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The Black Sea

1974
The Black Sea is an oval basin situated between the folded alpine belts of the Pontic Mountains to the south and the Caucasus and Crimea ranges to the north. It is connected via the Bosporus, having a sill of about 50-m depth, to the Mediterranean Sea. The Black Sea basin has an area of 432,000 km2 and a volume of 534,000 km3.
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Is the Destiny of the ‘Black Sea’ Black?

2020
Despite natural deficiencies, the Black Sea served well to the adjacent countries as a food source, transportation route, recreational facility, and even disposal site. As a result of these activities, it is subjected to many impacts such as pollution, habitat degradation, and overexploitation in the last decades.
Seyhan, Kadir   +3 more
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The Black Sea

2004
Abstract The Black Sea has long formed a zone of interaction—sometimes cordial, sometimes conflictual—among the peoples and states around its shores, from the Balkans to the Caucasus, from Russia to Turkey. To the ancient Greeks, the sea lay at the edge of the known world.
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Black sea seagrasses

Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2003
Nataliya A, Milchakova   +1 more
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Rhinoplasty in the Black Sea Region

Journal of Craniofacial Surgery, 2012
We have retrospectively evaluated the charts of 120 patients who had undergone rhinoplasties. The noses were divided into 2 types. Type 1 (42 cases) was characterized by a normal radix, high dorsum, and prominent vault. These noses were corrected by dorsal reduction, lateral osteotomy when needed, and caudal septal resection.
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The Black Sea and the Sea of Azov

1977
The Black Sea is one of the world’s largest marginal seas, with an area of 432,000 km2 and a volume of 534,000 km3. Most of the basin is deeper than 2000 m (Fig. 1) and the maximum depth reached is 2206 m. It is connected by a narrow passage, the Kerch Strait, to the shallow Sea of Azov which has an area of about 37,500 km2 (excluding the Sivash or ...
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On the origins of the name for the ‘Black Sea’

Journal of Historical Geography, 2011
Abstract The name ‘Black Sea’ is widely attributed to the Anatolian Turks, due to their habit of referring to the South as ‘white’ and North as ‘black’. However, the appellation first appeared in a Hungarian document and later in sources originating further to the North, including Icelandic sagas and other Nordic narratives. The Turks themselves have
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Cancer statistics for African American/Black People 2022

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022
Angela N Giaquinto   +2 more
exaly  

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