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  1. 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 ...

  2. Hace 4 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).

  3. 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

  4. 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

  5. 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 ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KhazarsKhazars - Wikipedia

    Hace 2 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 ...

  7. 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.