Boundary marker

Three-Country Cairn

Finland Enontekiö
Three-Country Cairn
Three-Country Cairn · Wikipedia

About

The Three-Country Cairn (Finnish: Kolmen valtakunnan rajapyykki, Northern Sami: Golmma riikka urna, Norwegian: Treriksrøysa, Swedish: Treriksröset) is the tripoint at which the international borders of Sweden, Norway and Finland meet, and the name of the monument that marks the point. It is the northernmost international tripoint in the world.The border between Norway and Sweden including Finland was decided in the Strömstad Treaty of 1751 and marked with cairns the following years, including cairn 294 which is located on a hill 150 meters east of today's Three-Country Cairn. When Sweden ceded Finland to Russia in 1809, it was decided that the new Finland–Sweden border should follow the rivers. But actually two rivers cross the Norwegian border, and the northern river was originally used and then the tripoint was at 69°3′37.4″N 20°33′11.4″E. The tripoint had no mark for several decades. It was decided in 1887 by the governments of Norway and Russia (which was administering Finland at the time) that the southern river was now larger. A monument of stones was erected on the site by them in 1897. The Swedish could not agree on a boundary commission with the Norwegians and did not contribute...

Three-Country Cairn

The climate is very cold (border between ET and Dfc ), with subarctic winters and tundra-like summers. The average temperature is below freezing.

Three-Country Cairn
Three-Country Cairn