Princess Astrid Coast
0 sources
Princess Astrid Coast
Summary
Princess Astrid Coast is a coast[1]. It draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (coast category, ranking #42 of 116).[2]
Key Facts
- Princess Astrid Coast is located in Antarctic Treaty area[3].
- Princess Astrid Coast's image is recorded as Antarctica.A2010286.0735.250m.jpg[4].
- Princess Astrid Coast's continent is recorded as Antarctica[5].
- Princess Astrid Coast's instance of is recorded as coast[6].
- Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner is named after Princess Astrid Coast[7].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Commons category is recorded as Princess Astrid Coast[8].
- Princess Astrid Coast's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -70.75, 'lon': 12.5}[9].
- Princess Astrid Coast's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -71, 'lon': 12}[10].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/083l2p[11].
- Princess Astrid Coast's GNIS Antarctica ID is recorded as 12110[12].
- Princess Astrid Coast's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Princess Astrid Coast[13].
- Princess Astrid Coast's GeoNames ID is recorded as 6623628[14].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names ID is recorded as 1012670[15].
- Princess Astrid Coast's SCAR Composite Gazetteer place ID is recorded as 11623[16].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Australian Antarctic Gazetteer ID is recorded as 130376[17].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as Prinsesse_Astrid_Kyst[18].
- Princess Astrid Coast's Norwegian Polar Institute place name ID is recorded as 05a6423c-de21-54bd-9d85-b136f6319063[19].
Body
Geography
Princess Astrid Coast is located in Antarctic Treaty area[3]. Its continent is recorded as Antarctica[5].
Designation and Status
Princess Astrid Coast's instance of is recorded as coast[6].
History and Context
Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner is named after Princess Astrid Coast[7].
Why It Matters
Princess Astrid Coast draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (coast category, ranking #42 of 116).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20]