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Young Scientists Seek Ways To Predict Natural Calamities

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  • Young Scientists Seek Ways To Predict Natural Calamities

    YOUNG SCIENTISTS SEEK WAYS TO PREDICT NATURAL CALAMITIES
    by Leonid Vinogradov

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    June 14, 2006 Wednesday 05:33 PM EST

    Natural calamities that occurred on Sakhalin and Kuril islands will
    be the main subject for discussion at an international conference
    of young scientists from Russia, Japan, China, Bulgaria, Iran, and
    Armenia. The forum is to be held here from June 15 to 20.

    The press service of the Sakhalin-based Institute of Marine Geology
    and Geophysics has announced that about 60 scholars will make reports
    at the conference. Russia will be represented by scientists from
    Vladivostok, Magadan, Moscow, Novosibirsk, Nizhny Novgorod, and
    Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.

    Those present will endeavour to work out a system to predict
    earthquakes, tsunami oceanic waves, and snow avalanches on the strength
    of the study of the natural calamities that occurred on Sakhalin and
    the Kuriles.

    The 1952 tsunami was the Kuriles' most terrible natural calamity
    that devastated the town of Severo-Kurilsk on Paramushir Island. The
    oceanic wave that was 15-18 metres high claimed a toll of more than
    2,000 human lives. The 1995 earthquake on Sakhalin made havoc of
    Neftegorsk township, killing more than 2,000 inhabitants.
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