Results 161 to 170 of about 5,545 (221)

A Rhino from Lake Baikal

open access: yesPeer Community in Paleontology
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Lake Baikal

open access: yes, 2018
Baikal is the deepest, oldest, and most voluminous lake on Earth. It is home to thousands of endemic species. It occupies a special place in the Russian psyche—a point of national pride and religious mysticism. Despite the lackluster status of civil society and political involvement in Russia generally, Lake Baikal is home to a strong and flourishing ...
Kate Pride Brown
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At Lake Baikal

Soviet Law and Government, 1971
The Central Committee of the Communist Party, subsequent to the original publication of the following article and the January 1969 decree of the USSR Council of Ministers, "On Measures for the Preservation and Rational Use of the Natural Ecologies of the Lake Baikal Basin," added its authority to that of the USSR Council of Ministers in a joint decree ...
V. Goncharov, A. Iurkov, Nils H. Wessell
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Mercury speciation in Lake Baikal

Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, 1995
Research on mercury (Hg) distribution and speciation was carried out in Lake Baikal, a large, strong-oligotrophic freshwater reservoir in Siberia, Russia, during June 1992 and march 1993. In summer, total Hg in the water column ranged from 0.14 to 0.77 ng Hg/L, with the highest concentrations observed in the central basin of the lake in surface water ...
Meuleman, C.   +2 more
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Upwellings in Lake Baikal

Doklady Earth Sciences, 2012
Based on shipboard and satellite observations, the characteristics of upwelling in Lake Baikal in the period of direct temperature stratification have been determined for the first time. Coastal upwellings appear annually under the effect of run-down and alongshore winds and are traced along the coast to a distance of up to 60–100 km and up to 250 km ...
M. N. Shimaraev   +4 more
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The Lake Baikal experiment

Nuclear Physics B - Proceedings Supplements, 1999
Abstract We review the present status of the Baikal Neutrino Project. The construction and performance of the large deep underwater Cherenkov detector NT-200 with 192 PMTs [1], which is currently taking data in Lake Baikal, are described. Some results from intermediate detector stages are presented.
V.A. Balkanov   +43 more
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