This is a sonification of the Bonin Islands, Japan Region 5.7M earthquake (10/4/2011 01:37:27 GMT). It was made from a seismogram recorded by the global seismic station YSS in SAKHALIN, RUSSIA. Find more at www.flyrok.org. Длительность: 0:04
Скриншоты к видео YSS Soundquake: 10/4/2011 01:37:27 GMT
Defeated, but Increasingly Assertive Japan Wants 4 Islands from Russia Disregarding Lost of 25 million Soviet lives in WWII /// Look into History As agreed with the Allies at the Tehran Conference and the Yalta Conference , the Soviet Union entered World War II's Pacific Theater. This offensive should not be confused with the Soviet-Japanese Border Wars, (particularly the Battle of Khalkhin Gol/Nomonhan Incident of May--September 1939), that ended in Japan's defeat in 1939, and led to the Soviet--Japanese Neutrality Pact. The Soviet--Japanese Border Wars were a series of border conflicts between the Soviet Union and Japan between 1938 and 1939. After the occupation of Manchukuo and Korea, Japan turned its military interests to Soviet territories. Conflicts between the Japanese and the Soviets frequently happened on the border of Manchuria. The Soviet-Japanese Border Wars served as a prelude to the upcoming World War II conflict in the same sense as the Spanish Civil War (and a number of other conflicts) did, as it essentially pitted the subsequent Allies and Axis Powers against each other. As a result of the Japanese defeat at Khalkhin Gol, Japan and the Soviet Union signed on April 13, 1941 a Neutrality Pact, similar to the German--Soviet non-aggression pact. Later in 1941, Japan would consider breaking the pact when the German Third Reich invaded the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa) at the start of the Great Patriotic War, but they made the crucial decision to keep <b>...</b> Длительность: 3:25
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A pensioner from the city of Tver has completed a 17000 kilometre bike ride. The epic journey across Russia and back took seven months. 66-year-old Yuliya Mikhailyuk cycled to Sakhalin Island in the Far East before turning around and riding back to her home in western Russia. She described the trip as a "challenge". Длительность: 2:34
Nov 2006 Russia claims its decision to stop Shell building the world's biggest oil and gas development was motivated by environmental concerns. So why will it let work resume if Shell pays more money? The impoverished islands of Sakhalin are noteworthy for two reasons. Their coastal waters are the only feeding ground for the critically endangered Western Grey Whale. And it's here that the world's largest integrated oil and gas facility is being built. This development is increasingly unpopular in Russia. As Julian Lee from the Centre for Global Energy Studies explains; "It's the only major project in Russia that has no Russian company involvement." Many believe the Kremlin is using environmental concerns to wrest back control of the Sakhalin development. Длительность: 25:38
Скриншоты к видео Sakhalin: Extraction or Extinction - Russia