
Devon Island, Nunavut.
'Devon Island' is the second-largest of the
Queen Elizabeth Islands,
Nunavut,
Canada, the
27th largest island in the world and
Canada's 6th largest island. The largest uninhabited island on
Earth, Devon Island comprises 55,247 km² (21,331 mi²) of
Precambrian gneiss and
Paleozoic siltstones and
shales. The highest point of the island is at 6,299 feet/1,920 meters.
Because of its relatively high elevation and its extreme northern latitude, it supports only a meagre population of
musk oxen and small birds and mammals; the island does support
hypolith communities. Animal life is concentrated in the Truelove Lowland area of the island, which has a favourable
microclimate and supports relatively lush Arctic vegetation. Temperatures during the brief (40 to 55 days) growing season seldom exceed 10 °C (50 °F), and in winter can plunge to as low as -50 °C (-58 °F). With a polar
desert ecology, Devon Island receives very little precipitation.
Devon Island is also notable for the presence of the
Haughton impact crater, created some 39 million years ago when a meteorite about 2 km (1.2 mi) in diameter crashed into what were then forests. The impact left a crater approximately 23 km (14 mi) in diameter, which was a lake for several million years. The crater is now considered one of Earth's best
Mars analog sites and is the summer home of the
Haughton-Mars Project.

Devon Island region

Satellite photo montage of Devon Island and its neighbours
History
An outpost was established at
Dundas Harbour () in August
1924 as part of a government presence intended to curb foreign
whaling and other activity. The outpost was leased to
Hudson's Bay Company in
1933.
The collapse of fur prices and the need to cut relief expenses led to the dispersal of 53
Baffin Island Inuit families on the island in
1934. It was considered a disaster due to wind conditions and the much colder climate, and the Inuit chose to leave in
1936. Dundas Harbour was populated again in the late 1940s to maintain a patrol presence, but it was closed again in
1951 due to ice difficulties.
In July
2004 Devon Island became the temporary home for five scientists and two journalists, who were to use the
Marslike environment to simulate living and working on the Red Planet. The Flashline MARS (
Mars Arctic Research Station) project entered its third season in 2004. A complementary program,
NASAs
Haughton Mars Project (HMP) is conducting
geological,
hydrological,
botanical, and
microbiological studies in this harsh environment, and entered its eighth field season the same year.
Only the ruins of a few buildings remain at Dundas Harbour today.
References
★
NASA Haughton-Mars project
★
Truelove Lowland summary and pictures
★
Sea islands: Atlas of Canada; Natural Resources Canada
External links
★
Arctic and Alpine Research Group, University of Alberta
★
Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station (FMARS), The Mars Society