Rothschild Island
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Rothschild Island is a dark, rocky island that is 39 kilometres (24 miles) long. Most of it is covered in ice, with tall mountains sticking up. These mountains are part of the Desko Mountains in Antarctica. The island is located 8 kilometres (5 miles) west of the northern part of Alexander Island, close to where Wilkins Sound begins.
It is part of the beautiful and wild land of Antarctica. Many scientists visit here to learn about nature and how the climate is changing.
Geography and wildlife
Lazarev Bay separates Rothschild Island from Alexander Island. The island has a mountain range called the Desko Mountains. These mountains stretch for about 20 miles from Bates Peak to Overton Peak. The mountains rise to about 1,000 metres at peaks like Enigma Peak and Fournier Ridge. Other notable peaks include Goward Peak, Mirnyy Peak, Morrill Peak, Schenck Peak, and Thuma Peak.
There are three small areas of volcanic rock on the island. An emperor penguin colony lives in a bay between Alexander Island and Rothschild Island. This colony was visited by scientists in 2015–2016. In November 2022, helicopters counted baby penguins and adult penguins there.
History
The island was first seen in 1825 by Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen. Later, during the French Antarctic Expedition from 1908 to 1910, it was named Rothschild Island by Jean-Baptiste Charcot to honor Édouard Alphonse James de Rothschild, a leader of the Rothschild banking family of France.
Explorers thought the island might be connected to nearby Alexander Island, but in 1940, the United States Antarctic Service Expedition confirmed it was separate by flying over and mapping it. Detailed maps were made later by the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition and others using photos from the air and satellites.
In 1976, a team from the British Antarctic Survey became the first people to visit Rothschild Island. More visits followed, and a part of the island was named after one of the researchers.
Threats and preservation
This remote area has never been home to people. It is protected by the Antarctic Treaty System. This system stops industrial development, waste disposal, and nuclear testing. But, the delicate ecosystems here can still be harmed by more tourists, especially those arriving on cruises across the Southern Ocean from the port of Ushuaia, Argentina.
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