Home arrow News arrow Arctic and Antarctic News 
Wednesday, 08 October 2008
  DXInfo, you DX web resource
  • Click to jump there
  • Click to jump there
  • Click to jump there
  • Click to jump there
Main Menu
Home
Welcome to DXInfo!
Call/QSL search database
Contact DXInfo admin
Guestbook
Links
News (all content)
News
News (miscellaneous)
News Archive
Search for text
DXInfo (DX & QSL Manager)
DXInfo Polls results
DX Calendar
Beacon Transmi. Schedule
Getting QSL's-Tips
IARU Band Plans
LOTW
Most Needed Entities 2007
Latest News
User login
DXInfo Counters
 Visits today: 23
 Visits yesterday: 117
 Visits month: 821
 Pages today: 300
 Pages yesterday: 1268
 Pages this month: 7856
 Data since: 2008-06-20
Statistics
  Members: 150
  News: 552
  Web Links: 75
  Visitors: 246865
Archive
Non-profite links
Masias Turismo Rural
Ham Info Bar
Pati Catala


Syndicate
ALL |0-9 |A |B |C |D |E |F |G |H |I |J |K |L |M |N |O |P |Q |R |S |T |U |V |W |X |Y |Z

News (all content) News Arctic and Antarctic News

Search by tag : AO5URD, Hesperides, polar, ship, News, Antarctica


Antarctica, But Sliced Differently Print E-mail
Written by Xavier   
Sunday, 16 December 2007

Antartica


Seven countries currently 'officially' claim territory in Antarctica. A map of these claims looks like a pie chart, as all are centred on the geographical South Pole(*). If all those claims would be realised, one would be able to visit those seven countries by simply walking in a circle around that one point. But all territorial claims on Antarctica were 'frozen' by the Antarctic Treaty of 1961, which also stipulated that thereafter, no new claim could be made. Present claimants are:

a.. France (Terre Adélie, since 1924)
b.. Chile (Antárctica, since 1940)
c.. Argentina (Antártida Argentina, since 1943)
d.. Australia (Australian Antarctic Territory, since 1933)
e.. United Kingdom (British Antarctic Territory, since 1908)
f.. Norway (Dronning Maud Land, since 1939; Peter I Island, since 1929)
g.. New Zealand (Ross Dependency, since 1923)


All claims apply to the areas south of 60°S, which is the northern limit of the Antarctic Treaty. The area between 90°W and 150°W remains unclaimed, except for Peter I Island, Norway's claim on this territory being the only one in Antarctica that is not a sector (a 'slice of the pie').

This status quo has been maintained ever since 1961, certain signatories - notably the US and the USSR - nevertheless expressing their reservations about certain treaty restrictions. Which could be dangerous, as some claims overlap - notably between Chile, Argentina and the UK. The latter two countries already went to war over the nearby (but non-Antarctic) Falkland Islands in 1982.

A Brazilian geostrategist Therezinha de Castro proposes a different way of approaching the divvying-up of the South Pole - a method which of course is more beneficial to Brazil's as yet unrecognised Antarctic claims, but which would also eliminate the inherent danger of overlapping claims. It goes like this: all non-South American nations withdraw their claims and bases from the South American sector of Anterctica (from 0°W to 90°W), and this sector is divided among the South American nations according to defrontação. This frontage signifies the 'open' sea acces to Antarctica via meridional lines. This would diminish the Chilean and Argentine sectors, give Uruguay, Peru and Ecuador a slice - and would give Brazil the biggest sector.

On reading an Economist article about British territorial claims in Antarctica, Paul Youlten recently came up with a similar idea. "The useful little map (included in the Economist article) got me wondering about which other countries might also lay claim to a slice of Antarctica based on their having un-restricted southern passage across open seas to the continent."

He used the 'frontage' principle not just for South America, but for the whole world. For a bit more about the sources and methods used by Paul Youlten, please click here to read his post on the subject. Via the Youlten method of frontage-ing, no less than 47 countries can lay a claim to Antarctica. To wit:

a.. From the Americas: USA, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Greenland.
b.. From Africa: Senegal, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Namibia, South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya, Somalia and Madagascar.
c.. From Asia: Yemen, Oman, Iran, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Burma and Indonesia.
d.. From Oceania: Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Zealand.


Remarkably, Iceland is the only European country with direct Antarctic access,
unless you count the UK (via the Falklands and South Georgia). "Unexpected
results include the surprising news that Somalia, Yemen and Oman could make
claims," says Mr Youlten. "As well as Iran, which I suspect might be tempted to
set up an 'Icelamic Republic' - sorry, I couldn't resist that one."

Will a re-distribution like this ever happen? It reminds one of the attempts to broaden the UN Security Council: the vetoing powers might not all be world powers anymore, but they can still. veto any change, for example to include one vetoing member per continent. This will continue until the UN Security Council or its vetoing members achieve total irrelevance. Similarly, a 'fairer' division of Antarctica will not happen until the Treaty signatories are weak enough, or the other parties are strong enough. Which is not anytime soon.

(*) even though the Norwegian claim is only defined east-west, not north-south, and therefore in theory does not extend all the way down to the Pole itself.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Mauricio Gurini - LU7DR
North Patagonia DX Group www.grupodedx.com.ar
Mediterraneo DX Club # 191 www.mdxc.org
Email / MSN: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Ing. White - Argentina
Skype: mauridr

Last Updated ( Sunday, 06 January 2008 )
 
< Prev   Next >
Live DX Spots
HF Conditions/Forecast
Sponsored Links
Translate this page:
Most Popular Articles
Poll of the month
Which PHONE band is your favorite?
 
Who's Online
We have 1 guest online
Visitors by Country
This month 's Top 10
US United States 29% United States
IT Italy 11% Italy
FR France 8% France
DE Germany 6% Germany
JP Japan 6% Japan
PL Poland 5% Poland
ES Spain 4% Spain
UK United Kingdom 3% United Kingdom
UA Ukraine 2% Ukraine
LT Lithuania 2% Lithuania
Visits from 114 countries
DXInfo Recommends
Get DXInfo search plugin
Get FIREFOX
Web hosting