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  1. Queen Maud Land (Norwegian: Dronning Maud Land) is a c. 2.7 million square kilometre (1.04 million sq mi) region of Antarctica claimed as a dependent territory by Norway. The territory lies between 20° west and 45° east, between the claimed British Antarctic Territory to the west and the similarly claimed Australian Antarctic Territory to the ...

  2. La Tierra de la Reina Maud (en noruego: Dronning Maud Land) es un sector de la Antártida Oriental sobre el océano Antártico que enfrenta al sur del continente africano. El Territorio comprende desde el meridiano 20° O hasta 45° E, limitando así con el Territorio Antártico Británico al oeste y el Territorio Antártico Australiano al este.

  3. In 2017, we dispatched a team of the world’s finest explorers to the Queen Maud Land territory where they spent a month climbing and establishing new routes on the Wolf’s Jaw massif. Enduring brutal storms and freezing winds, these six athletes put our pinnacle alpine equipment to the test during the ultimate expedition at the bottom of the ...

  4. 4 de ene. de 2019 · Queen Maud Land, which was annexed by Norway in 1939, is almost seven times larger than Norway – and constitutes one-sixth of the of the total area of Antarctica. James Cook was the first person to offer a detailed description of the waters around the frozen land mass called “Terra Autralis” from his travels in 1772 and the years that ...

  5. A Gram-stain-variable, aerobic, orange pigmented, catalase-positive and oxidase-negative, cocci-shaped bacterium, designated SM7_A14<sup>T</sup>, isolated from glacier fed sediment sample collected from the Queen Maud Land, near India's Maitri station in Antarctica. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16 …

  6. 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).

  7. Novolazarevskaya Station ( Russian: Станция Новолазаревская) is a Russian, formerly Soviet, Antarctic research station. The station is located at Schirmacher Oasis, Queen Maud Land, 75 km (47 mi) from the Antarctic coast, from which it is separated by Lazarev Ice Shelf. It was opened on January 18, 1961 by the 6th Soviet ...