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Tundra Times Volume 13, Number 30 (July 28, 1976)
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[news lead] World Eskimo-Indian Olympics
[news lead] Barrow to Get Transit System
[masthead]
[news] 21-People on an Ice-Floe-Although it is Summer Now, there is Ice on the Face of Fydor Zayats, Senior Engineer-Meteorologist. This is the Fifth Time Fydor Has Worked on a Drifting Research Station near the North Pole Where the Soviet Research Station North Pole-22 is Situated. Twenty-One People Are at Present Working in the Arctic Ocean, among Them Are Hydrologists, Geophysicists, Meteorologists, Manetlogists, Ionospherists, Radiomen, Doctors, Etc. a Radiosonde is Released in the Air Twice Daily in Any Weather. Its Signals Are Picked up the the Radar Aerial Which is Constantly Pointed at the Radio-Sonde. The Station Sends Information to the Mainland on Weather, Conditions of Ice, Oceans, Magnetic Phenomiena and Northern Lights. People Stand on Watch at the Station for a Year at a Time. The Scientific Data Collected by the Soviet Drifting Research Station North Pole-22 is Used for Making up Weather Reports, Hydrological, Ice and other Forecasts, and Helps the Study of the Interconnection between the Ocean and Atmosphere in the Arctic , Which Influences the Weather in Europe, Asia and America down to the Subtropics.
[news] Record Crowd Views Eskimo Films
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