Iturup

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Iturup
Disputed island
Other names: Russian: Итуру́п; Japanese: 択捉島; Ainu:エトゥオロ
IturupSTS112-E-5662.PNG
NASA picture of Iturup's southern end with volcano Berutarube and small clouds
Geography
Iturup is located in Russia
Iturup

Iturup is located in Japan
Iturup (off the coast of Hokkaidō)
Location Sea of Okhotsk
Coordinates 45°02′N 147°37′E / 45.033°N 147.617°E / 45.033; 147.617
Archipelago Kuril Islands
Area 3,139 square kilometres (776,000 acres)
Length 200 kilometres (120 mi)
Width 27 kilometres (17 mi)
Highest point Stokap
1,634 metres (5,361 ft)
Administered by
 Russia
Oblast Sakhalin
Claimed by
 Japan
Prefecture Hokkaidō
 Russia
Oblast Sakhalin
Demographics
Population 7,500 (as of 2003)

Iturup (Russian: Итуру́п; Ainu: エトゥオロ, Etuworop-sir; Japanese: 択捉島, Etorofu-tō) is the largest island of the South Kuril Islands. It is the northernmost island in the southern Kuril/Chishima islands, and though it is presently controlled by Russia, Japan also claims this island (see Kuril Islands dispute). It was until WWII owned by Japan, but Russia forced the Japanese living there to leave.

Iturup is located near the southern end of the Kuril/Chishima chain, between Kunashiri (19 km to the SW) and Urup (37 km to the NE). The town of Kurilsk, administrative center of Kurilsky District, is located roughly midway along its western shore.

The strait between Iturup and Urup is known as the Vries Strait, after Dutch explorer Maarten Gerritsz Vries, the first recorded European to explore the area.[1]

Contents

[edit] Geography

Iturup consists of volcanic massifs and mountain ridges. A series of a dozen volcanoes running NE to SW form the backbone of the island, the highest being Stokap (1,634 m) in the central part of Iturup. The shores of the island are high and abrupt. The vegetation mostly consists of spruce, larch, pine, fir, and mixed deciduous forests with alder, lianas and Kuril bamboo underbrush. The mountains are covered with birch and Siberian Dwarf Pine scrub, herbaceous flowers or bare rocks.

Volcanos of Iturup

[edit] History

Japanese inhabitants of the island at a riverside picnic in 1933

Initially inhabited by the Ainu, Japanese Shichirobei and his fellows drifted and reached Iturup at 1661. The island saw both a Russian settlement (late 18th century) and a Japanese garrison (1800) at the site of the present-day Kurilsk. In 1855 Iturup was ceded to Japan by the Treaty of Shimoda. Its name comes from the Ainu エトゥオロ (Etuworop), meaning "Place possessing [many] capes."

On 26 November 1941 a Japanese carrier fleet left Hitokappu Bay (Japanese: 単冠湾), on the eastern shore of Iturup, and sailed for an attack on the American base of Pearl Harbor.

In 1945, according to decisions of the Yalta Conference, it was occupied by the Soviet Union after Japan's defeat in World War II. The Japanese inhabitants were expelled to mainland Japan.[2] In 1956 the two countries agreed to restore diplomatic relations, but the peace treaty, as of 2007, has not been concluded due to the disputed status of Iturup and other islands Japan and Russia continues to claim.

A Soviet Anti-Air Defense (PVO) airfield, Burevestnik (English: storm-petrel), is located on the island and since the 1950s has been home for a number of Mikoyan fighter jets. In 1968, Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253 was intercepted over the Kuriles and forced to land at Burevestnik with 214 American troops bound for Vietnam. An older airfield, Vetrovoe, exists on the eastern part of the island and may have been used primarily by Japanese forces during World War II.

Administratively this island belongs to the Sakhalin Oblast of the Russian Federation.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dutch exploration
  2. ^ Takahara, "Nemuro raid survivor"

[edit] External links


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