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21 de abr. de 2024 · "Vernadsky, Vladimir Ivanovich" published on by Oxford University Press. who, in his 1926 book The Biosphere, popularized the term *biosphere, coined in 1885 by Eduard *Suess, postulating that life is the geological force that shapes the Earth and that the presence in the atmosphere of nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide is due to ...
Hace 5 días · Влади́мир Ива́нович Верна́дский ( 28 февраля [ 12 марта] 1863 [1], Санкт-Петербург [2] — 6 января 1945 [2] [3] […], Москва [2] ) — российский [5], украинский [6] и советский [7] учёный- естествоиспытатель, мыслитель и общественный деятель. Академик Императорской Санкт-Петербургской академии наук (1912) [8]. Действительный статский советник (1911).
2 de may. de 2024 · International scientific conference on the subject: «Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky and Lev Gumilev: Great Synthesis of creative heritage» (Dedicated to the 100th anniversary of birth of L.N.Gumilev and come the 150 anniversary of the birth of V.I. Vern
17 de abr. de 2024 · 2012-12-06 Vladimir I. Vernadsky "Vladimir Vernadsky was a brilliant and prescient scholar-a true scientific visionary who saw the deep connections between life on Earth and the rest of the planet and understood the profound implications for life as a cosmic phenomenon." -DAVID H. GRINSPOON, AUTHOR OF
15 de abr. de 2024 · 1998-03-27 Vladimir I Vernadsky The United States Man and the Biosphere Program 1990 U.S. National Committee for Man and the Biosphere The Biosphere 2007-06-19 Kaufman-Franz The Biosphere 1970 Global Ecology 2013-04-25 Mitchell B. Rambler Public awareness and concern over environmental degradation has reached an all time high, as the effect of ...
Hace 3 días · t. e. The Khazars [a] ( / ˈxɑːzɑːrz /) were a nomadic Turkic people that, in the late 6th-century CE, established a major commercial empire covering the southeastern section of modern European Russia, southern Ukraine, Crimea, and Kazakhstan. [10] They created what for its duration was the most powerful polity to emerge from the break-up ...
26 de abr. de 2024 · Vladimir Voevodsky (born June 4, 1966, Moscow, Russia—died September 30, 2017, Princeton, New Jersey, U.S.) was a Russian mathematician who won the Fields Medal in 2002 for having made one of the most outstanding advances in algebraic geometry in several decades.