Коллекции загружаются
В английской википедии статья про Сибирь забавная очень.
History Soviet Union In the early decades of the Soviet Union (especially in the 1930s and 1940s), the government used the Gulag state agency to administer a system of penal labour camps, replacing the previous katorga system.[30] According to semi-official Soviet estimates, which did not become public until after the fall of the Soviet government in 1991, from 1929 to 1953 more than 14 million people passed through these camps and prisons, many of them in Siberia. Another seven to eight million people were internally deported to remote areas of the Soviet Union (including entire nationalities or ethnicities in several cases).[31] Half a million (516,841) prisoners died in camps from 1941 to 1943[32] during World War II.[citation needed] At other periods, mortality was comparatively lower.[33] The size, scope, and scale of the Gulag slave-labour camps remain subjects of much research and debate. Many Gulag camps operated in extremely remote areas of northeastern Siberia. The best-known clusters included Sevvostlag (the North-East Camps) along the Kolyma and Norillag near Norilsk, where 69,000 prisoners lived in 1952.[34] Major industrial cities of Northern Siberia, such as Norilsk and Magadan, developed from camps built by prisoners and run by former prisoners. В профильной статье получше, но тоже не блистает. In the second half of the 20th century, the exploration of mineral and hydroenergetic resources continued. Many of these projects were planned, but were delayed due to wars and the ever-changing opinions of Soviet politicians. The most famous project is Baikal Amur Mainline. It was planned simultaneously with Trans-Siberian, but the construction began just before World War II, was put on hold during the war and restarted after. After Joseph Stalin's death, it was again suspended for years to be continued under Leonid Brezhnev. The cascade of hydroelectric powerplants was built in the 1960s–1970s on the Angara River, a project similar to Tennessee Valley Authority in the United States. The powerplants allowed creation and support of large production facilities, such as the aluminium plant in Bratsk, Ust-Ilimsk, rare-earth mining in Angara basin, and those associated with the timber industry. The price of electricity in Angara basin is the lowest in Russia. But the Angara cascade is not fully finished yet: the Boguchany power plant waits to be finished, and a series of enterprises will be set up. The downside of this development is the ecological damage due to low standards of production and excessive sizes of dams (the bigger projects were favoured by the industrial authorities and received more funding), the increased humidity sharpened the already hard climate. Another powerplant project on Katun River in Altai mountains in the 1980s, which was widely protested publicly, was cancelled. There are a number of military-oriented centers like the NPO Vektor and closed cities like Seversk. By the end of the 1980s a large portion of the industrial production of Omsk and Novosibirsk (up to 40%) was composed of military and aviation output. The collapse of state-funded military orders began an economic crisis. Akademgorodok, a scientific town near Novosibirsk The Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences unites a lot of research institutes in the biggest cities, the biggest being the Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics in Akademgorodok (a scientific town) near Novosibirsk. Other scientific towns or just districts composed by research institutes, also named "Akademgorodok", are in the cities of Tomsk, Krasnoyarsk and Irkutsk. These sites are the centers of the newly developed IT industry, especially in that of Novosibirsk, nicknamed "Silicon Taiga", and in Tomsk. A number of Siberian-based companies extended their businesses of various consumer products to meta-regional and an All-Russian level. Various Siberian artists and industries, have created communities that are not centralized in Moscow anymore, like the Idea[48] (annual low-budged ads festival), Golden Capital[49] (annual prize in architecture). 9 февраля 2022
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ReznoVV Онлайн
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the increased humidity sharpened the already hard climate Что было в голове у того, кто написал эту потрясающую в своей бессмысленности фразу? Если имеется в виду, что климат суровый, то любой нормальный англоговорящий человек написал бы "tough climate" или "harsh climate", но никак не "hard". Если имеется в виду, что климат был континентальным, то как повышение влажности его могло усугубить? Самое же забавное, что если про влияние сибирских ГЭС на гидрологию (ту же регуляцию Байкала, к примеру) споры в научном сообществе идут довольно активные, то в смысле влияния на климат всё вполне однозначно – благодаря ГЭС он заметно смягчился, что почти все считают позитивным влиянием (хотя, надо думать, любители каких-нибудь сибирских эндемиков с этим и поспорят).Ну, а что советская Сибирь – это сначала ГУЛАГ, а уж потом – добыча полезных ископаемых, промышленность, города-миллионеры и научные центры – это само собой, на английском же написано. 3 |
My Chemical Victim
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ReznoVV
Да я мамой клянусь, вот есть огрооооооооооооооомная пустая Сибирь, и где-то в центре этого белого ледяного пространства ГУЛаг. Потом опять снега. Азкабан прямо. 2 |
Trust me, you dont want to meet people who live in Far Eastern Russia, that place surpasses Lovecraft in creepiness. ( из глубин reddit)
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Заяц Онлайн
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ReznoVV
в смысле влияния на климат всё вполне однозначно – благодаря ГЭС он заметно смягчился, что почти все считают позитивным влиянием Особая советская термодинамика. Исключительно злотворная, хотя во всем остальном мире наоборот. |