Kola Peninsula
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The Kola Peninsula (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is a peninsula in the extreme northwest of Russia, and one of the largest peninsulas of Europe. Constituting the bulk of the territory of Murmansk Oblast, it lies almost completely inside the Arctic Circle and is bordered by the Barents Sea to the north and by the White Sea to the east and southeast. The city of Murmansk, the most populous settlement on the peninsula, has a population of roughly 270,000 residents.<ref>2021 Census of Russian Federation.</ref>
While humans had already settled in the north of the peninsula in the 7th–5th millennium BC, the rest of its territory remained uninhabited until the 3rd millennium BC, when various peoples started to arrive from the south. By the 1st millennium CE only the Sami people remained. This changed in the 12th century, when Russian Pomors discovered the peninsula's rich resources of game and fish. Soon after, the Pomors were followed by the tribute collectors from the Novgorod Republic, and the peninsula gradually became a part of the Novgorodian lands. The Novgorodians, however, established no permanent settlements until the 15th century.
The Soviet period (1917–1991) saw a rapid population increase, although most of the new arrivals remained confined to urbanized territories along the sea coast and the railroads. The Sami people were subject to forced collectivization, including forced relocation to Lovozero and other centralized settlements, and overall the peninsula became heavily industrialized and militarized, largely due to its strategic position (as the pre-eminent Soviet ice-free Atlantic coast) and to the discovery of the vast apatite deposits in the 1920s. As a result, the peninsula suffered major ecological damage. After the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union, the economy went into decline. Its population fell from 1,150,000 in 1989 to 795,000 in 2010. The peninsula recovered somewhat in the early 21st century, and is considered the most industrially developed and urbanized region in northern Russia.
Despite the peninsula's northerly location, its proximity to the North Atlantic Current (an extension of the Gulf Stream) leads to unusually high temperatures in winter, but also results in high winds due to the temperature variations between land and the Barents Sea. Summers are rather chilly, with the average July temperature of only Template:Convert. The peninsula is covered by taiga in the south and by tundra in the north, where permafrost limits the growth of trees, resulting in landscape dominated by shrubs and grasses. The peninsula supports a small variety of mammals, and its rivers are an important habitat for the Atlantic salmon. The Kandalaksha Nature Reserve, established to protect the population of common eider, is located in the Kandalaksha Gulf. The peninsula is also the site of the Kola Superdeep Borehole, the deepest hole drilled into the Earth.
GeographyEdit
Location and overviewEdit
The peninsula is located in the far northwest of Russia, almost completely inside the Arctic Circle and is bordered by the Barents Sea in the north and the White Sea in the east and southeast.<ref name="AtlasI">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. I</ref> Geologically, the peninsula occupies the northeastern edge of the Baltic Shield.<ref name="GSE" /> The western border of the peninsula stretches along the meridian from the Kola Bay through the valley of the Kola River, Lake Imandra, and the Niva River to the Kandalaksha Gulf,<ref name="GSE">Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Кольский полуостров Template:Webarchive Template:In lang</ref> although some sources push it all the way west to Russia's border with Finland.<ref name="Bartold">See, for example, Bartold, p. 14</ref>
Under a more restrictive definition, the peninsula covers an area of about Template:Convert.<ref name="GSE" /> The northern coast is steep and high, while the southern coast is flat.<ref name="GSE" /> The western part of the peninsula is covered by two mountain ranges: the Khibiny Mountains and the Lovozero Massif;<ref name="GSE" /> the former contains the highest point of the peninsula—Yudychvumchorr. Mount Chasnachorr, the height of which is Template:Convert, had been formerly considered the highest point of the Khibiny.<ref name="PGSR">Физико-географическая статистика России (Physical and geographical statistics of Russia) - Yudychvumchorr</ref> The Keyvy drainage divide lies in the central part.<ref name="GSE" /> The mountainous reliefs of the Murman and Kandalaksha Coasts stretch from southeast to northwest, mirroring the peninsula's main orographic features.<ref name="AtlasI" />
Administratively, the territory of the peninsula consists of Lovozersky and Tersky Districts, parts of Kandalakshsky and Kolsky Districts, as well as the territories subordinated to the cities and towns of Murmansk, Ostrovnoy, Severomorsk, Kirovsk, and parts of the territories subordinated to Apatity, Olenegorsk, and Polyarnye Zori.<ref name="Atlas2007_6">2007 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, pp. 6–7</ref>
Natural resourcesEdit
Because the last ice age removed the top sediment layer of the soil,<ref name="AtlasI" /> the surface of Kola Peninsula is extremely rich in various ores and minerals, including apatites and nephelines; copper, nickel, and iron ores; mica; kyanites; ceramic materials,<ref name="AtlasII">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. II.</ref> as well as rare-earth elements and non-ferrous ores.<ref name="GSE" /> Deposits of construction materials such as granite, quartzite, and limestone are also abundant.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Diatomaceous earth deposits are common near lakes and are used to produce insulation.<ref name="AtlasII" />
ClimateEdit
Proximity of the peninsula to the Gulf Stream leads to unusually high temperatures in winter for the region, resulting in significant temperature variations between land and the Barents Sea and in fluctuating temperatures during high winds.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Cyclones are typical during the cold seasons, while the warm seasons are characterized by anticyclones.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Monsoon winds are common in most areas, with south and southwesterly winds prevailing in winter months and with somewhat more pronounced easterly winds in summer.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Strong storm winds blow for 80–120 days a year.<ref name="AtlasII" /> The waters of the Murman Coast remain warm enough to remain ice-free even in winter.<ref name="Field">Field</ref>
Precipitation levels on the peninsula are rather high: Template:Convert in the mountains, Template:Convert on the Murman Coast, and Template:Convert in other areas.<ref name="AtlasII" /> The wettest months are August through October, while March and April are the driest.<ref name="AtlasII" />
The average temperature in January is about Template:Convert, with lower temperatures typical in the central parts of the peninsula.<ref name="GSE" /> The average temperature in July is about Template:Convert.<ref name="GSE" /> Record lows reach Template:Convert in the central parts and Template:Convert on the coasts.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Record highs exceed Template:Convert almost on all the territory of the peninsula.<ref name="AtlasII" /> First frosts occur as early as August and may last through May and even June.<ref name="AtlasII" />
Most areas of the Kola Peninsula are subarctic climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfc). The nearby islands usually belong to tundra (Köppen climate classification: ET).
Flora and faunaEdit
The peninsula is covered by taiga in the south and tundra in the north.<ref name="GSE" /> In the tundra, cold and windy conditions and permafrost limit the growth of the trees, resulting in a landscape dominated by grasses, wildflowers, and shrubs such as dwarf birch and cloudberry.<ref name="NatGeo">Template:NatGeo ecoregion</ref> In northern coastal areas, stony and shrub lichens are common.<ref name="NatGeo" /> The taiga in the southern areas is composed mostly of pine trees and spruces.<ref name="GSE" />
Reindeer herds visit the grasslands in summer.<ref name="NatGeo" /> Other animals include red and Arctic foxes, wolverines, moose,<ref name="NatGeo" /> otters, and lynx in the southern areas.<ref name="AtlasIII">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. III</ref> American minks, which were released near the Olenitsa River in 1935–1936, are now common throughout the peninsula and are commercially hunted.<ref name="AtlasIII" /> Beavers, which became endangered by 1880, were re-introduced in 1934–1957.<ref name="AtlasIII" /> All in all, thirty-two species of mammals and up to two hundred bird species inhabit the peninsula.<ref name="AtlasIII" />
Beluga whales are the only cetacean being common around the peninsula.Template:Citation needed Other dolphins, including Atlantic white-sided dolphins,Template:Citation needed white-beaked dolphins,Template:Citation needed and harbor porpoises,<ref>ASCOBANS. 8th Advisory Committee Meeting. Report of the Nordic sub-Group on Research Priorities for ASCOBANS, Charlottenlund Template:Webarchive. February 14, 2001.</ref> as well as large whales, such as bowhead, humpback, blue, and finback, also visit the area.Template:Citation needed
The coasts of the Kandalaksha Gulf and the Barents Sea are important breeding grounds for bearded seals and ringed seals.Template:Citation needed The Barents Sea is one of the only places the rare Gray seals can be found.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Greenland seals, or harp seals, also can be seen from time to time.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Twenty-nine species of fresh water fish are recognized on the territory of peninsula, including trout, stickleback, northern pike, and European perch.<ref name="AtlasIII" /> The rivers are an important habitat for the Atlantic salmon, which return from Greenland and the Faroe Islands to spawn in fresh water. As a result of this, a recreational fishery has been developed, with a number of remote lodges and camps available to host sport-fishermen.<ref name="Richmond365">Richmond, p. 365</ref> The Kandalaksha Nature Reserve, established in 1932 to protect the population of common eider,<ref name="KNR">Official website of the Kandalaksha Nature Reserve. Overview Template:Webarchive</ref> is organized in thirteen clusters located in the Kandalaksha Gulf of the Kola Peninsula and along the coasts of the Barents Sea.<ref name="TerskyD">Tersky District, p. 16</ref>
HydrologyEdit
The Kola Peninsula has many small but fast-moving rivers with rapids.<ref name="AtlasII" /> The most important of them are the Ponoy, the Varzuga, the Umba, the Teriberka, the Voronya, and the Yokanga.<ref name="GSE" /> Most rivers originate from lakes and swamps and collect their waters from melting snow.<ref name="AtlasII" /> The rivers become icebound during the winter, although the areas with strong rapids freeze later or not at all.<ref name="AtlasII" />
Major lakes include Imandra, Umbozero, and Lovozero.<ref name="GSE" /> There are no lakes with an area smaller than Template:Convert.<ref name="AtlasII" /> Recreational fishery is developed in the region.<ref name="Richmond365" /> Template:Further
EcologyEdit
The Kola Peninsula as a whole suffered major ecological damage, mostly as a result of pollution from the military (particularly naval) production, industrial mining of apatite, and military nuclear waste.<ref name="NatGeo" /> About 137 active and 140 decommissioned or idle naval nuclear reactors, produced by the Soviet military, remain on the peninsula.<ref name="Avenhausetal">Avenhaus et al, p. 247</ref> For thirty years, nuclear waste had been dumped into the sea by the Northern Fleet and Murmansk Shipping Company.<ref name="Avenhausetal" /> There is also evidence of contamination from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, with contaminants being found in the flesh of reindeer and other animals,<ref name="NatGeo" /> and from the 1972 and 1984 controlled nuclear explosions Template:Convert northwest of Kirovsk.<ref name="EconStrategy">Ministry of Economic Development of Murmansk Oblast. «Стратегия социально-экономического развития Мурманской области до 2020 года и на период до 2025 года» Template:Webarchive (Socioeconomic Development Strategy of Murmansk Oblast Until 2020 and for the Period Until 2025) Template:In lang</ref> Additionally, several nuclear weapons test ranges and radioactive waste storage facilities exist on the peninsula.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The main industrial pollution source is Norilsk Nickel in Monchegorsk—the large smelters responsible for over 80% of the sulfur dioxide emissions and for nearly all nickel and copper emissions.<ref name="Rigina">Rigina, p. 73.</ref> Since 1998, SO2 emissions in the area have dropped by almost 60%, from 88.3 thousand tonnes to 37.3 thousand tonnes in 2016, according to Norilsk Nickel.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Based on its new ‘Sulphur programme 2.0', Norilsk Nickel has set itself staged targets in cutting down sulphur dioxide emissions, which can have negative health and environmental effects. The ultimate aim is a 95% reduction (compared to 2015) in SO2 by 2030 for its Polar Division on the Taimyr peninsula, which includes its Nadezhda smelter and Copper plant, partly through a SO2 capture solution.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Other polluters of note include the thermal power stations in Apatity and Murmansk.<ref name="EconStrategy" />
HistoryEdit
Early historyEdit
The Rybachy Peninsula in the north of the Kola Peninsula was already settled in the 7th–5th millennium BCE.<ref name="AtlasV">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. V</ref> In the 3rd–2nd millennium BCE, the peninsula was settled by the peoples who arrived there from the south (the territory of modern Karelia).<ref name="AtlasV" /> Bolshoy Oleny Island in the Kola Bay of the Barents Sea is the location of an important Bronze Age archaeological site where ancient DNA has been recovered.<ref name="Paleo">V.I. Khartanovich, V.G. Moiseev. Paleoanthropology and paleogenetics: MAE RAS collections research finding and further study potential Template:Webarchive. Report to the International Scientific Conference "Archeology of the Arctic". YANAO Scientific Research Center of the Arctic. November 19–23, 2017. Salekhard.</ref>
By the end of the 1st millennium CE, the peninsula was settled only by the Sami people, who did not have their own state, lived in clans ruled by elders,<ref name="ATSBook16">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 16</ref> and were engaged mostly in reindeer herding and fishing.<ref name="AtlasIV">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. IV</ref> In the 12th century, Russian Pomors from the shores of the Onega Bay and in the lower reaches of the Northern Dvina discovered the peninsula and its game and fish riches.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> The Pomors organized regular hunting and fishing visits and started barter trade with the Sami.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> They also called the White Sea coast of the peninsula Tersky Coast ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) or Terskaya Land ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).<ref name="ATSBook16" />
By the end of the 12th century, the Pomors explored all of the northern coast of the peninsula and reached Finnmark (an area in the north of Norway), necessitating the Norwegians to support a naval guard in that area.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> The name given by the Pomors to the northern coast was Murman—a distorted form of Norman meaning "Norwegian".<ref name="ATSBook16" />
Novgorod RepublicEdit
Pomors were soon followed by tribute collectors from the Novgorod Republic, and the Kola Peninsula gradually became a part of the Novgorodian lands.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> A 1265 treaty of Yaroslav Yaroslavich with Novgorod mentions Tre Volost ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), which is later also mentioned in other documents dated as late as 1471.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> In addition to Tre, Novgorodian documents of the 13th–15th centuries also mention Kolo Volost, which bordered Tre approximately along the line between Kildin Island and Turiy Headland of the Turiy Peninsula.<ref name="ATSBook16" /> Kolo Volost lay to the west of that line, while Tre was situated to the east of it.<ref name="ATSBook16" />
By the 13th century, a need to formalize the border between the Novgorod Republic and the Scandinavian countries became evident.<ref name="ATSBook17">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 17</ref> The Novgorodians, along with the Karelians who came from the south, reached the coast of what now is Pechengsky District and the portion of the coast of Varangerfjord near the Jacob's River, which now is a part of Norway.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> The Sami population was forced to pay tribute.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> The Norwegians were also attempting to take control of these lands, resulting in armed conflicts.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> In 1251, a conflict between the Karelians, Novgorodians and the servants of the king of Norway led to the establishment of a Novgorodian mission in Norway.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> Also in 1251, the first treaty with Norway was signed in Novgorod regarding the Sami lands and the system of tribute collections, making the Sami people pay tribute to both Novgorod and Norway.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> By the terms of the treaty, Novgorodians could collect tribute from the Sami as far as the Lyngen fjord in the west, while Norwegians could collect tribute on the territory of the whole Kola Peninsula except in the eastern part of Tersky Coast.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> No state borders were established by the 1251 treaty.<ref name="ATSBook17" />
The treaty led to a short period of peace, but the armed conflicts resumed soon thereafter.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> Chronicles document attacks by the Novgorodians and the Karelians on Finnmark and northern Norway as early as 1271, and continuing well into the 14th century.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> The official border between the Novgorod lands and the lands of Sweden and Norway was established by the Treaty of Nöteborg on August 12, 1323.<ref name="ATSBook17" /> The treaty primarily focused on the Karelian Isthmus border and the border north of Lake Ladoga.<ref name="ATSBook17" />
Another treaty dealing the matters of the northern borders was the Treaty of Novgorod signed with Norway in 1326, which ended the decades of the Norwegian-Novgorodian border skirmishes in Finnmark.<ref name="ATSBook18">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 18</ref> Per the terms of this treaty, Norway relinquished all claims to the Kola Peninsula.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> The treaty did not address the situation with the Sami people paying tribute to both Norway and Novgorod, and the practice continued until 1602.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> While the 1326 treaty did not define the border in detail, it confirmed the 1323 border demarcation, which remained more or less unchanged for the next six hundred years, until 1920.<ref name="ATSBook18" />
In the 15th century, Novgorodians started to establish permanent settlements on the peninsula.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> Umba and Varzuga, the first documented permanent settlements of the Novgorodians, date back to 1466.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> Over time, all coastal areas to the west of the Pyalitsa River had been settled, creating a territory where the population was mostly Novgorodian.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> Administratively, this territory was divided into Varzuzhskaya and Umbskaya Volosts, which were governed by a posadnik from the area of the Northern Dvina.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> The Novgorod Republic lost control of both of these volosts to the Grand Duchy of Moscow after the Battle of Shelon in 1471,<ref name="ATSBook18" /> and the republic itself ceased to exist in 1478 when Ivan III took the city of Novgorod. All Novgorod territories, including those on the Kola Peninsula, became a part of the Grand Duchy of Moscow.<ref name="ATSBook18" />
The Novgorod Republic lost control of the peninsula to the Grand Duchy of Moscow in 1471, but the Russian migration did not stop. Several new settlements were established during the 16th century, and the Sami and Pomor people were forced into serfdom. In the second half of the 16th century, the peninsula became a subject of dispute between the Tsardom of Russia and the Kingdom of Denmark–Norway, which resulted in the strengthening of the Russian position. By the end of the 19th century, the indigenous Sami population had been mostly forced north by the Russians as well as by newly arriving Izhma Komi and Kominized Nenets (so-called Yaran people), who migrated here to escape a reindeer disease epidemic in their home lands in the southeast of the White Sea. The original administrative and economic center of the area was Kola, situated at the estuary of the Kola River into the Kola Bay. In 1916, Romanov-na-Murmane (now Murmansk) was founded and quickly became the largest city and port on the peninsula.
Russian settlementEdit
Russian migration to the peninsula continued into the 16th century, when new settlements such as Kandalaksha and Porya-Guba were established.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> Kola was first mentioned in 1565.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> In the end of the 15th century, the Pomors and the Sami people were forced into serfdom, mostly by the monasteries.<ref name="AtlasV" /> Monastery votchiny greatly expanded during the 17th century, but were abolished in 1764, when all of the Kola Peninsula peasants became state peasants.<ref name="AtlasV" />
In the second half of the 16th century, King Frederick II of Denmark–Norway demanded that the Tsardom of Russia cede the peninsula.<ref name="ATSBook18" /> Russia declined, and in order to organize adequate defenses established the position of a voyevoda.<ref name="ATSBook19">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 19</ref> The voyevoda sat in Kola, which became the administrative center of the region.<ref name="ATSBook19" /> Prior to that, the administrative duties were performed by the tax collectors from Kandalaksha.<ref name="ATSBook19" /> Newly established Kolsky Uyezd covered most of the territory of the peninsula (with the exception of Varzuzhskaya and Umbskaya Volosts, which were a part of Dvinsky Uyezd), as well as the northern part of Karelia all the way to Lendery.<ref name="ATSBook19" />
Despite the economic activity, permanent settlement of the peninsula did not intensify until the 1860s, and even then it remained sporadic until 1917.<ref name="AtlasIV" /> The population of Kola in 1880, for example, was only around 500 inhabitants living in 80 households, compared to 1,900 inhabitants in 300 households living there in 1582.<ref name="Field" /> Transportation facilities were virtually non-existent and communication with the rest of Russia was irregular.<ref name="Field" /> 1887 saw an influx of Izhma Komi and Nenets people who were migrating to the peninsula to escape a reindeer-disease epidemic in their homelands and brought their large deer herds with them, resulting in increased competition for the grazing lands, a conflict between the Komi and the Sami, and in marginalization of the local Sami population.<ref name="RobKass">Robinson & Kassam, pp. 92–93</ref> By the end of the 19th century, the Sami population had mostly been forced north, with ethnic Russians settling in the south of the peninsula.<ref name="RobKass" />
In 1894, the peninsula was visited by the Russian minister of finance, Sergei Witte, who became convinced of the region's economic potential.<ref name="Field" /> Consequently, in 1896 telephone and a telegraph communications were extended to Kola, improving links with the mainland.<ref name="Field" /> The possibility of building a railway was also considered, but no action was taken at the time.<ref name="Field" /> Also in 1896, Alexandrovsk (now Polyarny) was founded, and grew in size so rapidly that it was granted town status in 1899; Kolsky Uyezd was renamed Alexandrovsky on that occasion.<ref name="ATSBook24">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 24</ref>
During World War I (1914-1918), the still poorly developed peninsula suddenly found itself in a strategic position, as communication between Russia and the Allies via the Baltic and Black Sea was cut. Britain helped in the development of the ice-free harbors of the Murman Coast as the only practical means of sending Allied war supplies to the Eastern Front.<ref name="Field" /><ref> Template:Cite book </ref> In March 1915, the construction of the railroad was rushed, and the railroad was quickly opened in 1916, even though it was only partially completed and poorly built.<ref name="Field" /> In 1916, Romanov-na-Murmane (Romanov on the Murman: modern Murmansk) was founded<ref name="ATSBook24" /> as the terminal point of the new railroad;<ref name="Field" /> the town quickly grew to become the largest one on the peninsula.
Soviet and modern periodsEdit
Soviet power was established on the territory of the peninsula on Template:OldStyleDateNY, 1917, but the territory was occupied by the forces of Russia's pre-war allies in March 1918–March 1920.<ref name="AtlasVI">1971 Atlas of Murmansk Oblast, p. VI</ref> Alexandrovsky Uyezd was transformed into Murmansk Governorate by the Soviet government in June 1921.<ref name="ATSBook34">Administrative-Territorial Divisions of Murmansk Oblast, p. 28</ref> On August 1, 1927, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (VTsIK) issued two Resolutions: "On the Establishment of Leningrad Oblast" and "On the Borders and Composition of the Okrugs of Leningrad Oblast", according to which Murmansk Governorate was transformed into Murmansk Okrug (which was divided into six districts) and included into Leningrad Oblast.<ref name="ATSBook34" /> This arrangement existed until May 28, 1938, when the okrug was separated from Leningrad Oblast, merged with Kandalakshsky District of the Karelian ASSR, and transformed into modern Murmansk Oblast.<ref name="Xform">Decree of May 28, 1938</ref>
All in all, the Soviet period saw a significant increase in population (from 15,000 in 1913 to 1,150,000 in 1989), although most of the population remained concentrated in the urban localities along the railroads and the sea coast.<ref name="AtlasIV" /> Most of the sparsely populated territories outside the urbanized areas were used for deer herding. This region is also home to the Kola Superdeep Borehole. <ref name="AtlasIV" /> In 1920–1940, the town of Kirovsk and several work settlements were established on the peninsula.<ref name="AtlasVI" />
The Sami peoples were subject to forced collectivization, with more than half of their reindeer herds collectivized in 1928–1930.<ref name="RobKass" /> In addition, the traditional Sami herding practices were phased out in favor of the more economically profitable Komi approach, which emphasized permanent settlements over free herding.<ref name="RobKass" /> Since the Sami culture is strongly tied to the herding practices, this resulted in the Sami people gradually losing their language and traditional herding knowledge.<ref name="RobKass" /> Most Sami were forced to settle in the village of Lovozero, which became the cultural center of the Sami people in Russia.<ref name="RobKass" /> Those Sami resisting the collectivization were subject to forced labor or death.<ref name="RobKass" /> Various forms of repression against the Sami continued until Stalin's death in 1953.<ref name="RobKass" /> In the 1990s, 40% of the Sami lived in urbanized areas,<ref name="RobKass" /> although some herd reindeer across much of the region.
The Sami were not the only people subject to repressions. Thousands of people were sent to Kola in the 1930s–1950s, and in 2007 over two thousand people—descendants of those forcibly sent there—still live on the peninsula.<ref name="RIAN">RIA Novosti. A Monument to the Victims of Political Repressions Is Planned to Open in Murmansk by October 30 Template:Webarchive. September 26, 2007 Template:In lang</ref> A significant portion of the people deported to Kola were peasants from southern Russia subjected to dekulakization.<ref name="KolaEncHist">Kola Encyclopedia. Kola Krai in 1920–1939 Template:Webarchive Template:In lang</ref> Prisoner labor was often used when building new factories<ref name="Richmond354">Richmond, p. 354</ref> and for manning those which were operational: in 1940, for example, the whole Severonikel Metallurgy Mining Complex was turned over to the NKVD system.<ref name="Ivanova">Ivanova, p. 83</ref>
DemographyEdit
Until the 1800s, the Kola Peninsula was extremely sparsely populated, with only 5,200 inhabitants in 1858. In 1868 the Russian government created incentives for settlement and not only Russians but also Finns, Norwegians and Karelians moved to the peninsula. By the 1897 census 9,291 people were counted in the Kola uyezd; 63% Russian, 19% Sami, 11% Finnish and 3% Karelian.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
By 1913 about 13,000–15,000 people lived in the peninsula, mostly along the shores.<ref name="AtlasIV" /><ref name="Kozlovetal">Kozlov et al., p. 50</ref> However, the discovery of the vast natural resource deposits and industrialization efforts led to an explosive population growth during the Soviet times.<ref name="Kozlovetal" /> By 1970, the population of the peninsula was around 799,000.<ref name="AtlasIV" /> The trend reverted in the 1990s, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.<ref name="Richmond354" /> The population of the whole Murmansk Oblast went down from 1,150,000 in 1989<ref name="1989Census">Template:Ru-pop-ref</ref> to 890,000 in 2002<ref name="2002Census">Template:Ru-pop-ref</ref> to 795,000 in 2010.<ref name="2010Census">Template:Ru-pop-ref</ref>
As of the 2010 Census, the population consisted mostly of Russians (89.0%), Ukrainians (4.8%), and Belarusians (1.7%).<ref name="2010Census" /> Other groups of note include Komi (~1,600 inhabitants), Sami (~1,600), and Karelians (~1,400).<ref name="2010Census" /> The indigenous Sami people are mostly concentrated in Lovozersky District.<ref name="EconStrategy" />
EconomyEdit
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Historical backgroundEdit
During the 15th–16th centuries, the main occupations of the Tersky Coast population were Atlantic salmon fishing, seal hunting, and the extraction of salt from the sea water.<ref name="AtlasV" /> The salt extraction in Kandalaksha and Kola was mostly carried out by the monasteries in Pechenga and Solovki, and for a long time remained the only "industry" on the peninsula.<ref name="NatRes">Natural Resources of the Kola Peninsula, pp. 14–16</ref>
By the mid-16th century, Atlantic cod fishing developed on the Murman Coast in the north.<ref name="AtlasV" /> The 1560s saw a rapid growth of international trade, with the Russian merchants from different regions of the country arriving to the peninsula to trade with the merchants from Western Europe.<ref name="AtlasV" /> In 1585 the trade was moved to Archangel, although the settlement of Kola was still permitted to trade locally produced goods.<ref name="AtlasV" />
During the 17th century, the salt extraction activities gradually went into decline as the locally produced salt was uncompetitive with cheap salt produced in the Kama River regions.<ref name="AtlasV" /> Extensive poaching also led to the significantly reduced outputs from pearl hunting.<ref name="AtlasV" /> Commercial deer herding became more popular, although its share in the economy remained negligible until the 19th century.<ref name="AtlasV" /> By the end of the 17th century, the practice of seasonal fishing and hunting settlements in the north of the peninsula became very common.<ref name="AtlasIV" />
Peter the Great, recognizing the political and economical importance of the peninsula, promoted its industries and commerce. The region fell into neglect after St. Petersburg was founded in 1703 and most of the shipping trade shifted there.<ref name="Field" /> In 1732, large deposits of silver in native form were discovered on Medvezhy Island in the Kandalaksha Gulf and copper, silver, and gold deposits were found in the lower reaches of the Ponoy River.<ref name="NatRes" /> Despite the efforts ongoing for the next two centuries, there was no commercial success.<ref name="NatRes" /> At the end of the 18th century, the local population learned the practice of peat production from the Norwegians and started using peat for heating.<ref name="NatRes" /> Timber cutting industry developed in the region at the end of the 19th century; mostly in Kovda and Umba.<ref name="AtlasV" />
The Soviet era saw drastic industrialization and militarization of the peninsula. In 1925–1926, significant deposits of apatite were discovered in the Khibiny Mountains,<ref name="NatRes" /> and the first apatite batch was shipped only a few years later, in 1929.<ref name="NatRes" /> In 1930, sulfide deposits were discovered in the Moncha area; in 1932–1933 iron ore deposits were found near the upper streams of the Iona River; in 1935, significant deposits of titanium ores were discovered in the area of modern Afrikanda.<ref name="NatRes" />
The collectivization efforts in the 1930s led to the concentration of the reindeer herds in kolkhozes (collective farms), which in turn were further consolidated into a few large-scale state farms in the late 1950s–early 1970s.<ref name="CostNel125">Costlow & Nelson, p. 125</ref> By the mid-1970s, the state farms were further consolidated into just two, based in Lovozero and Krasnoshchelye.<ref name="CostNel125" /> The consolidations were rationalized by the necessity to isolate the herders from the military installations, as well as by the need to flood some territories to construct hydroelectric plants.<ref name="CostNel125" />
Fishing, being the traditional industry of the region, was always considered important although the volumes of production remained insignificant until the beginning of the 20th century.<ref name="KolaEncFish">Kola Encyclopedia. Fishing Industry Template:Webarchive Template:In lang</ref> In the 1920s–1930s, the Murmansk Trawl Fleet was created and the fishing infrastructure started to develop intensively.<ref name="KolaEncFish" /> By 1940, fishing accounted for 40% of the oblast's and for 80% of Murmansk's economy.<ref name="KolaEncFish" />
During the Cold War, the peninsula served as the naval basing area for a large portion of the Soviet naval and air strategic forces, providing protection from and posing a threat to northern Norway.<ref name="GlobSec">GlobalSecurity.org. Murmansk Oblast Template:Webarchive</ref> Also the ELF-transmitter ZEVS of the Russian Navy is situated there.Template:Cn
Border tensions between Norway and the Soviets were dramatized in the premiere of The Sandbaggers.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Norwegian concerns about Russian troops in the Kola peninsula persisted into the 1990s, after the fall of the Iron Curtain.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Modern economyEdit
After the economic slump of the 1990s, the economy of the oblast started to rebound during the first decade of the 2000s, although at a rate below the country's average.<ref name="EconStrategy" /> Today the Kola Peninsula is the most industrially developed and urbanized region in northern Russia.<ref name="Rigina" /> The major port of the peninsula is Murmansk, which serves as the administrative center of Murmansk Oblast<ref name="MurmanskOCharter">Charter of Murmansk Oblast, Article 8.1.</ref> and does not freeze in winter.<ref name="GSE" /> Although the strategic importance of the Kola Peninsula has diminished since the Cold War,<ref name="GlobSec" /> the peninsula nevertheless still has the highest concentration of nuclear weapons, reactors, and facilities in Russia, with the number of nuclear reactors alone exceeding any other region of the world.<ref name="Avenhausetal" />
Mining is the basis of the oblast's economy, and mining enterprises remain the principal employers in such monotowns as Apatity, Kirovsk, Zapolyarny, Nikel, and Monchegorsk.<ref name="KolaEncMining">Kola Encyclopedia. Mining Industry Template:Webarchive Template:In lang.</ref> The Kola Mining and Metallurgical Company, a division of Norilsk Nickel, conducts nickel-, copper-, and platinum-group-metals-mining operations on the peninsula.<ref name="NN">Official website of Norilsk Nickel. About Norilsk Nickel Template:Webarchive.</ref> Other large mining companies include OAO Apatit, which is the largest producer of phosphates in Europe; OAO Olcon, one of the leading producers of iron ore concentrates in Russia; and OAO Kovdorsky GOK, an ore-mining and processing enterprise.<ref name="KolaEncMining" />
The fishing industry, although still operating significantly below the Soviet level of production,<ref name="EconStrategy" /> remains profitable, supplying 20% of Russia's fish in 2006<ref name="KolaEncFish" /> and with the volume steadily growing in 2007–2010.<ref name="MinEcDev">Ministry of Economic Development of Murmansk Oblast. Fishing industry of Murmansk Oblast Template:Webarchive Template:In lang.</ref> Murmansk is a key base for three fishing fleets, including Russia's largest, the Murmansk Trawl Fleet.<ref name="GlobSec" /> Fish breeding, especially of salmon and trout, is a growing industry.<ref name="GlobSec" />
The energy sector is represented by the Kola Nuclear Power Plant near Polyarnye Zori, which produces about half of all energy, and a network of seventeen hydroelectric and two thermal power stations, generating the other half.<ref name="KolaEncEnergy">Kola Encyclopedia. Energy Sector Template:Webarchive Template:In lang.</ref> The energy surplus, accounting for about 20% of the total generated energy,<ref name="KolaEncEconOverview">Kola Encyclopedia. Overview of the Economy Template:Webarchive Template:In lang.</ref> is transferred to the unified energy system of Russia, as well as exported to Norway and Finland via the NORDEL system.<ref name="KolaEncEnergy" />
With the economy of the oblast being mostly export-oriented, transportation plays an important role and accounts for 11% of the Gross Regional Product.<ref name="KolaEncTransp">Kola Encyclopedia. Transportation, Communications, Trade, Customs Template:Webarchive Template:In lang.</ref> On the Kola Peninsula, the transportation network includes ship transport, air transport, automotive transport, electrified public transport, and access to the railways mostly passing through the rest of Murmansk Oblast.<ref name="KolaEncTransp" /> The city of Murmansk is an important port on the Northern Sea Route.<ref name="KolaEncTransp" /> The largest airports are the Murmansk Airport, which handles international flights to Scandinavian countries, and the joint military-civilian Kirovsk-Apatity Airport<ref name="KolaEncTransp" /> located Template:Convert southeast of Apatity.
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
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- Wm. O. Field, Jr. The Kola Peninsula. Gibraltar of the Western Arctic. The American Quarterly on the Soviet Union. July 1938. Vol. I, No. 2.
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- Olga Rigina. GIS Analysis of Surface Water Chemistry Susceptibility and Response to Industrial Air Pollution in the Kola Peninsula, Northern Russia. Published in Biogeochemical Investigations at the Watershed, Landscape, and Regional Scales, Springer 1998.
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