The head of the fjord was first put on the map by
Robert Peary, who reached the area of the head of the fjord in 1892 together with
Eivind Astrup and gave the fjord its name. Peary had mapped the fjord as a bay or sound, leading westwards through the
Peary Channel. To the east the coast of "Academy Land" was trending southeastwards. The ill-fated
Denmark expedition 1906-1908 mapped the whole fjord from its mouth in the east, showing its true extent. The three expedition members who had explored the fjord on
dogsleds,
Ludvig Mylius-Erichsen,
Niels Peter Høeg Hagen and
Jørgen Brønlund, were not able to return to their base and died. The traces of ancient human settlements in the area have been the subject of research since the beginning of the 20th century. The first notable research results were published in 1911 by Christian Bendix Thostrup, a member of the Denmark Expedition.
Pre-history North of the fjord, in southern
Peary Land, there are remains of dwellings with elliptical floor plan, built by
Early Paleoeskimo Independence I culture. These people used tools made from rocks and bones, and subsisted from hunting wildlife like
musk oxen and
Arctic hares. Bones of musk oxen hunted down in Peary Land show that the area was inhabited at 2000 BC. The oldest discoveries are dated at 2400 BC. Discoveries of the time starting around 1800 BC until 1300 BC were mostly made south of Independence Fjord. It is unknown whether the Independence I culture vanished or the people moved south. Discoveries of a later time, about 800 BC to 200 BC, are related to the
Independence II culture. Initially, Independence I and Independence II had been regarded as the same culture, but
Eigil Knuth found in 1956 that the two were separate cultures, because of different dwelling constructions, and differences in other artefacts. The residential dwellings of Independence II are more complex and larger than the older buildings in this area. Like their predecessors, the people of Independence II also settled south of Independence Fjord. In both cases it is unclear whether discoveries in other areas of North Greenland and on
Ellesmere Island should be attributed to other cultures. ==Image gallery==