The Bering Strait Crossing: A 21st Century Frontier between East and WestThe Bering Strait Crossing is the epic story of the Intercontinental Divide. The ancient waterway - when the fog clears over the Diomede Islands - is among the world’s most stunning vistas. This is where the 53-mile wide strait, named for Danish explorer Vitus Bering (1681-1741), separates four continents across the Europe-Asia landmass and the Americas. Extremes of climate, isolation, and geopolitical tension have all interfaced to create the perception of a frozen limbo at the edge of the world. Yet the Bering Strait is the world’s geographical crossroads - linking East with West - for nowhere else on the globe is it possible to cross the Pacific Rim between Asia and the Americas. In the modern era, various schemes have been proposed - rail, ferry, tunnel - by which to cross the strait. Since the end of the Cold War, a scheduled air service has been in place. The strait remains undefeated in terms of a terrestrial link between the USA and Russia - so far. The author uncovers a world-shaping revelation: that the Bering Strait has the potential to become a global shipping nexus via the Northwest Passage and the Northern Sea Route between Europe, North America, and Asia. The self-induced amnesia of the long Cold War years is yielding to a fresh outlook between East and West across the strait. In a world thirsty for energy resources and trade, the prospect for US-Russian cooperation across the northern Pacific Rim is tantalising in its multiplicity - and vastness - with profound implications for the global economy. In this twenty first century, the Beringia corridors (N-S, E-W) have the potential to unite the world. |
From inside the book
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... Cape Dezhnev gives way to the Russian Far East and, beyond, Siberia. Photo: courtesy © Aeromap US, Inc. Live-view: Diomede Islands (web-cam): http://www.bsdc.org " We do not know this country . Vitus Jonassen.
... Cape Dezhnev in the Russian Far East and Cape Prince of Wales in Alaska. As straits go, the waterway is more of a meeting place of vast headlands, between the Chukotka Peninsula and the Seward Peninsula. A familiar, Atlantic-biased map ...
... Cape , four of the koches had been lost . The survivors - Dezhnev among them - sailed onwards , along the Chukchi coast . Then , as they reached the mouth of the Anadyr River “ . . .by God's judgement all our koches were wrecked by the ...
... Dezhnev's route . Dezhnev is remembered today by the naming of Cape Dezhnev , the easternmost extremity of the Eurasian landmass . An abandoned lighthouse marks the promontory . In some alternative history , where there are no clerical ...
... Dezhnev's voyage remained buried in the Yakutsk archives . In Germany , though , the great Gottfried Leibniz had advised the Russian Academy of Scientists of an “ icy cape " in that remote region . There was corroborative 'evidence ...
Contents
11 | |
19 | |
31 | |
40 | |
A Footnote to Gvozdev | 55 |
Captain Cooks Third Voyage | 61 |
Beyond the Two Islands Return to the Sandwich Islands | 73 |
W H Seward has his Way | 89 |
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The Bering Strait Crossing: A 21st Century Frontier between East and West James A. Oliver Limited preview - 2006 |