of steep cliffs descending into the water, on which icebergs drift. It is 11 km long and only 1.6 km wide at the narrowest point.
Discovered by the German expedition from 1873-1874, but not flown until December 1898, when it was transferred to the Belgica research vessel, belonging to the Belgian Antarctic Expedition. The commandant of the expedition, Adrien de Gerlache, named it in honor of Captain Charles Lemaire (1863-1925), a Belgian researcher of the Congo.
The popular cruise route is also made by relatively safe and calm waters, which is rare in turbulent southern seas. The greatest difficulty is caused by the fact that icebergs can fill the canal, especially at the beginning of the season, forcing ships to turn around and circumnavigate the Booth island to reach Petermann Island.
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