the Arctic 1882: First International Polar Year
9 October 1882
9 Oct 1882
Claiming the Far North
1818–1875 Partitioning the North Pacific
1875–1939 Claiming the Far North
1939–1945 World War II in the Arctic
1945–pres The Arctic Transformed
First International Polar Year
9 Oct 1882 First International Polar Year
5 Aug 1892 Opening up Greenland
13 Jun 1898 Klondike Gold Rush
7 Jun 1905 Norwegian Independence
6 Apr 1909 Race to the North Pole
6 Apr 1917 Great War and the Arctic
21 Aug 1918 Allied Intervention in Russia
6 Apr 1920 Far Eastern Republic
31 Oct 1921 Wrangel Island Fiasco
20 Jan 1925 Soviet-Japanese Peace Treaty
14 May 1926 Arctic Flights
12 Jul 1932 Erik the Red's Land
By the 1870s polar exploration was becoming increasingly nationalistic, but some realized that a coordinated approach involving multiple simultaneous expeditions might be more fruitful. This thinking led to the International Polar Year, when from the summer of 1882 to that of 1883, researchers from Austria-Hungary, Britain, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and the US operated meteorological stations around the Arctic circle in what was to be the first great international scientific project.