Konstantina Bay

Konstantina Bay (Russian: Zaliv Konstantina) is a small bay in the northwestern Sea of Okhotsk, just south of the Shantar Islands. It is a western branch of the larger Academy Bay to the east. The bay is about 9.6 km (6 mi) in diameter and its entrance is about 4.8 km (3 mi) wide. Spring tides rise 3.8 m (12.5 ft), while neaps rise 2.7 m (9 ft).[1]

Flora and fauna

The bay's shores are covered with fir, larch, pine, birch, and various other species of trees.[1] Waders use the southern part of Konstantina Bay as a stopover during their summer migration. The most abundant species is Terek sandpiper.[2]

History

It was frequented by American and Russian whaleships targeting bowhead whales between 1854 and 1885. The former called it Taylor's Bay,[3][4] after J. Taylor, captain of the ship Maria Theresa (330 tons), of New Bedford, who frequented the area in the early 1850s.[5][6]

References

  1. United States. (1918). Asiatic Pilot, Volume 1: East coast of Siberia, Sakhalin Island and Chosen. Washington: Hydrographic Office.
  2. Pronkevich, V. V. (1998). "Migration of waders in the Khabarovsk region of the Far East". International Wader Studies 10: 425-430.
  3. Newburyport, of Stonington, Aug. 1, 1854. In Whalemen's Shipping List & Merchants' Transcript (Vol. XII, No. 41, December 12, 1854, p. 314, New Bedford).
  4. Hudson, of Fairhaven, July 5–22, 1857, Kendall Whaling Museum (KWM); Java, of New Bedford, Aug. 15–17, 1865, Aug. 28, 1866, July 20–21, 1867, Nicholson Whaling Collection; Sea Breeze, of New Bedford, July 16, July 30-Aug. 2, 1874, G. W. Blunt White Library; Mary and Helen II, of San Francisco, Aug. 13-15, 1885, KWM.
  5. J. E. Donnell, of New Bedford, July 24, 1852, Martha's Vineyard Museum.
  6. Starbuck, Alexander (1878). History of the American Whale Fishery from Its Earliest Inception to the year 1876. Castle. ISBN 1-55521-537-8.

54°04′52″N 137°22′44″E


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