The territory was named by Lauge Koch after Gertrud Rask (1673 – 1735), the wife of missionary Hans Egede, during the 1921–1923 Bicentenary Jubilee Expedition surveys. Koch found no muskoxen in the area and deemed that it was too arduous for the animals to cross this barren, inhospitable expanse, so that they had to choose another route to reach the northeast coast of Peary Land in their migrations.[3][4]
The terrain is harsh, mountainous and rugged, with numerous glaciated areas. The highest point of Gertrud Rask Land is a 1,432 metres (4,698 ft) summit located in the inner part.[6] According to other sources the same peak is 1,411 metres (4,629 ft) high.[7]
Bibliography
H.P. Trettin (ed.), Geology of the Innuitian Orogen and Arctic Platform of Canada and Greenland. 1991
J. D. Friderichsen et al. Lithostratigraphic framework of the Upper Proterozoic and Lowe Paleozoic Deep Water Elastic Deposits of North Greenland 1982
^Dan Laursen, The Place Names of North Greenland. Kommissionen for Videnskabelige Undersøgelser i Grønland (ed.): Meddelelser om Grønland. Vol. 180, Nr. 2. C. A. Reitzels Forlag, Kopenhagen 1972, ISBN 87-421-0070-4, p. 244