ILULISSAT,
Greenland (AP) -- It is one of the most barren and
inhospitable places to live on the planet. Yet the
Arctic landscape of Greenland attracts thousands of
visitors yearly who marvel at the astounding beauty
of icebergs, glaciers and a vast ice cap.
The
Kangia fjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site outside
this western Greenland town, offers one of the most
dramatic views of the forces of nature in motion.
Enormous blocks of ice break off with a thunderous
roar from the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier and into the
fjord before beginning their silent 25-mile voyage
out to the Arctic Sea.
Tourists
wrapped in blankets watch the spectacle from cutters,
zigzagging between the massive ice blocks, while others
swoop down over the glacier in helicopters.
"I
have never seen anything like this. The glacier is
fantastic," said Javier Gonzales Garcia, 42,
of Barcelona, Spain. "These are mountains like
we have in Spain but they are of ice and disappear
in the ocean. I will tell my grandchildren about this
when I get old."
Some
30,000 tourists visit the world's largest island every
year, with the bulk going to Ilulissat, which means
"icebergs" in Greenlandic, which is spoken
by the indigenous Inuits.
More
than 80 percent of visitors come from Denmark, which
Greenland is part of as a semiautonomous territory.
Other Scandinavians, Germans, French and Britons also
find their way here -- although it is considered an
extreme destination for them, too.
"Greenland
is attracting people who want to try something different,
really different," said Hans Peter Poulsen of
the Greenland Tourism and Business Council. "There
is no mass tourism here."
Traveling
to and within Greenland is expensive because of its
size and remote location. The island stretches 1,655
miles from south to north, and is four times larger
than France. The vast ice cap covers 85 percent of
the island.
There
are no roads connecting towns and settlements, so
transportation is by plane, helicopter and dogsled,
or by boat during the ice-free summer.
"The
infrastructure is a huge problem and a giant challenge,"
Poulsen said.
Dogsleds,
kayaks, culture
Dogsled
rides are offered in Sisimiut or Ilulissat, Greenland's
third-largest town, where the 4,400 residents are
outnumbered by more than 6,000 sled dogs.
Daring
visitors paddle in kayaks between icebergs or camp
in tents in the Arctic wilderness. Others hike the
10,560-foot-thick ice cap, or join a photo safari,
hoping to snap shots of musk oxen and reindeer on
land, or whales and seals at sea.
Don't
expect to cross paths with any polar bears, though.
Most Greenlanders have never seen one, as the animals
seldom venture into populated areas from their habitat
in the more inaccessible northern parts.
In
coastal towns, tourists can board a cutter or fishing
boat for a late-night cruise among the icebergs. They
steer you so close you can break off a small chunk
of ice, frozen for 100,000 years, and slip it into
your drink in the midnight sun.
Visitors
can get a taste of the local culture in Kulusuk, a
village of 230 people on the thinly populated, wind-swept
east coast, where locals perform Inuit drum dances.
The village has no paved streets, but there is a modern
hotel next to a small airfield.
"The
tourists who come here are typically Europeans and
Americans on a round trip to the Nordic countries,"
said Patrick M. Abrahamsen of the Hotel Kulusuk. They
come via Reykjavik, the capital of neighboring Iceland,
"to get a quick feel of Greenland."
Tourists
are not the only ones interested in Greenland. Scientists
too, are eyeing it -- but with worry. Many scientists
believe the thinning of the ice cap that covers the
world's largest island is the result of global warming,
with dire implications for various aspects of life
here, from fishing to local hunters' dogsledding on
the ice-covered fjords and inlets.
In
Qassiarsuk, a hamlet near Narsarsuaq, southern Greenland,
is a replica of what has been called the first Christian
church built in North America, to which Greenland
geographically belongs.
The
Viking Eric the Red -- whose son Leif Ericson is believed
to have landed in North America 500 years before Columbus
-- built the tiny 10-foot wooden church with a grass
roof next to his home.
Ilulissat,
too, has more to offer than calving glaciers and icebergs.
At
the mouth of the Kangia fjord is the archaeological
site of Sermermiut, where the earliest human settlement
on the island was established 4,400 years ago.
In
the Ilulissat hinterland, where the rocks are covered
by soil and moss, more than 300 different species
of plants, including crowberries, lousewort, marsh
tea and Niviarsiaq -- Greenland's national flower
-- can be found.
Every
town or larger village has at least one museum.
Ilulissat
has a museum for whaling and fishing, and one for
explorer Knud Rasmussen, who documented Eskimo culture
in the early 20th century. The permanent exhibit sits
in a red wooden house in the middle of the town where
he was born in 1879.
Nuuk,
the capital 372 miles south of Ilulissat, houses Greenland's
National Museum, displaying local history, well-preserved
mummies of Inuits, kayaks and other artifacts. Sisimiut,
on the Arctic Circle, has an archaeological museum
dedicated to the Inuits, who arrived here from Siberia
more than 4,000 years ago.
Kangerlussuaq,
near Sisimiut, and Narsarsuaq are both former U.S.
Air Force bases with permanent exhibits on the American
presence there.
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2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This
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