Igdlukulik, an archaeological site with the ruins of a former
Inuit settlement lies by the shore where the Nørrearm branches north. The fjord is named after
Godske Lindenov (d. 1612), admiral of the
Danish Navy noted for his role in King
Christian IV's expeditions to Greenland. In 1931
Norway sent two expeditions to establish hunting and
radio station in Southeast Greenland. Led by
Ole Mortensen, one of the expeditions went to
Kangerlussuaq Fjord on ship
Signalhorn from
Ålesund and built a hut there. Since hunting there was poor, Mortensen moved with his men to Lindenow Fjord, where a Norwegian radio and meteorological station named Moreton was built from the mouth of the fjord in 1932. Following sovereignty claims by Norway under the official name
Fridtjof Nansen Land on the southeast coast of Greenland between 60°30'N and 63°40'N in the same year, another expedition was sent by the Norwegian government led by
Gunnar Horn. The station was moved to a better location further north to
Nanuuseq Fjord and was named
Torgilsbu, after
Torgils Orrabeinfostre, a legendary Norseman who was shipwrecked in 1001 in the inhospitable Southeastern Greenland coast and spent four years trying to reach the
Western Settlement. Subsequently seven smaller stations were established in the area around Torgilsbu. Ole Mortensen gave assistance and hospitality to
Gino Watkins and his two companions,
Percy Lemon and
Augustine Courtauld, during their open boat journey of around the
King Frederick VI Coast in 1931. Mortensen died in 1932 near the station when he fell through the ice of the fjord and was drowned. ==Geography==