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'Kunashir Island' (, ''Kunashiri''; , meaning ''Black Island'' in
Ainu) is the southernmost island in the
Kuril chain in
Russia's
Sakhalin Oblast. It is one of the islands in the Kuril chain which are
claimed by
Japan.
It lies between the
straits of Kunashir, Catherine, Izmena, and South Kuril. Kunashir is visible from the nearby Japanese island of
Hokkaido.
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Area: 1,490 km²
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Length: 123 km
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Width: 4–30 km
Kunashir is formed by four
volcanoes which were separate islands but have since joined together by low-lying areas with
lakes and
hot springs. All these volcanoes are still active:
Tyatya (1,819 m),
Smirnov,
Mendeleev, and
Golovnin).
The island is formed with the
volcanic and
crystalline rocks. The
climate is of
monsoon type. The
vegetation mostly consists of
spruce,
pine,
fir, and mixed
deciduous forests with
lianas and Kuril
bamboo underbrush. The
mountains are covered with
birch and
Siberian Dwarf Pine scrub,
herbaceous
flowers or bare rocks.
In 1789 Kunashiri was one of the settings of the
Menashi-Kunashir Battle in which
Ainu revolted against Japanese tradespeople and colonists. The Russian navigator
Vasily Golovnin attempted to map and explore the island in 1819, but was apprehended by Japanese authorities and spent two years in prison.
Primary economic activity is
fishery and
fishing industry. The island has a
port next to the village of
Yuzhno-Kurilsk, administrative center of
Yuzhno-Kurilsky District and the island's main settlement.
See also
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Kuril Islands dispute
References