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The Far North of Greenland is sparsely inhabited and exceptionally cold. Even getting here is an achievement, and getting around is an exercise in planning, as the tourist infrastructure found in other parts of Greenland simply is not present here.

Nunâ island east of Upernavik and south of Aappilattoq

Regions

Cities

Other destinations

  • ATOW1996 is a tiny uninhabited island (about 10 meters across and 1 meter high) in the Arctic Ocean, north of Greenland, and is currently considered the northernmost piece of permanent land on Earth—though there are a couple of unconfirmed potential islands further north. So far the only sighting of the island was in a 1996 exploration; beyond that you'd have to be incredibly resourceful and adventurous to make it here and back alive. The nearest city is Qaanaaq.

Understand

Talk

Get in

  • Air Greenland is basically the only option for tourists. Tickets are expensive and the schedule is sparse. Airports exists at Qaanaaq and Upernavik.
  • There is also the Thule Air base, which belongs to the U.S. It has flights directly from the U.S., but only for people working there or invited.

Get around

  • Air Greenland operates helicopter flights from the airports to settlements without airports.

See

Do

Eat

Drink

Stay safe

Go next

This region travel guide to Northern Greenland is an outline and may need more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. If there are Cities and Other destinations listed, they may not all be at usable status or there may not be a valid regional structure and a "Get in" section describing all of the typical ways to get here. Please plunge forward and help it grow!

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