Shetland is an
archipelago off the northeast coast of mainland Scotland. The islands lie to
the northeast of Orkney, 280 km from the Faroe Islands and form part of the
division between the Atlantic Ocean to the west and the North Sea to the
east. The total area is approximately 1,466 km² (566 sq. miles). Shetland
constitutes one of the 32 council areas of Scotland. The islands'
administrative centre and only burgh is Lerwick.
The largest island, known as the Mainland, has an area of 967 km² (374 sq.
miles), making it the third-largest Scottish island and the fifth-largest of
the British Isles.
In the early 1970s, oil and gas was found off Shetland. The East Shetland
Basin is one of the largest petroleum sedimentary basins in Europe and the
oil extracted there is sent to the terminal at Sullom Voe (Norse:
Solheimavagr). Sullom Voe terminal opened in 1978 and is the largest oil
export harbour in Great Britain with a volume of 25 million tons per year.
Income from oil, and the improved economic state that oil-related
development has brought, has resulted in reduced emigration and vastly
improved infrastructure throughout Shetland, leading to an improved quality
of life.
As a result of the oil revenue and the cultural links with Norway, a small
independence movement developed briefly within Shetland. It saw as its model
the Isle of Man, as well as its closest neighbour, Faroe, an autonomous
dependency of Denmark.The landscape and the light
found in Shetland have been an inspiration to many artists in the fields of
painting, drawing and sculpturing, both local and from elsewhere. There are
several local art galleries. As with other Scottish dialects, the Shetland
dialect, a mixture of old English, Scots and Norse words, was actively
discouraged in schools, churches and civic life until the late twentieth
century, but has since then been restored as a language of culture.
Out of the approximately 100
islands, only fifteen are inhabited. The main island of the group is known
as Mainland.
The other inhabited islands are: Bressay, Burra, Fetlar, Foula, Muckle Roe,
Papa Stour, Trondra, Vaila, Unst, Whalsay, Yell in the main Shetland group,
plus Fair Isle to the south, and Housay and Bruray in the Out Skerries to
the east.
Fair Isle lies approximately
halfway between Shetland and Orkney, but it is administered as part of
Shetland and is often counted as part of the island group. The Out Skerries
lie east of the main group. Due to the islands' latitude, on clear winter
nights the aurora borealis or 'northern lights' can sometimes be seen in the
sky, while in summer there is almost perpetual daylight, a state of affairs
known locally as the 'simmer dim'. |