(Redirected from Point Barrow, Alaska)'Point Barrow' or 'Nuvuk', is a
headland on the
Arctic coast of the
U.S. state of
Alaska, located 15 km (9 mi) northeast of
Barrow. It is the
northernmost point of the
United States, at . The distance to the
North Pole is 2078 km (1292 mi / 1122 nm).
The first
European to discover the point was
English geographer
Frederick William Beechey, who encountered it in
1825. It is named for Sir
John Barrow, a statesman and geographer of the British
Admiralty. The water around the point is normally ice-free for only two or three months a year, but this period is increasing,
[1] possibly due to
global warming. Point Barrow has served as a jumping-off point for many
Arctic expeditions, including the
Wilkins-Detroit Arctic Expeditions and the
April 15,
1928 Eielson-
Wilkins flight across the Arctic Ocean to
Spitsbergen.
Point Barrow is close to site of the airplane crash that on
August 15,
1935, killed two famous individuals:
aviator Wiley Post and his sole passenger, the widely respected
social commentator Will Rogers.
Between 1965 and 1972, the point was used as a launch site for
Nike Cajun and
Nike Apache sounding rockets. It is also the site of a
Global Atmosphere Watch atmospheric monitoring station.

Panorama showing the tip of Point Barrow
References
1. http://seagrant.uaf.edu/nosb/papers/2005/seward-jeannot.html
External links
★
Rocket launches at Point Barrow