Providence Bay (, ''Bukhta Provideniya'') is a
fjord
In physical geography, a fjord (also spelled fiord in New Zealand English; ) is a long, narrow sea inlet with steep sides or cliffs, created by a glacier. Fjords exist on the coasts of Antarctica, the Arctic, and surrounding landmasses of the n ...
in the southern coast of the
Chukchi Peninsula
The Chukchi Peninsula (also Chukotka Peninsula or Chukotski Peninsula; , ''Chukotskiy poluostrov'', short form , ''Chukotka''), at about 66° N 172° W, is the easternmost peninsula of Asia. Its eastern end is at Cape Dezhnev near the village ...
of northeastern Siberia. It was a popular rendezvous, wintering spot, and provisioning spot for whalers and traders in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Emma Harbor (now Komsomolskaya Bay) is a large sheltered bay in the eastern shore of Providence Bay.
Provideniya
Provideniya ( rus, Провиде́ния, p=prəvʲɪˈdʲenʲɪjə; Chukchi: ) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) and the administrative center of Providensky District of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia, located on Komsomolskay ...
and Ureliki settlements and
Provideniya Bay Airport stand on the Komsomolskaya Bay. Plover Bay in English sources sometimes refers specifically to the
anchorage
Anchorage, officially the Municipality of Anchorage, is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Alaska. With a population of 291,247 at the 2020 census, it contains nearly 40 percent of the state's population. The Anchorage metropolita ...
behind Napkum Spit within Providence Bay (also called Port Providence) but was commonly used as a synonym for Providence Bay; Russian 19th century sources used the term for an anchorage within Providence Bay.
[Popov, chapter 8]
Plover Bay takes its name from
HMS ''Plover'', a British ship which overwintered in Emma Harbor in 1848–1849. HMS ''Plover'' with captain Thomas E. L. Moore left
Plymouth
Plymouth ( ) is a port city status in the United Kingdom, city and unitary authority in Devon, South West England. It is located on Devon's south coast between the rivers River Plym, Plym and River Tamar, Tamar, about southwest of Exeter and ...
in January 1848 for the
Bering Sea
The Bering Sea ( , ; rus, Бе́рингово мо́ре, r=Béringovo móre, p=ˈbʲerʲɪnɡəvə ˈmorʲe) is a marginal sea of the Northern Pacific Ocean. It forms, along with the Bering Strait, the divide between the two largest landmasse ...
to find the lost
Franklin Expedition
Franklin's lost expedition was a failed British voyage of Arctic exploration led by Captain (Royal Navy), Captain Sir John Franklin that departed England in 1845 aboard two ships, and , and was assigned to traverse the last unnavigated sec ...
. On October 17, 1848, Moore anchored his ship in a safe harbor; he is given credit for the name Providence Bay and for the first successful wintering of a ship in Bering Sea region.
[Gal] Lieutenant
William Hulme Hooper
__NOTOC__
William Hulme Hooper (13 June 1826 – 19 May 1854) was an English Royal Navy officer and Arctic explorer who served on under Commander Thomas E. L. Moore, which sailed out of Plymouth, England, in 1848, on a mission to find the ...
of the ''Plover'' attributes the name Port Emma (or Emma's Harbor) to Captain Moore but provides no explanation of the choice of name.
Geography
The entrance to Providence Bay is delineated by Mys Lysaya Golova (East Head, Baldhead Point) on the east and by Mys Lesovskogo on the west. Mys Lysaya Golova is about west-northwest of
Cape Chukotsky.
Providence Bay is about 8 km wide at its mouth and 34 km long (measured along the midline). It is about 4 km wide through much of its length below Emma Harbor, and about 2.5 km wide just above the juncture. The lower part of the bay runs roughly northeast, while the upper part (above the branch shown as Ked Bay) dog-legs north and is about 2 km wide. Depth soundings (USCGS 1928) show at the entrance and a maximum depth of . A more recent chart (USCS 2000) shows depths of at the entrance.
Emma Harbor has been described as "the best harbor on the Asiatic coast north of
Petropavlosk...." and is currently the only important harbor on Providence Bay.
It is a fjord in its own right, about 14 km from the mouth of Providence Bay and about 1.5 x 6 km in extent with depths shown from . Besides Emma Harbor there are three or four other sheltered anchorages within Providence Bay that are named by early writers: Port Providence, Cache Bay (also Ked Bay or Cash Cove), Telegraph Harbor, and Snug Harbor. Port Providence (now Buhkta Slavyanka or Reid Plover) is the anchorage behind Plover Spit, which provides a natural breakwater. It currently serves as the quarantine and hazardous cargo anchorage for Provideniya. Plover Spit is called Napkum Spit in an 1869 account; it projects into the bay from the eastern shore about 8 km from the mouth of the fjord. It has its origin in the moraine left by the glacier that carved the fjord. The tip of the spit is Mys Gaydamak. Cache bay is the cove in the eastern shore of the fjord, north of Emma Harbor. Snug Harbor is located near the head of the bay, behind Whale Island. Telegraph Harbor is named for the
Western Union Telegraph Expedition of 1866-1867 which wintered there (remains of Western Union cabin were reportedly still standing in 1960). It may be the same as Snug Harbor. The
United States Coast and Geodetic Survey
The United States Coast and Geodetic Survey ( USC&GS; known as the Survey of the Coast from 1807 to 1836, and as the United States Coast Survey from 1836 until 1878) was the first scientific agency of the Federal government of the United State ...
chart shows the entire upper portion of the fjord as Vsadnik Bay. The Asiatic Pilot of 1909 refers to Vladimir Bay and Cache Bay, separated by Popov point, and notes that the bays are shallower above this point.
Plover Spit is site of an abandoned Eskimo village with characteristic semi-underground houses, a more recent village of
yaranga
A Yaranga ( Chukchi: ) is a tent-like traditional mobile home of some nomadic Northern indigenous peoples of Russia, such as Chukchi and Siberian Yupik.
A Yaranga is a cone-shaped or rounded reindeer-hide tent. It is built of a light wooden ...
s, and one of the
1869 eclipse observatories (see below). The U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey charts show the village at the base of the spit as Rirak, and starting in 1928 show a village Uredlak on the south shore of Emma Harbor The Soviet-era village of Plover was probably located on the mainland near the spit; it was damaged by a landslide and the inhabitants (including some relocated from Ureliki) were relocated to Provideniya.
[Krupnik] Nasskatulok, a Yupik village at the head of Plover Bay was reported by
Aurel Krause
Dr. Aurel Krause (December 30, 1848 – March 14, 1908) was a German geographer known today for his early ethnography of the Tlingit people, Tlingit Indians of southeast Alaska, published in 1885.
Krause was born in Polski Konopat, Polnisch K ...
(observed 1881) but not mentioned by
Waldemar Bogoras
Vladimir Germanovich Bogoraz (), born Natan Mendelevich Bogoraz () and used the literary pseudonym N. A. Tan (; – May 10, 1936), was a Russian revolutionary, writer and anthropologist, especially known for his studies of the Chukchi people in ...
(''ca.'' 1898) There were also villages on the coast. Aiwan (Avan), a
Yupik village, lay east of the bay between the sea and Lake
Istikhed
Istikhed () or Ystiget () is a lake in Providensky District, Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russian Federation.Google Earth
There are no permanent settlements on the shores of the lake. Provideniya lies to the north and the Provideniya Bay Airpor ...
(a freshwater lake named after the English toponym "East Head"; called Lake Moore in some English-language sources ). It was reportedly abandoned in 1942 due to concern it could be hit by Soviet Navy shells; another source has it evacuated in 1941 to make way for
coast-defense artillery; yet another source has it occupied into the 1950s. The USCGS chart shows a village Akatlak just west of the mouth of the bay.
History

Providence Bay and Emma Harbor do not appear on maps before 1850; it is thought they were visited by whalers in the period 1845-48 just prior to the ''
Plover
Plovers ( , ) are members of a widely distributed group of wader, wading birds of subfamily Charadriinae. The term "plover" applies to all the members of the subfamily, though only about half of them include it in their name.
Species lis ...
s visit. Providence Bay was probably visited by Russian explorer
Kurbat Ivanov
Kurbat Afanasyevich Ivanov (; died 1667) was a Cossack explorer of Siberia. He was the first Russian to encounter Lake Baikal, and to create the first map of the Russian Far East. He also is credited with creation of the early map of Chukotka a ...
in 1660 but his explorations of the
Gulf of Anadyr
The Gulf of Anadyr, or Anadyr Bay (), is a large bay on the Bering Sea in far northeast Siberia. It has a total surface area of
Location
The bay is roughly rectangular and opens to the southeast. The corners are (clockwise from the south) Cape ...
were not widely reported. ''Golden Gate'', a ship of the
Russian–American Telegraph Expedition, visited Plover Bay in September 1865, having just missed encounter with "the famed and dreaded"
CSS ''Shenandoah''.
Frederick Whymper, member of this expedition, reported that by this time "it was no uncommon thing to find several
whaling
Whaling is the hunting of whales for their products such as meat and blubber, which can be turned into a type of oil that was important in the Industrial Revolution. Whaling was practiced as an organized industry as early as 875 AD. By the 16t ...
vessels lying inside in summer". Whymper (and later
John Muir
John Muir ( ; April 21, 1838December 24, 1914), also known as "John of the Mountains" and "Father of the national park, National Parks", was a Scottish-born American naturalist, author, environmental philosopher, botanist, zoologist, glaciologi ...
) described the mountains around Plover Bay as "composed of an infinite number of fragments split up by action of frost... innumerable and many-coloured
lichen
A lichen ( , ) is a hybrid colony (biology), colony of algae or cyanobacteria living symbiotically among hypha, filaments of multiple fungus species, along with yeasts and bacteria embedded in the cortex or "skin", in a mutualism (biology), m ...
s and
moss
Mosses are small, non-vascular plant, non-vascular flowerless plants in the taxonomic phylum, division Bryophyta (, ) ''sensu stricto''. Bryophyta (''sensu lato'', Wilhelm Philippe Schimper, Schimp. 1879) may also refer to the parent group bryo ...
es are the only vegetation to be seen, except on a patch of open green country near Emma Harbour, where domesticated
reindeer
The reindeer or caribou (''Rangifer tarandus'') is a species of deer with circumpolar distribution, native to Arctic, subarctic, tundra, taiga, boreal, and mountainous regions of Northern Europe, Siberia, and North America. It is the only re ...
graze."
The area around Providence Bay provided good whaling in the early days, particularly in the fall; this may account for some of its popularity as a wintering spot. In 1860, the Supreme Court of Hawaii ruled in favor of eight seamen of the whaling brig ''Wailua'' of Honolulu which wintered in Plover Bay 1858-9 after staying too late into the fall. Captain Lass maintained he had become icebound unintentionally having entered the bay to take on water and remained because of the good whaling. The whaling in this instance was done from boats operating from the harbor, where the ship remained moored. The crew members alleged that Lass had planned on overwintering, subjecting them to hardship and extending their service in violation of their contract. The court ruled for the seamen, holding that although intention was not proved, Captain Lass's actions amounted to recklessness. Whymper describes witnessing the pursuit and processing of whales within the bay in 1866. In 1871, the whaling bark ''Oriole'', damaged by ice, limped or was towed into Plover Bay to attempt repairs. According to John Spears colorful account, Captain Hayes had taken his ship through the ice to reach open water off the Siberian coast, hoping to have the large schools of whales near Plover Bay to himself, but the ship hit a large ice floe. The ''Oriole'' was subsequently abandoned in the bay; in Spears account, she was tipped on her side for repairs when a hatch gave way, flooding and sinking the ship in minutes. By 1880, a visitor on the schooner ''Yukon'' found the village on the spit much reduced; whales were no longer abundant and many residents had moved west in search of better hunting. The village dogs had all died due to lack of food.
In 1875 Russian
clipper
A clipper was a type of mid-19th-century merchant sailing vessel, designed for speed. The term was also retrospectively applied to the Baltimore clipper, which originated in the late 18th century.
Clippers were generally narrow for their len ...
''
Gaydamak Gaydamak is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
* Alexandre Gaydamak (born 1976), Russian-French businessman
* Arcadi Gaydamak (born 1952), Russian-Israeli businessman and philanthropist, father of Alexandre
See also
* Haydamak
...
'' under command of
Sergey Tyrtov anchored in Providence Bay. Tyrtov, ordered to enforce
state monopoly
In economics, a government monopoly or public monopoly is a form of coercive monopoly in which a government agency or government corporation is the sole provider of a particular good or service and competition is prohibited by law. It is a monopoly ...
on coastal trading, distributed to local Chukchis printed leaflets addressed to foreign merchants. He then headed north to
Saint Lawrence Bay where he intercepted ''Timandra'', an American merchant boat involved in trading
walrus ivory
Walrus ivory, also known as morse, comes from two modified upper canines of a walrus. The tusks grow throughout life and may, in the Pacific walrus, attain a length of one metre. Walrus teeth are commercially carved and traded; the average wa ...
for alcohol.
[ In 1876 the mission was continued by captain Novosilsky on board of '' Vsadnik''. ''Vsadnik'' anchored in Plover Bay July 5, 1876, performed ]hydrographic survey
Hydrographic survey is the science of measurement and description of features which affect maritime navigation, marine construction, dredging, offshore wind farms, offshore oil exploration and drilling and related activities. Surveys may als ...
of the area and then headed north; she passed Bering Strait
The Bering Strait ( , ; ) is a strait between the Pacific and Arctic oceans, separating the Chukchi Peninsula of the Russian Far East from the Seward Peninsula of Alaska. The present Russia–United States maritime boundary is at 168° 58' ...
, turned west, reaching Cape Schmidt
Cape Schmidt (; ''Mys Shmidta'' or Мыс Отто Шмидта; ''Mys Otto Shmidta''; Chukchi: Ир-Каппея; ''Ir-Kappeya''), formerly known as Cape North, is a headland in the Chukchi Sea, part of Iultinsky District of the Chukotka Autono ...
(then Cape Severny, or North Cape in English usage) and safely returned to base. ''Vsadnik'' did not meet any merchant boats, but found evidence of recent trading with America (including unfinished vodka
Vodka ( ; is a clear distilled beverage, distilled alcoholic beverage. Its varieties originated in Poland and Russia. Vodka is composed mainly of water and ethanol but sometimes with traces of impurities and flavourings. Traditionally, it is ...
barrels) in Chukchi huts.[
In 1881 Russian '' Strelok'' anchored in Providence Bay. ''Strelok'', apart from surveys and border control, was tasked with rescuing crews of two missing American ]whaling
Whaling is the hunting of whales for their products such as meat and blubber, which can be turned into a type of oil that was important in the Industrial Revolution. Whaling was practiced as an organized industry as early as 875 AD. By the 16t ...
ships, however, soon the crew of American schooner
A schooner ( ) is a type of sailing ship, sailing vessel defined by its Rig (sailing), rig: fore-and-aft rigged on all of two or more Mast (sailing), masts and, in the case of a two-masted schooner, the foremast generally being shorter than t ...
''Handy'' told Russians that one of the missing ships sank with no survivors; the other crew was already safe in San Francisco
San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco, is a commercial, Financial District, San Francisco, financial, and Culture of San Francisco, cultural center of Northern California. With a population of 827,526 residents as of ...
.[ Instead, ''Strelok'' found and resupplied the German scientific expedition of ]Aurel Krause
Dr. Aurel Krause (December 30, 1848 – March 14, 1908) was a German geographer known today for his early ethnography of the Tlingit people, Tlingit Indians of southeast Alaska, published in 1885.
Krause was born in Polski Konopat, Polnisch K ...
. At Saint Lawrence Bay ''Strelok'' met USS ''Rodgers''; both ships headed north to Bering Strait but soon separated. ''Strelok'' reached Cape Dezhnev
Cape Dezhnyov or Cape Dezhnev (; ; Iñupiaq language, Inupiaq: ''Nuuġaq''), formerly known as East Cape or Cape Vostochny, is a Cape (geography), cape that forms the easternmost mainland point of Asia. It is located on the Chukchi Peninsula i ...
(then Cape Vostochny) and turned back while ''Rodgers'' reached Wrangel Island
Wrangel Island (, ; , , ) is an island of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia. It is the List of islands by area, 92nd-largest island in the world and roughly the size of Crete. Located in the Arctic Ocean between the Chukchi Sea and East Si ...
.[ In the same year, the U.S. revenue cutter '' Corwin'', also searching for the lost whalers and for the missing US exploration vessel USS '' Jeannette'' took on coal at Plover Bay. This was Russian government coal, piled on the bank; there is no indication the coaling station had any resident staff. John Muir, aboard the Corwin as naturalist, took advantage of these stops to make geological observations in the mountains east of the fjord
An article from 1879 quotes a letter from ]William Healey Dall
William Healey Dall (August 21, 1845 – March 27, 1927) was an American natural history, naturalist, a prominent Malacology, malacologist, and one of the earliest scientific explorers of interior Alaska. He described many mollusks of the Pacifi ...
, referring in passing to "the white men's trading station at Plover Bay". It is not clear whether Dall meant an established trading post, or simply a rendezvous. As late as 1880, the only settlement mentioned by an anonymous visitor on the USC&GS schooner ''Yukon
Yukon () is a Provinces and territories of Canada, territory of Canada, bordering British Columbia to the south, the Northwest Territories to the east, the Beaufort Sea to the north, and the U.S. state of Alaska to the west. It is Canada’s we ...
'' was a native village. The Northeastern Siberian Company had a trading station, called Vladimir, on Plover Bay from at latest 1903 until about 1910. In 1908 the steamer ''Corwin'' unloaded cargo at Vladimir Station; this was the former revenue cutter that carried Muir in 1881. By 1913 Emma Harbor was the home of baron Kleist, the Russian administrator for Kamchatka
The Kamchatka Peninsula (, ) is a peninsula in the Russian Far East, with an area of about . The Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Okhotsk make up the peninsula's eastern and western coastlines, respectively.
Immediately offshore along the Pacific ...
uezd
An uezd (also spelled uyezd or uiezd; rus, уе́зд ( pre-1918: уѣздъ), p=ʊˈjest), or povit in a Ukrainian context () was a type of administrative subdivision of the Grand Duchy of Moscow, the Tsardom of Russia, the Russian Empire, the ...
, of a district judge, and of an Estonian trader, Bally Thompson, who maintained a store there. Baron Kleist's house, built of squared logs with curlicue trim cut from planks, stood on the eastern shore of the bay between two outbuildings. It was put up about 1909 at a cost of about $15,000, with materials brought up from Vladivostok. In 1926, Yupik people from Provideniya Bay were recruited to settle Wrangel Island. In 1930, Provideniya Bay served as a temporary base for Soviet aircraft to evacuate passengers from the Soviet steamer Stavropol, frozen in off Mys Schmitda on the northern coast of Chukotka. These aircraft were delivered by the icebreaker ''Litke''; the passengers, transported by aircraft and sledge, wintered at Provideniya Bay and were picked up by the Stavropol the next July.
Emma Harbor and Providence Bay were favored sites for scientific observers. These included investigators from the US Naval Observatory attempting to observe the 1869 solar eclipse, several ornithological collectors, geologists, and the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (geomagnetic
Earth's magnetic field, also known as the geomagnetic field, is the magnetic field that extends from structure of Earth, Earth's interior out into space, where it interacts with the solar wind, a stream of charged particles emanating from ...
observations) in 1921. The Harriman Alaska Expedition visited there in July 1899 and produced many good photographs illustrating topography and native life. John Muir noted that by 1899 there were around fifty Chukchis living in a dozen huts covered with walrus hide, already "spoiled by the contact with civilization of the whaler seamen". John Burroughs
John Burroughs (April 3, 1837 – March 29, 1921) was an American naturalist and nature essayist, active in the conservation movement in the United States. The first of his essay collections was ''Wake-Robin'' in 1871.
In the words of his bi ...
noted that "they were not shy of our cameras and freely admitted us to the greasy and smoky interiors of their dwellings" and "some of the natives showed a strain of European blood."
In 1921, there were reported efforts by Japan to assert control of the area, and the strategic importance of the bay was noted by an American writer . Two Soviet-era settlements, Provideniya
Provideniya ( rus, Провиде́ния, p=prəvʲɪˈdʲenʲɪjə; Chukchi: ) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) and the administrative center of Providensky District of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia, located on Komsomolskay ...
and Ureliki, were built on Komsomolskaya Bay in the 20th century, and the bay was used as a naval harbor. It was the major supply point for the Chukotka region during World War II.[ After the breakup of the ]Soviet Union
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR), commonly known as the Soviet Union, was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 until Dissolution of the Soviet ...
five border patrol boats stationed in Provideniya stayed idle at the port for three years due to lack of fuel.[Arbatov et al., p. 147] Ureliki, a military city, is reportedly now abandoned, but the adjacent Provideniya Bay Airport remains.
See also
*List of fjords of Russia
This is a list of the most important fjords of the Russian Federation. Fjords
In spite of the vastness of the Arctic coastlines of the Russian Federation there are relatively few fjords in Russia. Fjords are circumscribed to certain areas only; ...
* List of inhabited localities in Providensky District
* :File:Plover Bai.PNG Map from a 1906 atlas - identifies Cache Bay, Mount Kennicott
* :File:Plover Bay Sketch Map 1869.PNG Professor Hall's sketch map of Plover Bay and Emma Harbor 1869
* Provideniya Bay Airport
Notes
References
*
*
* pp. 278–279.
* Bockstoce, John R. (2006
Nineteenth century commercial shipping losses in the northern Bering Sea, Chukchi Sea, and Beaufort Sea
''The Northern Mariner, XVI'' (2), pp 53–68
*
*
*
* pp 304–305.
*
* Fisher, Raymond H. (ed) (1981) The Voyage of Semen Dezhnev in 1648: Bering's precursor, with selected documents. Hakluyt Society
The Hakluyt Society is a text publication society, founded in 1846 and based in London, England, which publishes scholarly editions of primary records of historic voyages, travels and other geographical material. In addition to its publishin ...
, London.
*
*
*
* Hodge, Frederick Webb (1912
Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, Volume 3.
Volume 30 of Bulletin (Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology) Reprint Digital Scanning, Inc., 2003.
*
*
*
*
* (reprint of 1938 edition)
* ''Nature'' 19, Jan 23, 1879, p 270. "Geographical notes".
* ''New York Times'', September 23, 1869
P 5
* ''New York Times'', November 21, 1880. ttps://www.nytimes.com/1880/11/21/archives/cruising-in-the-arctic-the-yukon-at-st-paul-and-at-plover-bay.html "Cruising in the arctic; the Yukon at St. Paul and at Plover Bay"p. 8
* ''New York Times'', November 27, 1921
"Yankee in Siberia
American hunter brings ne specimens—complains of Japanese interference." Page XX12
* ''New York Times'', March 21, 1922
"Japanese in the far north"
p3.
''Nielsen v Northeastern Siberian Company''
Supreme Court of Washington Sept 18, 1905 ''Pacific Reporter 82'' p292
* Query Bering; select preview for year wanted (dates 1911, 1916, 1923, 1928, 1933, 1938). Click desired location to enlarge and center.
*
*
*
* Reid, Anna (2002) ''The Shaman's Coat A Native history of Siberia'' Phoenix (Orion Books) London, paperback edition 2003
*
* , p. 53
* Spears, John Randolph (1908
''The story of the New England whalers''
The Macmillan Company, NY, pp 410–414
* United States Hydrographic Office (1909)
Asiatic pilot, Volume 1.
Issues 122–126; Issue 162 of H.O. pub. Gov. Printing Off., Washington.
* West, Ellsworth Luce (1965) as told to Eleanor Ransom Mayhew. ''Captain's papers: a log of whaling and other sea experiences''; Barre Publishers, Barre, MA
*
External links
:
East coast of Plover Bay showing the change in character at the point where the spit leaves the shore.
:
Eskimos in umiak alongside the ''George W. Elder''.
:
Eskimo woman and children in camp dressed in reindeer-skin parkas and sealskin boots.
:
Eskimo summer houses, or topeks, constructed of reindeer skins stretched over poles. View looking toward sea.
:
Eskimo village at Plover Bay. Skin house for summer use on the left. Turf wall of a winter house on the right.
:
Frame of winter house of Eskimo at Plover Bay. The posts are jaw bones of whales. The filling between them is turf.
Provideniya on Wikimapia
Provideniya photos
Lake Istikhed
Provideniya Bay
Provideniya Bay looking toward the sea
Ureliki on Wikimapia
Ureliki photo gallery
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210123230924/http://foto.chukotken.ru/categories.php?cat_id=77 , date=2021-01-23
More photos of Ureliki
Bodies of water of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Fjords of Russia
Bays of the Bering Sea
Ports and harbours of the Russian Pacific Coast
Providensky District