Kamen Ariy


Kamen Ariy, or Ary Rock, is an uninhabited islet of the Commander Islands in the North Pacific Ocean, east of the Kamchatka Peninsula in Eastern Russia. These islands belong to the Kamchatka Krai of the Russian Federation. Described as "craggy" by Encyclopædia Britannica, Kamen Ariy is about west of Tufted Puffin Rock and consists of two rocks. The northern rock is pointed and reaches a height of. The southern rock is much flatter and only reaches a height of.
The islands were first named as Novy Island by naval officer Otto von Kotzebue in 1824. Three years later, the islet was visited by explorer Friedrich Benjamin von Lütke and was named Sivuchy. It was finally named Ariy in 1848 due to the amount of macaws that took rest on the islet. Since 1883, the rock was designated as such on maps according to the. As part of the Commander Islands, its temperature averages in August and in February. The islet's precipitation averages about each year.
Since 1983, the islet was designated as a Protected Area of Russia on 28 December of that year and is part of the Commander Islands State Nature Biosphere Reserve. It gained protected status due to the islet hosting multiple animal species on its surface, which include: seventeen protected species of birds, sea lions, harbour seals, spotted seals, northern fur seals and sea otters.