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  1. Queen Maud Land is a pie-segment of Antarctica nominally claimed by Norway, east of Coat's Land and extending from the pole to the coast, where it forms impressive ice cliffs. This sea (unofficially known as the King Haakon VII Sea) was traditionally a Norwegian whaling area.

  2. 21 de oct. de 2023 · The area of operations for the expedition was located almost entirely in what is now the Norwegian claim of Antarctica — Queen Maud Land. Norway had been surveying the region, itself interested in the whale oil, and authorities in Norway were tipped off in December that Schwabenland was outbound to Antarctica.

  3. 26 de sept. de 2003 · [23] Total particle number concentrations and particle size distributions in the diameter range 3–800 nm were measured in Antarctica during the austral summers 2000 and 2001. The measurement site was the Finnish research station Aboa (73°03′S, 13°25′W) located in continental Antarctica some 130 km from the coastline.

  4. The earliest reliable dataset originates from the third leg of the US South Pole–Queen Maud Land traverse (SPQMLT 1964–68) covering the southernmost part of the area of interest between 75° S and 80° S and between 10° W and 40° E on Amundsenisen (Reference Picciotto, Crozaz, De Breuck and Crary Picciotto and others, 1971).

  5. 1 de oct. de 2006 · For example, northern Victoria Land is home to four dark species, southern Victoria Land contains three species, one dark, one blueish, one white, and in some of the most southern ‘exposed’ terrestrial soils in the Queen Maud Mountains, two white species outnumber the single dark species (Fig. 1; Table 1).

  6. 12 de nov. de 2023 · The flight is likely destined for the Troll Research Station in Queen Maud Land, which has been a year-round research station since 2005. The runway at Troll Airfield needs constant monitoring and ...

  7. 16 de nov. de 2023 · Largest jet ever to land Antarctic ice field. On Wednesday, the crew at the Norwegian Polar Institute in Troll, Maud Land, Antarctica welcomed a 787 Dreamliner with 45 researchers and 13 tons of equipment. This was the largest ever plane to land on the ice runway, opening up new research possibilities on the remote continent.