Igarka, Russia

Igarka is a city (since 1931) of regional subordination in the Turukhansk district of the Krasnoyarsk Territory of Russia. The city forms a municipality with the status of an urban settlement, the city of Igarka, as the only settlement in its composition. Within the framework of the administrative-territorial structure, the city of Igarka corresponds to the administrative-territorial unit.

Now it is a port accessible to sea vessels from the Yenisei Gulf; there is also Igarka Airport, used for the transportation of goods and work shifts to the oil fields. Igarka has been operating as a seaport since 1928. Berths, etc. were built before 1930-35, then they were improved, expanded, concreted, etc. Before the collapse of the USSR, up to 120-140 sea vessels were handled in Igarka during the short summer navigation.

 

History

According to one version, the city got its name from the channel on which it is located. The channel, in turn, is named after the local fisherman Yegor Shiryaev, whose name the locals turned from “Yegorka” into “Igarka”. However, the fact of the existence of a person with a similar name is not recorded in any of the historical documents.

According to another version, which was first expressed by the local historian Adolf Vasilievich Vakhmistrov, the name was first given to the Igarka River, the left tributary of the Yenisei River. The roots of the name of the river probably come from the language of the disappeared indigenous peoples, akin to the modern Kets. According to the research of A.V. Vakhmistrov, the Igarka river was first mapped by Peter Chichagov in 1725.

The Igara channel was first described and mapped during the Great Northern Expedition in 1740 by Fyodor Minin and Khariton Laptev.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Old Igarka camp existed on the site of the city.

In 1929, a timber export port was built here. Until the 1950s, political, military and other prisoners were exiled here. With their hands, as well as the efforts of enthusiasts and civilians, the city was built. A fish-processing plant and a shipyard were built.

In 1936, on the site that is now occupied by the cinema "Sever", the first People's Theater appeared in the Arctic, the founder and first artistic director of which was the famous actress Vera Pashennaya, who remained in Igarka after the tour.

From here, in 1947-1953, a railway line was built to Salekhard - a "road on bones", part of the unfinished Transpolar line, which claimed thousands of prisoners' lives and was subsequently abandoned. The city also developed as a timber industry center.

In 1956, by order of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, the development of the first plan for the general reconstruction of Igarka began. The designers saw the city as a major center of the timber industry, a large port on the Yenisei, accessible for large-tonnage ships. The general plan took into account the promising possibility of building a railway, it was noted that in the near future Igarka could become a center for the extraction of coal, oil and other ore minerals.

On July 27, 1962, a catastrophic fire broke out in the city, the so-called. "Big Igarsky fire", which completely destroyed the finished product warehouse of the plant - 159.2 thousand cubic meters of sawn timber. In the fire that spread to the city, 65 residential and administrative buildings also burned down - two shops and a fish cooperative office, a maternity hospital, a pharmacy, a nursery, two newly built hostels, a wooden bridge across the Bear Log. The fire also destroyed the buildings of the local history museum and the interclub. The poem by Alexander Gorodnitsky "The Ballad of the Prison Saved" is dedicated to the fire.

At the time of the fire, most of the men were at work, that is, they were not in the city. Women in their arms carried children out of creches and houses. The prisoners were released from the prison, which was approached by fire. Only thanks to them it was possible to stop the fire. After that, every one of them returned to the prison. After the fire, the city was rebuilt.

Since the beginning of the 1960s, a rapid growth of the export-oriented woodworking industry began in Igarka. There was a Sawmill and transshipment plant in which 4 woodworking workshops worked. In the 1970s and 1980s, the plant processed and dispatched more than 1 million 250 thousand cubic meters of export lumber per year, mostly packaged; in addition, more than 300 thousand cubic meters of products of deep wood processing, produced at the local timber complex, were shipped for export. Up to a hundred sea vessels came to the port for the plant's products for navigation, and the seaport's capacity allowed it to serve 25 large-tonnage ships at once. In terms of timber supplies, the Igarsk seaport ranked second in the country after Arkhangelsk. Timber was delivered by rafts along the Yenisei.

Currently, production is almost closed. This is also associated with a significant reduction in the city's population - from 18 thousand in 1989 to the current level. According to other sources, the historical peak of the Igarka population was 20-25 thousand people.

 

Destinations

Permafrost Museum
The Permafrost Museum in Igarka is the main attraction of this small town located in the northern part of the Krasnoyarsk Territory. Today it is the only such museum in the world.

The Permafrost Museum was founded in 1965 in the underground of the Igarskaya permafrost station with a depth of 7 to 14 m, where since the 1930s. scientists are studying permafrost. The museum constantly maintains a temperature of minus 5-6 ° C - this is the optimal temperature for preserving permafrost in natural conditions. The total area of ​​the museum is about 700 sq. m, 150 sq.m. one of them is an "ice" dungeon.

In July 1991, the Igarsk Museum was given the official status of a local history museum. Four years later, the Permafrost Museum was declared a natural monument of regional significance.

The museum has a unique collection of ice. The most ancient type of ice, which is more than 50 thousand years old, was brought from Ice Mountain - one of the natural monuments of the Krasnoyarsk Territory. The permafrost is the main exhibit of the museum, and many interesting exhibits can be seen here. For example, the remains of relict trees, the "youngest" of which are 24,500 years old.

In 1950, a capsule with newspapers was laid for long-term storage in one of the museum halls at a depth of two meters. Scientists have drawn up an act that testifies to a scientific experiment on storing documents in permafrost. This experiment will last until 2045.

In addition to the beauty of fragile ice, the Permafrost Museum also has departments of nature and local history. The complex consists of two historical sections. One of them tells about the history of the construction of the Salekhard - Igarka railway. In the historical department of the museum, expositions are presented, thanks to which visitors have the opportunity to learn more about the history of the city, the formation of polar aviation, as well as get acquainted with the history of the Stalin Museum, which is located in the village of Kureyka. Of particular interest to the guests of the Permafrost Museum is the exhibition “V.P. Astafiev and Igarka ".

 

Geography and climate
The city is located on the bank of the Igarskaya channel of the Yenisei, 1330 km north of Krasnoyarsk in a straight line (the distance along the Yenisei is about 1800 km). It is located above the Arctic Circle, in the permafrost zone, and belongs to the regions of the Far North.

The climate in Igarka is cold and temperate. A lot of rainfall, even in the driest months. According to the Köppen climate classification, it is a subarctic climate (Dfc index) with short cool summers and constant moisture throughout the year. The absolute minimum temperature in Igarka is -55.5 degrees.

Timezone
MSK + 4
The city of Igarka is located in the time zone MSK + 4. The time offset from UTC is +7: 00.

Energy
The actively developed Vankor oil and gas field is located 130 kilometers northwest of Igarka. In August 2009, the field produced commercial oil. The Ust-Khantayskaya HPP is located 80 km north-east of Igarka, and the Kureiskaya HPP is 90 km to the south-east.

The construction of the Nizhne-Kureyskaya hydroelectric power station is planned.