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Aasiaat (old spelling: Ausiait), Danish: Egedesminde is Greenland's fourth-largest town and at the same time a municipality (Aasiaat Kommuneat). The municipality covers several islands at the southern end of Disko Bay (Aasiaat Archipelago in west-central Greenland. The approximate location of Aasiaat town is .
It is one of two Greenlandic municipalities that do not occupy any portion of the main island of Greenland, the other one being Qeqertarsuaq. As of January 1 2005, the municipality had a population of 3 310, on an area of 4000 km². Aasiaat is sometimes referred to as the Town of the Whales [1], since marine mammals such as whales and seals are a common sight.
The largest island of the Aasiaat archipelago is Saqqarliup Nunaa, which is uninhabited, but has buildings to accommodate tourists. On the western tip of the island is the abandoned village of Manermiut. The total population of the municipality is spread among three settlements (population figures all as of (1 January 2005):
Another abandoned village is Vester Ejland on the namesake island, the westernmost of the archipelago, 29 km WSW of Aasiaat town.
In Greenlandic, Aasiaat means "City of Spiders".
Archaeological projects in the region have suggested human habitation in the region that
includes Aasiaat as far back as the 5th millennium BC. The earliest modern settlers
dated to around 1200; these were probably subsistence hunters.
These inhabitants hunted harp seals and capelin
(ammassaat) near Sydøst Bay in the spring. In the
The settlement that would become Aasiaat was founded in 1759 by Niels Egede, the son Hans Egede a Norwegian missionary. Named Egedesminde Colony after him, it was located north of Nordre Strømfjord, and was 125 km south of Aasiaat's current location. The town was moved to its current site in 1763. Most villagers were whalers, and the smallpox germs they carried to the region was harmful to the native population, especially in the 1770s. But by the beginning of the 19th century, the population had stabilized and was rising slowly. It grew from 390 in 1805 to 1,269 in 1901.
Aasiaat saw much growth in the first half of the 20th century.
On May 3, 1940, a treaty signed in Godhavn allowed American relief airplanes bound for the British Isles to use Greenlandic, Icelandic, and Scottish airspace. A result of World War II was the fact that Denmark, under the control of Nazi Germany, could not freely send supplies to Greenland; this task fell to the United States and Canada. Supplies were stored near Aasiaat, and were then transferred to other towns of the region, such as Uummannaq and Sisimiut.
Aasiaat has grown much since the war. A weather station was constructed in
1942 by the Americans. Cod, an economically popular fish since the
1930s, were caught and sent to a new factory to be salted and
packed. Other businesses sprang up, accommodating to the resources and climate of the region. This boom reached its peak in the
1950s, when a
In 1998, a new landing strip was opened to the public (previously a heliport was the only aerial facility); it is near a shrimp processing factory. Today, almost 4,800 people live in the Aasiaat and its neighboring district, Kangaatsiaq.
Air Greenland operates air services to Aasiaat.
Fishing of shrimp and crabs, shipbuilding, and tourism are the primary economic activities of the region.
Aasiaat has four schools: a regular school (Gammeqarfik), a vocational school(GU Aasiaat), a school for the physically disabled(Ado Lyngep Atuarfia), and a school for musicians (Aasiaat Music-school).
The area in and around the municipality offers many services for tourists, including kayaking, cross-country skiing, dogsledding, and whale-watching.
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