Cape Prince of Wales

Cape Prince of Wales is the westernmost mainland point of the Americas. It was named in 1778 by Captain James Cook of the British Royal Navy, presumably for the Prince of Wales at the time, George Augustus Frederick. Discovered in 1732, by an expedition led by a Russian military geodesist Mikhail Gvozdev in Sviatoi Gavriil; later, the cape was named by Vitus Bering for Gvozdev as Mys Gvozdeva. The Eskimo name of the cape, published by G.Sarychev in 1826, was Nykhta. The current name has been finally approved by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names Decisions in 1944.
Located on the Seward Peninsula of the U.S. state of Alaska near the settlement of Wales, Cape Prince of Wales is the terminus of the Continental Divide, marking the division between the Pacific and Arctic coasts, as well as marking the limit between the Bering Sea and the Chukchi Sea. It is the eastern boundary of the Bering Strait, 51 miles opposite Cape Dezhnev, and adjacent to the Diomede Islands and Fairway Rock.
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