Area: |
Kamchatka Region covers an estimated 472,000 sq kilometers.
Chukotka Region covers an estimated 737,700 sq kilometers.
Klyuchevskaya Sopka at 4688 meters is the highest volcano on the Kamchatka Peninsula and also the highest volcano in Eurasia.
Kamchatka is often called the land of Fire and Volcano’s. It is situated right on the border of the Asian and Pacific Tectonic plates. Mountain formation and other geological processes are still very active in this region. The present relief of Kamchatka reflects its rich geological past. The western coast is fairly flat, unbroken and featureless in contrast with the east coast with its numerous fiords, gulfs and steep slopes plunging down to the sea.
Kamchatka and the Kuril Islands are the only regions of recent volcanic activity in Russia. Earthquakes and eruptions are quite frequent and it deservedly belongs to the so called “Pacific-ring-of-fire”. There are about 300 volcano’s in Kamchatka, 29 of them are still active.
The landscape of Chukotka is dominated by tundra interspersed with low mountains with some areas of taiga in the south and west.
These regions were first inhabited about 15,000 years ago. The first settlers were ancient hunters, the ancestors of the North American Indians. 10,000 years ago local culture started taking shape with the arrival of groups migrating from Asia to Alaska. They were the ancestors of the present Eskimos, Aleuts and Itelmen. Their culture and lifestyle were based on the peoples wide use of marine and continental flora and fauna.
The first explorers came to the region in the early 17th century. Between 1658 and 1661 Ivan Kamchatyi (from where the region gets it’s name) crossed the Peninsula starting up the Lesnaya River from the west. The end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th centuries was a period when interest in the Far Eastern Territories and Kamchatka grew rapidly driven in part by the economic development of Russia initiated by Peter the Great.
In 1697 a group of Cossacks led by Vladimir Atlasov marched south of Anadyr to Kamchatka. He was the first person to describe Kamchatka’s world of wild nature, customs and traditions of the native people. In 1724 Tsar Peter the Great commissioned the Danish navigator, Vitus Bering to explore the seas of North Eastern Russia. He set out on his first expedition in 1725 but it was abandoned due to bad weather. In 1728 he returned and his ships St Peter and St Paul sailed into the sheltered Avacha Bay. Petropavlovsk, the capital of Kamchataka was named after his two ships. He continued on to discover and map the Aleutian, Komander and Kuril Islands and to discover the strait named after him, separating Asia from North America.
This expedition traverses a wide range of habitats, more than almost any other expedition of its type. From Kamchatka’s birch forest and rocky coastline and Islands to the dry trundas of the Chukotka Peninsula. The wildlife includes among other species caribou, wolves, brown bears and Arctic Fox. Marine mammals are numerous including walrus, Stella sealions and fur seals. The potential bird list is huge as it will include many of the Arctic migratory species.
Click here for a detailed Bird Checklist
-
Read other comments"I can truly say that, for all of the reading beforehand, nothing can compare with actually being there and seeing everything as it actually is."
Doreen, United Kingdom - 20/09/2007