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Meteorology in the Soviet Arctic, 1920–45 [Summarised from Meteorologicheskie issledovaniya v sovetskoy arktike za 25 let (1920–45) [Meteorological research in the Soviet Arctic during 25 years (1920–45)] by Ye. I. Tikhomirov. Izvestiya Vsesoyuznogo Geografieheskogo Obshchestva [News of the All-Union Geographical Society](Leningrad), Tom 77, No. 6, 1945, p. 322–27.]
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 October 2009
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1949
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1 These figures are for polar stations, since all polar stations do meteorological work. Ya. Ya. Gakkel' gives the total number of polar stations in operation in 1945 as 77 (Za chetvert' veka [For a quarter of a century], Moscow, Leningrad, 1945, p. 63Google Scholar); Laktionov, A. F. gives 62 as the number operating in 1945 actually on the Northern Sea Route (Izvestiya Vsesoyuznogo Geografieheskogo Obshchestva [News of the All-Union Geographical Society], Tom 77, No. 6, 1945, p. 342)Google Scholar; so it seems likely that this subdivision by seas does not imply that all the stations in each group are actually on the coast.—T.E.A.
2 Kratkie svedeniya po meteorologii i okeanografii Karskogoi Sibirskogo morey [Short account of the meteorology and oceanography of the Kara and Siberian Seas], 1919Google Scholar.