
Victoria Island, northern Canada.

Closeup map of Victoria Island

Satellite photograph montage of Victoria Island
'Victoria Island' is an island in the
Canadian Arctic Archipelago and straddles the boundary between
Nunavut and the
Northwest Territories of
Canada. It is the
9th largest island of the world, and at is
Canada's second largest island and nearly double the size of
Newfoundland (or only very slightly smaller than the size of the island of
Great Britain). The western third of the island belongs to the
Inuvik Region in the Northwest Territories and the remainder is part of Nunavut's
Kitikmeot Region.
Viscount Melville Sound lies to the north, and the
M'Clintock Channel and
Victoria Strait lie eastward. On the west are
Amundsen Gulf and
Banks Island, which is separated from Victoria by a long sound called the
Prince of Wales Strait. To the south (from west to east) lies the
Dolphin and Union Strait,
Austin Bay,
Coronation Gulf and the
Dease Strait.
The southern waterways, and sometimes the Prince of Wales Strait, form part of the disputed
Northwest Passage which the
Government of Canada claims are
Canadian Internal Waters while other nations state are either
territorial waters or
international waters.
Victoria Island is an island of
peninsulas, having a heavily indented coastline with many
inlets. In the east, pointing northwards, is the Storkerson Peninsula, which ends with the Goldsmith Channel, the body of water separating Victoria from
Stefansson Island. The Storkerson Peninsula is separated from the island's north-central areas by Hadley Bay, a major inlet. Another, broad peninsula is found in the north, Prince Albert Peninsula. This ends at the Prince of Wales Strait. In the south, and pointing westwards, is the Wollaston Peninsula, separated from the island's central areas by Prince Albert Sound.
Victoria Island reaches an elevation of in the Shaler Mountains in the north-central region.
As of the
Canada 2006 Census the population of the island is 1,875; 1,477 in Nunavut and 398 in the Northwest Territories. The largest settlement on the island is
Cambridge Bay, which lies on the south-east coast and is in Nunavut.
Ulukhaktok is on the west coast and is in the Northwest Territories.
Trading posts, such as Fort Collinson on the northwest coast, have long since been abandoned.
The island is named after
Queen Victoria, the
Canadian sovereign from 1867 to 1901. The features bearing the name "Prince Albert" are, of course, named after
her consort.
Although Victoria Island is located in Canada, it is nowhere near the city of
Victoria, British Columbia, which is on
Vancouver Island.