Water Springs of Leningrad Region, Russia (Part 2/2) St Petersburg Area
September, 25th, for the second time again I joined an expedition of Saint Petersburg bloggers in collaboration with Russian Geology Society to explore the natural water springs located in Leningrad Region (which is actually St Petersburg region as Leningrad is the name of the city during Soviet Times).
We were checking the water springs by GPS-locations which people sent to Russian Geology Society and were taking the probes in each spring for further expertise of Russian Geology laboratory.
After there's going to be a whole online map of water springs with exact GPS-locations and the main thing results of an expertise.
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#russia #leningradregion #springs
#родникиленинградскойобласти #россия #санктпетербург #питер
Vasilisa Seneko visiting Museum - Institute of Geology in Saint Petersburg
Vasilisa Seneko visiting Museum - Institute of Geology in Saint Petersburg with Grammy and Great Uncle Sergei.
Thank you very much, Uncle Sergei, for showing me your institute and museum.
For more information about Young Acress Vasilisa Seneko
backstage.com/davidseneko
youtube.com/user/Seneko123
Facebook.com/DavidSeneko
GEOLOGICAL PRACTICE IN RUSSIA 2016
Vlog summing up the geological trip of two French third year geology students in Russia !
Musiques :
Beach Day Rmx
Electro Brass
froyo
I Feel The Heat
I'll be there
thank you
My go away Dream
sleep
Juan RIOS - Ténegro.
Thank you for watching !
The Importance of Museums to Zoologists
Welcome to the Manchester Museum. It is seen every day by the University students, but how much do you really know about the importance of these establishments in your education so far?
Eremitaasi/ Visit to Hermitage
Visiting the Hermitage properly would take 9 years - you can visit Hermitage in 13 minutes by watching this video. Unfortunately I cannot explain all those paintings - they are Rembrants (1 da Vinci) etc.
3D geological structure visualization
Saint-Petersburg (Russia) is depicted as bluish-green plot
Two working days in St. Petersburg 0028
My life journey / 0028 / 160405:
Saint Petersburg is the second largest city in Russia. It is located on the Neva River at the head of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea. It was named Saint Petersburg in 1703. In 1914 the name of the city was changed from Saint Petersburg to Petrograd, in 1924 to Leningrad and in 1991, back to Saint Petersburg. Tsar Peter the Great founded Saint Petersburg on May 27 1703. Between 1713–1728 and 1732–1918 Saint Petersburg functioned as the imperial capital of Russia. In 1918 the central government bodies moved from Saint Petersburg (then named Petrograd) to Moscow. It is Russia's second-largest city after Moscow, with 6 million inhabitants (2016), and the fourth most populated federal subject. Saint Petersburg is a major European cultural center, and also an important Russian port on the Baltic Sea.
Saint Petersburg is often described as the most Westernized city of Russia, as well as its cultural capital. It is the northernmost city in the world with a population of over one million. The Historic Centre of Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments constitute a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Saint Petersburg is home to The Hermitage, one of the largest art museums in the world.
What is to see in the movie:
Ploshchad Vosstaniya Square) is a station on the Kirovsko-Vyborgskaya Line of Saint Petersburg Metro. It is one of the system's original stations, opening on November 15, 1955. It is a deep underground pylon station at 58 m depth.
The Nevsky today functions as the main thoroughfare in Saint Petersburg. The majority of the city's shopping and nightlife are located on or right off of the Nevsky Prospekt.
The Passage, from the French word Passage, is an elite department store on Nevsky Avenue in Saint Petersburg, Russia, which celebrated its 150th anniversary in 1998.
This Gostiny Dvor is not only the city's oldest shopping centre, but also one of the first shopping arcades in the world. Sprawling at the intersection of Nevsky Prospekt and Sadovaya Street for over one kilometer and embracing the area of 53,000 m2 (570,000 sq ft), the indoor complex of more than 100 shops took twenty-eight years to construct.
Elisseeff Emporium in St. Petersburg is a large retail and entertainment complex, including a famous food hall, constructed in 1902–1903 for the Elisseeff Brothers. Located at 56 Nevsky Prospekt, the complex consists of three buildings, although the corner one is the structure that is referred to as Elisseeff’s store or shop. Designed by architect Gabriel Baranovskii (Baranovsky, Baranowski, it is one of most striking examples of St. Petersburg Art Nouveau architecture, although at the time of its construction the building was considered controversial.
The Saint Petersburg Metro is the underground railway system in Saint Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast, Russia. It has been open since 15 November 1955. Formerly known as the V.I. Lenin Order of Lenin Leningrad Metropoliten, the system exhibits many typical Soviet designs and features exquisite decorations and artwork making it one of the most attractive and elegant metros in the world. Due to the city's unique geology, the Saint Petersburg Metro is one of the deepest metro systems in the world and the deepest by the average depth of all the stations. The system's deepest station, Admiralteyskaya, is 86 metres below ground. Serving ca. 2 million passengers daily, it is also the 19th busiest metro system in the world.
The State Russian Museum is the largest depository of Russian fine art in Saint Petersburg. It is also one of the largest museums in the country. The museum was established on April 13, 1895, upon enthronement of Nicholas II to commemorate his father, Alexander III.
The Moyka River is a small river in Russia that encircles the central portion of Saint Petersburg, effectively making it an island. The river, originally known as Mya, derives its name from the Ingrian word for slush or mire. It is 5 kilometres (3 mi) long and 40 metres (130 ft) wide.
Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood
This Church was built on the site where Emperor Alexander II was fatally wounded in March 1881.The church was built between 1883 and 1907. The construction was funded by the imperial family.
Singer House also widely known as the House of Books, is a building located at the intersection of Nevsky Prospekt and the Griboyedov Canal, directly opposite the Kazan Cathedral in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is recognized as a historical landmark, has official status as an object of Russian cultural heritage, and contains the headquarters of the VK social network.
Kazan Cathedral or Kazanskiy Kafedralniy Sobor , also known as the Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan, is a cathedral of the Russian Orthodox Church on the Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg.
National Museum of the Republic Tatarstan
The National Museum of the Republic of Tatarstan (NM RT) is the largest museum in Tatarstan. It was founded as a Kazan Town Scientific and Industrial Museum in 1894 and opened on April 5, 1895. The basis of the museum is a private collection of 40 thousandth items of Andrei Fedorovich Likhachev (1832-90), a well-known regional archaeologist, numismatist, collector also the exhibits of scientific and industrial exhibition in 1890. Well-known scientists of Kazan University stood at the roots of the establishment of the museum and of the museum's collections formation, such as: A.A. Stuckenberg, N.P. Zagoskin, P.I. Krotov, N.F. Vysotsky, N.F. Catania and others. The museum occupies the former building of Gostinniy dvor (guest house), a monument of architecture and history of Russian Federation and the Republic of Tatarstan.
There are over 800 thousand units in the museum's collection.
Nowadays the museum is in the process of reconstruction, the project of which provides creation of a permanent exhibition on the area of more than 6 000 sq.m. 2001, the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Tatarstan approved the scientific concept of creation of exposition of NM RT in Gostiny Dvor building; consisting of three main parts: History of Tatarstan, from ancient times to present days, Nature and a Man, Culture: the interaction of cultures of peoples of Tatarstan. Now the museum has the following exhibitions: Ancient History of Tatarstan, Money, trade and trade routes in the Middle Ages, Tatar Golden Treasures, Kazan Province in the XVIII century, there are also temporary exhibitions.
Introduction of information technologies in all activity spheres of the museum began in 2001. During these years, a portal Museums of Tatarstan tatar.museum.ru have been created, it contains information on more than 100 museums of the republic.
The National Museum of the Republic of Tatarstan won the contest The Changing Museum in a Changing World in 2006. The Internet site of the contest:
University of Oslo Natural History Museum Geological exhibitions_2009
Jewish and Railway Museums
Welcome to the tourism reality show, the Livingstone tour.
Tonight, on the Livingstone Tour.
Museums are mostly about history and memorabilia. In this episode, we delve into the history of Jews in Zambia and then look at some fine vintage steam locomotives from yesteryear.
The Railway Museum is located off Mosi O Tunya way, only 2.5 kilometers from the Livingstone museum, and approximately 9 kilometers away from the Victoria Falls.
The Jewish Museum and the Railway Museum are located within the same premises, providing rather distinct subject matters, making them appear unlikely neighbors. Both museums, however, have quite interesting historical information, and therefore, we brought the contestants here.
The Jewish Museum is an historical archive that focus on the arrival of Jews, their economic, social, and political contribution to Northern Rhodesia and Zambia from the early 1890s.
Russian research with video: From St. Petersburg to Swem
Sasha Prokhorov, associate professor of Russian, and Cindy Centeno, media specialist, led a study-abroad trip to St. Petersburg with an emphasis on creating video documentaries. (Features soundtrack by the W&M Russian Music Ensemble.)
The Meteorite Museum
- Please Help Support Our Video Productions!
Peek inside the meteorite vault at Arizona State University where billion-year-old rocks from space give researchers clues about the formation of our solar system. The meteorites survived their journeys through space and the Earth’s atmosphere and were collected around the world to be preserved inside the vault. Dr. Laurence Garvie, curator of the Center for Meteorite Studies at Arizona State University, studies, shows and smells, these metallic messengers from the universe to “unravel their stories”.
Produced by Emily V. Driscoll
Music by Audio Network.com
Filmed by Brandon Swanson
Additional Footage and Stills Provided by
Arizona State University, Laurence Garvie, The Weather Network,
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA's Scientific
Visualization Studio, ABC Library
Thanks to Emilie Dunham, Zachary Torrano, Meenakshi Wadhwa
St. Petersburg ²⁰¹³ | Rusya'nın Kültür Başkenti | Nevskiy Prospekt | Hermitage
St. Petersburg 2013 - Rusya'nın Kültür Başkenti - Nevskiy Prospekt - Hermitage
July 2013
Mammoth remains reveal the ancient world
(11 Nov 2010)
AP TELEVISION
Cherskii, Siberia, Russia - 22 - 29 October 2010
1. Wide pan on the frozen Kolyma river
2. Mid of scientist Sergey Zimov walks up to mammoths and bison's bones laying on the deck of his boat
3. Close up and zoom out on Zimov lifting up mammoth bone
4. Close up and zoom out of the same
5. Close up pan of bones
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Sergey Zimov, Director of Cherskii Science Station
For three hundred years people here are looking for mammoth bones, ivory is the word in english. Each year our region digs up about 30 to 40 tonnes of mammoth's bones, of mammoth's tusks.
7. Wide of Cherskii across the Kolyma river
AP TELEVISION
Saint Petersburg, Russia - November 1, 2010
8. Wide of the Neva river in Saint Petersburg, Russia
9. Close up of the entrance sign of Saint Petersburg zoological museum
10. Mid of the same
11. Mid of school teacher and children in front of baby mammoth Dima
12. Close up of baby mammoth Dima
13. Wide of mammoth skeleton
14. Mid pan of Yury Starikov walking in Saint Petersburg zoological museum underground corridor
15. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Yury Starikov, Taxidermist (start with close up hands on rests of mammoth leg) :
Here is a deformed fragment of the skin, and here is too, so that's why we'll have to put it in a solution, to wash it out, to put back on place all what is deformed and clean the dirt, then we'll place it in another preserving solution that will allow to prepare the mummy of this leg.
16. Close of scientist placing the mammoth leg in a solution
AP TELEVISION
Jersey City, New Jersey, US - 8 October 2010
17. Baby mammoth Lyuba being lifted from packing case and taken to weighing scale
18. Close up of scales, pull out to baby mammoth
19. SOUNDBITE (English) Jenn Cooper, Field Museum in Chicago: (speaking while wearing protective mask)
Because of the way Lyuba was preserved she is slowly drying out. We've noticed that she has lost weight between her initial arrival in Chicago last November and when we picked her up this Spring.
20. Lyuba being moved from scale to examining table
21. Close up of Lyuba's eye, pull out to wide
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Wayne LaBar, Liberty Science Centre spokesman :
She's the best preserved specimen that has ever been discovered, entirely intact. Not like seeing a skeleton that you might have found in a natural history museum or some of the ones that are here, rather she has all of her flesh on her as well and she is as close as you can get to seeing a live mammoth as possible right now.
23. Zoom in to hair on Lyuba's body
24. Wide of Lyuba
25. Pan of Lyuba's skin to end of trunk
26. Various of Lyuba being fitted into her case
27. Pan from video depiction of what Lyuba might have looked like to exhibit of Lyuba in case
LEAD IN :
Wooly mammoths once roamed the vast plains of the Siberian tundra.
Then about 10,000 years ago _ in the span of a geological heartbeat, over a 300 year period - they disappeared from Siberia, some driven to extinction.
STORYLINE:
During the last Ice Age, shaggy mammoths, woolly rhinos and bison lumbered across the grassy tundra of northern Siberia.
Scientist Sergey Zimov estimates that there are around 150 million mammoth remains in the Russian permafrost .
Zimov has made the remote town of Cherskii his home, some 6600 kilometres (4, 000 miles approx) east of Moscow and is the director of the Internationally funded Northeast Science Station.
He regularly comes across remains of Mammoths and other Ice Age animals during his work in this snowy landscape.
Some of the mammoths are frozen completely in the permafrost, other in pieces of bones.
The museum is working on the full restoration of an adult Mammoth.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
【K】Finland Travel-Helsinki[핀란드 여행-헬싱키]바위 안 템펠리아우키오 교회/Temppeliaukio Church/Rock Church/Stone Hill
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
■ The Travels of Nearly Everywhere! 10,000 of HD world travel video clips with English subtitle! (Click on 'subtitles/CC' button)
■ '구독' 버튼을 누르고 10,000여 개의 생생한 【HD】영상을 공유 해 보세요! (Click on 'setting'-'quality'- 【1080P HD】 ! / 더보기 SHOW MORE ↓↓↓)
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[한국어 정보]
내가 찾은 곳은 헬싱키의 한 교회. 커다란 바위언덕을 파내고 그 안에 교회를 지었다. 내벽을 전혀 다듬지 않은 것이 자연친화적이다. “이곳에 바위로 된 언덕이 있었습니다. 그래서 바위를 이용해서 교회를 짓자는 아이디어가 나왔습니다. 다이너마이트로 폭파해서 이 공간을 만들었습니다. 교회는 1969년에 완공되었으니까 42년밖에 되지 않은 거죠. 하지만 이 교회는 세계에서 가장 오래되었다고 할 수 있습니다. 왜냐하면 18억 5천만 년이나 된 지질구조거든요.” 벽면에 세로로 난 다이너마이트 자국이 선명하다. 특이한 건 실내에 등이 없다는 것이다. 자연채광이 주는 신비로움에 한참을 그곳에 머물렀다.
[English: Google Translator]
Where I found a church in Helsinki. Dig a large rocky hill built a church in it. It is not at all an inner wall of multicolored nature-friendly. There was a rocky hill here. So, using the rock jitja the church came out with an idea. I created this space to dynamite to blow. Eunikka church was completed in 1969 did not only 42 years. However, this may have been the oldest church in the world. Because I 1.85 billion years or a geological structure, a portrait on the wall is clear, I have dynamite country. Such that there is no unusual thing in the room. Daylighting stayed there for a long time in that mystery.
[Finnish: Google Translator]
Missä Löysin kirkko Helsingissä. Kaiva suuri kallioinen mäki rakennettiin kirkko sitä. Se ei ole ollenkaan sisäseinä monivärinen luonto-ystävällinen. Siellä oli kallioinen mäki täällä. Joten, käyttäen rock jitja kirkko tuli ulos idea. Olen luonut tämän tilan dynamiittia puhaltaa. Eunikka kirkko valmistui vuonna 1969 ei ollut vain 42 vuotta. Tämä voi kuitenkin olla vanhin kirkko maailmassa. Koska minulla 1850000000vuosi tai geologinen rakenne, muotokuva seinällä on selvä, minulla on dynamiittia maassa. Niin että ei ole epätavallista asia huoneeseen. Päivänvalon viipyi siellä pitkään, että mysteeri.
[Information]
■클립명: 유럽121-핀란드02-06 바위 안에 지은 템펠리아우키오 교회/Temppeliaukio Church/Rock Church/Stone Hill
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 김명숙 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2011년 6월 June
[Keywords]
,유럽,Europe,,핀란드,Finland,Suomen tasavalta,Republiken Finland,김명숙,2011,6월 June,,,,
Interactive e-Labeling Touch Screen Kiosk at Royal Ontario Museum
The Vale Inco Limited Gallery of Minerals presents approximately 2,300 minerals, rocks and meteorites, exploring such areas as the classification of minerals, their physical and scientific properties, causes of mineral colour and the geological environments necessary for spectacular mineral growth. Overdrive designed and produced the interactive component which utilizes over 40 touch screens, allowing visitors to learn about the specimens through text, high-resolution photographs and videos.
RAPAPORT, DECEMBER 19, 2012: Tracking New Russian Crown Jewels
RAPAPORT...
To watch USGS podcast, click
In this week's Rapaport news broadcast, MVI Marketing Ltd. unveils the winners of its inaugural USA Jewelry Social Media Awards. Highlights include top performers such as Cartier, Tiffany & Co. and HSN. Read the full report at MVI Marketing's research report center.
As Social Media is becoming increasingly important to jewelry consumers, MVI has begun tracking how jewelry retailers and brands are doing in this emerging arena, said MVI's chief executive, Marty Hurwitz. MVI created a Quality Ranking that is calculated as a quantitative measure of the quality of social engagement for each brand. Hurwitz said, A real gap is evolving between those jewelry retailers and brands that are dedicating time and resources to their digital footprint and those that have yet to cast their nets where the consumer fish are swimming. Based on the performance of some of the smaller players in this report, it is obviously an arena in which a level playing field can be achieved and brands can capture market share among younger, newer consumers.
Also this week, from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), four previously undiscovered photos of undocumented Russian Crown Jewels were recently discovered in the USGS library. The photos appear in a 1922 album called Russian Diamond Fund, that was uncovered in the rare book room of the library.
The four unique photos were originally part of the personal collection of George F. Kunz (1856 to 1932), a mineralogist and gemologist, gentleman explorer, and employee of the USGS and Tiffany & Co. These four photos are unique because they are not included in the official documentation of the Russian Crown Jewels, Russia's Treasure of Diamonds and Precious Stones, published in 1925. The USGS also has a copy of this 1925 publication in Kunz's collection. (Follow the story at USGS.)
Russia's Treasure of Diamonds and Precious Stones is considered the most complete inventory of the Russian Crown Jewels and 22 of the photographs from Kunz's 1922 album appear to be the same images used in the official Russian 1925 publication. The four pieces portrayed in the album discovered by the USGS that do not appear in the later publication include a sapphire and diamond tiara, a sapphire bracelet, an emerald necklace, and a sapphire brooch (pictured) in the shape of a bow.
Researchers have determined that the sapphire brooch was sold in London in 1927, but the fate of the other three pieces is a mystery to this day. USGS librarians are trying to trace the history with assistance from experts from around the world.
This 1922 album contains photographs that document the Imperial Crown Jewels and augments the official 1925 catalog with images of pieces that were not previously known to exist, said USGS library director Richard Huffine. The USGS has preserved this collection in obscurity for over 75 years, and now that it's been discovered, we're excited to share this material with the world to support research and understanding of these rare materials today.
Russia's Treasure of Diamonds and Precious Stones collection contains 100 unbound plates with accompanying text and was published as the inventory of the Romanov jewels. The USGS Library's copy of Russia's Treasure is missing two plates, but is otherwise in excellent condition. A different copy of Russia's Treasure of Diamonds and Precious Stones sold on auction at Christie's in 2007 for GBP 72,000, or over $141,984.
The album Russian Diamond Fund, however, is believed to be the only copy in existence. The album begins with an exquisitely hand-colored title page, followed by 88 photographs of the Romanov jewelry with descriptive captions in Russian.
The rich history of the Russian people is reflected in the origins of the Imperial Crown Jewels of Russia. The jewels were worn by the Romanov Royal Family (1613 to 1917) until they were seized by the new government during the Russian Revolution and secured in secret until 1922. In 1922 the jewels were unpacked and a full inventory taken. The Russian Diamond Fund album dates to the same year and the photographs appear to have been part of the initial inventory.
These images are unique representations of a bygone era-taken at a key moment for Russia, buried in quiet bookshelves for almost a hundred years, then rediscovered to add one more tiny but important part to the infinite puzzle of history, said USGS librarian Jenna Nolt.
Research was conducted by USGS librarians in collaboration with the Hillwood Museum and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) in Carlsbad, California to find additional information on the historical value of the photographs and information on the four photographs of unique pieces from the 1922 album.
Transmutation and development of the Earth. Interview with V. Krivitsky
Interview with Vladimir Krivitsky, PhD in geologo-mineralogical sciences, Senior Researcher of Museum of Physical Geography Lomonosov Moscow State University, Adviser of the project Syntestech
This interview intended to give examples of the course of the natural processes of cold transmutation and to fill some theoretical gaps of LENR.
Russian version:
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AFRO THE COLOR OF EMOTION HERMITAGE MUSEUM SAINT PETERBOURG RUSSIA
In the Winter Palace opened the exhibition Afro
The exhibition is organised by the State Hermitage in association with Afro Archive (Rome), National gallery of Contemporary Art (Rome), under the auspices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Italy, the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Italy, the Italian Culture Institute (St. Petersburg), and the Consulate General of the Republic of Italy in St. Petersburg