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1

Sartor, Valerie, and Svetlana Bogdanova. "Evolving and adapting to global changes regarding English: English language teaching in the Siberian city of Irkutsk." English Today 31, no. 2 (May 28, 2015): 5–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266078415000048.

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The Russian Federation, established after the breakup of the USSR in the early 1990s, is the largest country in the world (Blinnikov, 2011). Russians have long considered their capital, Moscow, and the adjoining city of St Petersburg, to be the centres of culture and commerce, as well of the arts and educational facilities. Due to the large size of their country, Russians designate areas west of the Ural Mountains informally as “European Russia.” The Russian territories known as Siberia and the Russian Far East extend east of the Urals to the Pacific Ocean, and cover approximately 10% of the world's land mass (Yudin, 2006). In May 2000, President Putin designated nine federal subjects (provinces and republics) of Siberia as the Siberian Federal District (http://russiatrek.org/siberia-district). The capital of Irkutsk, located in Irkutsk Province, is situated in the southeastern part of the Siberian Federal District.
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2

žigaitė, živilė, Valentina Karatajūtė-Talimaa, and Alain Blieck. "Vertebrate microremains from the Lower Silurian of Siberia and Central Asia: palaeobiodiversity and palaeobiogeography." Journal of Micropalaeontology 30, no. 2 (September 1, 2011): 97–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/0262-821x11-016.

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Abstract. The biostratigraphic and palaeogeographical distributions of early vertebrate microfossils from a number of Lower Silurian localities in northwestern Mongolia, Tuva and southern Siberia were reviewed. Vertebrate microremains showed high taxonomic diversity, comprising acanthodians, chondrichthyans, putative galeaspids, heterostracans, mongolepids, tesakoviaspids, thelodonts and possible eriptychiids. The majority of taxa have lower stratigraphic levels of occurrence compared to other Silurian palaeobiogeographical provinces, such as the European-Russian or Canadian Arctic. Vertebrate microremains are numerous within the samples, which may indicate warm-water low-latitude palaeobasins with rich shelf faunas. This disagrees with the recent interpretations of the territory as a northern high-latitude Siberian palaeocontinent. The palaeobiogeographical distribution of vertebrate taxa indicates an endemic palaeobiogeographical province of connected epeiric palaeoseas with external isolation during the early Silurian. In previous works separation between Tuvan and Siberian palaeobiogeographical provinces has been suggested. After careful revision of the vertebrate microfossil record of the region, we find that differences in a few vertebrate taxa do not provide not strong enough evidence to reliably distinguish these provinces. We therefore dispute the hypothesis of two biogeographical provinces in the early Silurian of the Siberian palaeocontinent, and propose a single unified Siberian–Tuvan palaeobiogeographical province.
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3

Karchaeva, T. G. "ORGANIZATION OF NOTARY BUSINESS IN SIBERIA BEFORE 1896: THE YENISEI PROVINCE." Bulletin of Kemerovo State University, no. 1 (April 25, 2018): 39–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/2078-8975-2018-1-39-45.

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The current paper features organization and operation of notaries in Siberia before 1896. The data obtained have revealed that the Statute of Notaries reached Siberia some thirty years after it had been issued in Central Russia in 1866. The article contains information about the development of the history of Notarial Institute in the Yenisei province before and after the Siberian Notary Reform of 1896. It has been concluded that Siberia had regional peculiarities in its management in the pre-revolutionary period of Russian history. In the XVIII century notary functions were performed by clerks, bailiffs and "weeklings", after 1822 – by officials of city councils and police employees (e.g. the city of Turukhansk). The author notes that the rapid social and economic changes in Siberia predetermined the need for the development of the pre-reform notary as an independent legal institution. Archival materials reveal that the first notary began his work in Krasnoyarsk as late as in 1883, and he was not a state servant, the way it was in Central Russia, but was elected by the local municipal authorities; what is more, neither authorities nor society had any influence on his activities. It was concluded that the pre-1896 Siberian notaries had a number of regional features that played their role in the pre-revolutionary period of Russian history.
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4

Suslova, L. N., I. V. Yarkova, and R. G. Bukanova. "Everyday Life of Population of Siberian Province in Context of Peter’s I Reforms in First Quarter of 18th Century." Nauchnyi dialog, no. 6 (June 24, 2021): 448–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-6-448-466.

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The article is devoted to the study of the evolution of the culture of everyday life of the Siberian province population in the first quarter of the 18th century, the characteristics of the development of traditional forms of material culture of Siberians, and new features of everyday life that arose under the influence of the implementation of Peter's reforms on the territory of Western Siberia. Changes in the material culture, leisure and life of the population of the Siberian province in the first quarter of the 18th century are considered, the traditions of building houses, making clothes, the level of medical care and health care, leisure activities of the population of Western Siberia in the first quarter of the 18th century are described. The study was carried out on the basis of an analysis of the complex of legislative and office-work sources of the State Archives in Tobolsk. Among them, an important place is occupied by decrees regulating the organization of medical care for the population, documents reflecting the actions of local authorities in relation to the occupation of Swedish prisoners of war in Tobolsk by distilling. The authors of the article show that Peter's modernization processes in the field of culture, customs and everyday life had little effect on the traditions of building houses, making clothes, and everyday activities of the majority of the peasant population of the Siberian province and local non-Russian peoples. It is concluded that the main changes affecting the area of everyday culture are associated with the implementation of the military and administrative reforms of Peter I, the appearance of captured Swedes on the territory of the province, the implementation of the provincial reform, a change in the local administration system, the emergence of medical professional personnel and health care institutions.
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5

Antipova, E. M. "THE STRUCTURE OF THE SIBERIAN GEOGRAPHICAL FLORAL ELEMENT IN THE MIDDLE SIBERIAN FOREST STEPPES." Proceedings on applied botany, genetics and breeding 180, no. 3 (October 29, 2019): 76–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.30901/2227-8834-2019-3-76-81.

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Background. The ultimate goal of studies of any flora is the clarification of the history of vegetation cover and individual taxa formation in the studied region, determination of the degree of its individuality, of floristic links with other territories, and of regularities in flora formation.Materials and methods. The flora of vascular plants in the island forest steppes of Middle Siberia, i. e. of the Krasnoyarsk, Kansk and Achinsk forest steppes, identified by the specific floras method of A. I. Tolmachev, was chosen as the object of research. The purpose of the paper was to study the structure of the Siberian geographical element in the steppe flora, characteristics of the types of constituent distribution areas selected on the basis of the phytochorion concept. The basis for determining the types of habitats was the planetary regionalization scheme by A. L. Takhtajan, complemented by statistical convergent zonation for Siberia by L. I. Malyshev, and for the Russian Far East by R. V. Kamelin.Results. The territory of the Middle Siberian forest steppes is a part of the Altai-Yenisei Province. The Krasnoyarsk, Kansk and Achinsk forest steppes (Krasnoyarsk Territory) are the most northern parts of the region (55°28’–57°28’N, 89°– 96°40’E). Twenty-six local floras were examined. Ten distribution area types were identified within the Siberian geographical element of the boreal group according to the names of sub-regions and provinces (154 species, 11.12%), limiting their distribution from West to East or from East to West, including all intermediate Siberian provinces between them. All types of distribution areas were combined into four large subgroups, namely Siberian, West Siberian, Middle Siberian, and East Siberian. Names of geographical elements were composed from the names of several phytochoria, in which they had been registered, according to the rules by M. G. Popov.Conclusions. The Siberian geographical element rates third in all three forest steppes after the Euro-Siberian and Circumboreal geographical elements. In the flora of the Middle Siberian forest steppes Siberian elements amount to 11%, among which the Middle Siberian ones prevail (4.4%, 61 species) due to the geographical position of the flora. The fraction of species distributed throughout Siberia is 3.25% (45 species), followed by East Siberian species (2.24%, 31 species) and West Siberian ones (1.23%, 17 species).
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6

Khomentovsky, V. V. "The Vendian System of Siberia and a standard stratigraphic scale." Geological Magazine 123, no. 4 (July 1986): 333–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756800033422.

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AbstractIn Siberia Vendian is equated with a Yudoma Complex or Yudomian. Yudomian deposits of the Siberian Platform and adjacent geosynclines differ greatly in facies and thickness. According to the composition and structure of Yudomian deposits, four facies provinces may be recognized on the platform. Local stratigraphic charts for each province are presented and their correlation and possibility to subdivide the Vendian System in Siberia into three horizons or stages are substantiated. The upper stage (Nemakit–Daldyn), on the basis of palaeontological evidence, is in its turn subdivided into two zones: Anabarites trisulcatus and Purella antiqua.The most important Early Baikalian rearrangement is proved to take place around 800±50 Ma. The pre-Vendian (Late Baikalian) movements, though less intensive, make the determination of the Yudomian lower boundary easier.The specific character of Vendian biostratigraphy is discussed involving all groups of the organic remains, that causes the necessity of recognition, subdivision and correlation on the basis of the whole complex of data.The boundary between the Vendian System and the Lower Cambrian Tommotian Stage (in type section) is proved to conform to the base of the Pestrozvet Formation, which divides the A. sunnaginicus and P. antiqua zones.
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7

Cai, Yaoping, Hong Hua, Andrey Yu Zhuravlev, José Antonio Gámez Vintaned, and Andrey Yu Ivantsov. "Discussion of ‘First finds of problematic Ediacaran fossil Gaojiashania in Siberia and its origin’." Geological Magazine 148, no. 2 (September 9, 2010): 329–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756810000749.

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Y. Cai & H. Hua comment: Zhuravlev, Gámez Vintaned & Ivantsov (2009) reported the problematic Ediacaran fossil Gaojiashania annulucosta in Siberia and they considered that this is the first find of Gaojiashania outside China, since Gaojiashania had previously only been reported from the Gaojiashan Member of the middle Dengying Formation in the Ningqiang area, southern Shaanxi Province, South China. However, we believe that the so-called Siberian Gaojiashania was mis-identified, and what was described as Gaojiashania annulucosta by Zhuravlev, Gámez Vintaned & Ivantsov (2009) is more appropriately ascribed to Shaanxilithes ningqiangensis, another problematic Ediacaran fossil that has also been known from the Gaojiashan Member in Shaanxi Province of South China (Chen, Chen & Lao, 1975; Xing et al. 1984), as well as the stratigraphically equivalent Taozichong Formation in Guizhou Province (Hua, Chen & Zhang, 2004) and the Jiucheng Member (Dengying Formation) in Yunnan Province of South China (Zhu & Zhang, 2005), the Zhoujieshan Formation in Qinghai Province (Shen et al. 2007), and the Zhengmuguan Formation in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region of North China (Shen et al. 2007).
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8

Stevens, Calvin H., and Charles A. Ross. "Fusulinids from piston cores, Northwind Ridge, Amerasia Basin, Arctic Ocean." Journal of Paleontology 71, no. 3 (May 1997): 357–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000039378.

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Fusulinaceans from the flank of Northwind Ridge in the Arctic Ocean indicate that this feature is underlain by miogeoclinal upper Paleozoic strata, and that the fauna belongs to the Middle Carboniferous through Early Permian Arctic Fusulinacean Province. This province stretched from the Canadian Arctic Islands eastward to Svalbard where it merged with the similar Ural Fusulinacean Province in the western Ural Mountains. Because these provinces did not extend into Siberia, the Northwind Ridge assemblage indicates that these rocks originally were adjacent to, or a part of, the Canadian Arctic Islands Carboniferous-Permian shelf margin.
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9

Zhuravlev, Andrey Yu. "Evolution of archaeocyaths and palaeobiogeography of the Early Cambrian." Geological Magazine 123, no. 4 (July 1986): 377–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756800033471.

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AbstractIn the Early Cambrian, there were two peaks of the increase in number of new archaeocyathan genera. These diversification bursts are, perhaps, related to significant changes in Early Cambrian palaeogeography. The first burst at the beginning of the Atdabanian was, perhaps, connected with the initiation of archaeocyathan expansion beyond the Siberian Platform. During the second half of the Atdabanian, closely related archaeocyathan assemblages were established from North Africa to Australia because neither climate, nor geographic isolation could have affected their differentiation in that time. At the end of the Atdabanian and the beginning of the Botomian the number of archaeocyathan genera again increased sharply, and isolated provinces were established. The American–Koryakiyan province was formed in western North America (from Alaska to Sonora) and included the Koryakiya, while the Afro–Siberian–Antarctic province probably extended from North Africa and Western Europe to Siberia, Australia, and Antarctica. The main difference between the regular archaeocyathan assemblages lies in what skeletal elements filled the intervallum. There was a certain stability in the distribution of skeletal elements of high taxonomic rank and an interchangeability of elements of low taxonomic rank.
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10

Korzhenevsky, K. B. "Territorial Delimitation between Altai, Omsk and Semipalatinsk Provinces in 1925." Nauchnyi dialog, no. 5 (May 28, 2021): 371–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-5-371-383.

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A detailed analysis of the process of demarcation of the Altai province from the Omsk province of the RSFSR and the Semipalatinsk province of the Kirghiz (since June 1925 — Kazak) ASSR, which were first involved in scientific circulation is carried out on the basis of the archival documents. It is shown that it consisted in an attempt by the Altai authorities to withdraw the territory of the Narrow Steppe from under their jurisdiction and transfer it to the adjacent provinces in the first half of 1925. The history of this border issue, which arose as a result of the inclusion of the Korostelevskaya steppe in the Kyrgyz ASSR, is investigated. The course of discussion of changes in the border line between the authorities of the three provinces and Moscow is described. Various arguments proposed by the parties, options for resolving the problem that have arisen are considered; and also, it is explained why, in the end, the disputed border territory remained part of Siberia. It is noted that the attempts of the leadership of the Altai province to transfer part of the territory of the Uglovsky district with the “Narrow Steppe” tract under the control of the Omsk and Semipalatinsk provinces are noted. It is concluded that the issue of the status of the Narrow Steppe during the nationalterritorial demarcation between Siberia and Kazakhstan was one of the most difficult and went beyond the traditional ways of solving similar problems.
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11

Podobina, Vera M. "New data on middle and late Albian foraminifera and biostratigraphy of the northern palaeobiogeographical district of western Siberia." Geologos 21, no. 1 (March 1, 2015): 71–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/logos-2015-0004.

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Abstract The present paper discusses foraminiferal assemblages and biozones established on the basis of studies of samples from ten borehole sequences of the Khanty-Mansiysk Horizon in the Samotlor area of the northern palaeobiogeographical district of western Siberia (Russia). In this region, middle and late Albian foraminiferal assemblages were first distinguished in western Siberia. Levels from which these assemblages have been recovered, are here referred to the following foraminiferal zones, the Ammobaculites fragmentarius-Gaudryinopsis filiformis Zone (middle Albian) and the Ammotium braunsteini-Verneuilinoides borealis assanoviensis Zone (upper Albian). Zonal assemblages are dominated by representatives of the orders Ammodiscida, Textulariida and Ataxophragmiida. Species of the ataxophragmiid genera Verneuilinoides, Pseudoverneuilina and Gaudryinopsis are the most characteristic, inclusive of several key index forms. Foraminiferal tests consist of agglutinated quartz-silica, the wall microstructure being almost exclusively medium and coarse grained. In specific composition, the Albian assemblages from the Samotlor area are similar to those from Transuralia (Russia) and to the Canadian Province, which, together with West-Siberian Province, forms the Arctic palaeobiogeographical realm
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12

Prishchepa, Alexander. "Special opinion of the head of the Central board." OOO "Zhurnal "Voprosy Istorii" 2021, no. 03 (March 1, 2021): 178–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.31166/voprosyistorii202103statyi14.

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The article analyzes the activities of the head of the Glavtyumenneftegazstroy department Alexey Barsukov during the industrial development of the West Siberian oil and gas province. The article analyzes the economic policy of accelerated hydrocarbon production in the north of the Tyumen region, draws attention to its negative consequences for the economy of the USSR, and focuses on the alternative strategy proposed by A. Barsukov for the development of oil and gas fields in Western Siberia.
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13

Tkachev, S. E., A. Yu Tikunov, I. V. Babkin, N. N. Livanova, S. G. Livanov, V. V. Panov, V. V. Yakimenko, A. K. Tantsev, D. E. Taranenko, and N. V. Tikunova. "Occurrence and Genetic Diversity of Kemerovo Virus in Ixodid Tick of Western Siberia." Epidemiology and Vaccine Prevention 16, no. 2 (April 20, 2017): 75–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.31631/2073-3046-2017-16-2-75-79.

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Kemerovo virus (KEMV), a member of Reoviridae family, Orbivirus genus, is transmitted by ixodes ticks and can cause the damage of human central nervous system. The occurrence and genetic diversity of KEMV in Western Siberia still remained poorly studied, so, the aim of this work was to investigate the prevalence and genetic variability of KEMV in ixodid ticks from Western Siberia. A total of 1958 Ixodes persulcatus, I. pavlovskyi ticks and their hybrids from Novosibirsk and Omsk provinces, Altai Republic (Russia) and East Kazakhstan province (Kazakhstan) were analyzed for the presence of KEMV and tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) RNA. It was shown that KEMV distribution area in Western Siberia was wider and included Northern and Northeastern Altai in addition to Omsk and Novosibirsk provinces. For the first time this virus was found in Kazakhstan. The occurrence of KEMV was statistically lower than TBEV in most locations in Western Siberia. KEMV was found both in I. persulcatus and I. pavlovskyi ticks and in their hybrids. Notably, KEMV variants found in 2010s genetically differ from those isolated in 1960s. Moreover, the possibility of reassortment for KEMV was demonstrated for the first time.
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14

Zinovyev, Vasiliy P., and Sergey G. Sulyak. "Scientific and Technical Associations of Tomsk Province." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History 65, no. 3 (2020): 904–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2020.312.

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This article analyzes the corporate movement in the scientific and technical spheres of Russia’s largest Tomsk province in the late 19th — early 20th centuries. The authors have collected the most comprehensive information available in historiography about the scientific and technical associations of the province. In total, 35 associations have been identified. Tomsk, being a university city, had more scientific and technical associations than other cities — 20. It is determined that the most important factor in the emergence of scientific communities and their activity in the Tomsk province were higher educational institutions: the Imperial University (which opened in 1888); the Institute of Technology (1896), and Siberian Higher courses for women (1910), whose teachers initiated the majority of agricultural, medical, technical, local history, and humanitarian public associations. The second most important factor was the activity of officials of the regional administration concentrated in Tomsk — civil servants, engineers by education, in such spheres as transport, mining, telegraph, excise and others. The third factor in uniting fans of scientific activity was the Siberian group of the State Duma, which initiated the work of the society for the study of Siberia and improvement of its life. The fourth, the most numerous, but weak in scientific terms, group of associations was formed by agricultural specialists: agronomists, animal technicians, beekeepers, gardeners, botanists. The departments of the Imperial Russian geographical society in the Tomsk province were represented by one — the Altai sub-department in Barnaul. The authors conclude that scientific associations were non-political associations whose social significance was small in contrast to the scientific one.
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15

Ershova, Victoria B., Andrei V. Prokopiev, and Andrei K. Khudoley. "Hidden Middle Devonian Magmatism of North-Eastern Siberia: Age Constraints from Detrital Zircon U–Pb Data." Minerals 10, no. 10 (October 1, 2020): 874. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min10100874.

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We present new data on the tectonic evolution of north-eastern Siberia using an integrated provenance analysis based on U–Pb detrital zircon dating and sandstone petrography of Devonian sedimentary strata. Our petrographic data suggest that Upper Devonian sandstones of north-eastern Siberia were derived from a local provenance, supported by the widespread distribution of ca. 1900–2000 Ma magmatic events in the basement of the neighboring Ust’-Lena and Olenek uplifts. Devonian detrital zircon age distributions of the Devonian sandstones are similar to ages of Middle Paleozoic magmatic rocks of Yakutsk-Vilyui large igneous province (LIP). Therefore, we suggest that the studied sandstones were derived from proximally-located uplifted blocks composed of Proterozoic–Devonian rocks and Middle–Late Devonian volcanics. Moreover, the abundance of Middle–Late Devonian zircons is suggestive of a wider distribution of coeval magmatism across north-eastern Siberia than previously supposed. We propose that widespread Devonian magmatism associated with the Yakutsk-Vilyui LIP also occurred to the east of our study area and is now buried beneath thick Carboniferous–Jurassic sedimentary rocks of the eastern Siberian passive margin, subsequently deformed into the Late Jurassic–Cretaceous Verkhoyansk fold-and-thrust belt. We also propose that the major pulse of the Yakutsk-Vilyui LIP occurred in north-eastern Siberia during the Middle Devonian at ca. 390 Ma, some 15 million years earlier than within the Vilyui rift basin in eastern Siberia (ca. 375 Ma).
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16

Brumfield, William C. "Photographic Documentation of Architectural Monuments in Siberia: Tiumen Province." Visual Resources 16, no. 4 (January 2000): 309–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01973762.2000.9658565.

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17

Podobina, V. M. "NEW DATA ON BIOSTRATIGRAPHY AND FORAMINIFERA OF THE ALBIAN IN WEST SIBERIA." Geology and mineral resources of Siberia, no. 2 (2021): 17–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.20403/2078-0575-2021-2-17-23.

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Foraminifera and ostracods similar to the Samotlor ones of the Middle and Upper Albian were found in the section of a newly drilled well in the Severnaya area of West Siberia. Host rocks are marine facies of the Khanty-Mansikian horizon, distributed in the northern paleobiogeographic district of the West Siberian Province. Foraminifera of the Middle Albian in this district are identified as the assemblage with Ammobaculites fragmentarius, Gaudryinopsis filiformis; the Upper Albian ones – the assemblage with Ammotium braunsteini, Verneuilinoides borealis assanoviensis. Layers with these assemblages are identified as foraminiferal zones of the Albian stage, belonging to the middle series of the Cretaceous System.
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18

Babushkin, E. S. "Materials on the fauna of bivalve mollusks (Mollusca, Bivalvia) of the Taz river basin (Western Siberia)." Ruthenica, Russian Malacological Journal 30, no. 1 (February 11, 2020): 13–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.35885/ruthenica.2021.30(1).3.

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Based on a study of samples made by the author, 70 species of freshwater bivalves belonging to 6 genera and 2 families are recorded for the Taz River basin (north of Western Siberia). An annotated list of bivalves of the Taz basin is provided, with data on species’ range, their findings in Western Siberia and within the studied area. Some information about bionomics and abundance of bivalves are given. 45 species are for the first time registered in this basin. Most studied molluscan communities are characterized by low species richness; the distribution of species by their occurrence was extremely uneven. 22 species are characterized as rare. The highest species richness of bivalves was found in river channels, rivers and brooks; the lowest - in temporary habitats. The core of the fauna is constituted by species with broadest range (cosmopolitan, trans Holarctic, trans Palearctic) as well as by taxa with European Siberian type of distribution. From the taxonomic point of view, the bivalve fauna of the Taz basin is relatively separated from the faunas of other river basins of Western Siberia and is more similar to the fauna of the Lower Yenisean zoogeographic province (sensu Starobogatov [1986]).
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19

Kogarko, L. N. "Role of CO2 on differentiation of ultramafic alkaline series: liquid immiscibility in carbonate-bearing phonolitic dykes (Polar Siberia)." Mineralogical Magazine 61, no. 407 (August 1997): 549–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1997.061.407.07.

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AbstractThe Maimecha-Kotui province in the North of Siberian platform is the largest province of ultramafic alkaline rocks in the world. The province comprises thirty-seven central-type complexes together with numerous dykes. The majority of dykes are radially disposed around the ultramafic alkaline massifs. Data are presented for dykes of the Dolbykha carbonatite complex, which comprises olivine and melilite nephelinites; nosean, calcite and cancrinite phonolites; calcite trachytes and calcite carbonatites.Some peralkaline phonolitic dykes contain carbonate-bearing globules with sizes of 1−2 mm to 17−20 mm. Globules consist of polycrystalline calcitic aggregates together with albite, phlogopite, apatite, Sr-lueshite, zircon, ancylite, ilmenite and strontianite. The phonolites have phenocrysts of albite, phlogopite and ilmenite. Albite, phlogopite, calcite and nepheline are also present in the groundmass. Analysis of these materials in the light of experimental data on the liquid immiscibility in carbonate-silicate systems suggests that separation of carbonatite from phonolitic melts took place due to immiscibility in the liquid state. I propose that carbonate melts contained originally significantly higher alkali contents which were subsequently lost into the fluid phase due to the incongruent dissolution of calcium-sodium carbonates in aqueous fluid at low temperatures. The discovery of nyerereite in the carbonatite of Polar Siberia confirms this conclusion. I infer that one of the mechanisms for the genesis of carbonatite melt in Polar Siberia was liquid immiscibility in strongly differentiated phonolitic magmas.The generation of the carbonatites was probably controlled by the depth (and PCO2) of the crustal magma chamber where differentiation took place and probably also by the alkalinity of melts, and the rapidity of magma ascent to the surface.
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20

Dobretsov, N. L., S. M. Zhmodik, E. V. Lazareva, A. V. Tolstov, D. K. Belyanin, O. N. Surkov, N. N. Dobretsov, N. V. Rodionov, and S. A. Sergeev. "U-Pb age of sphene grains, petrochemical, mineralogical and geochemical features of alkaline rocks of the Bogdo complex (Arctic Siberia)." Доклады Академии наук 489, no. 3 (November 29, 2019): 281–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0869-56524893281-285.

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In the north of the Siberian Platform, east of the Anabar Shield, several identified massifs of alkaline rocks with carbonatites are known: Tomtorsky, Bogdo, Promezhutochniy, as well as Bualkalakh, Chuempe, Uele, which are projected according to geophysical data and forming a large alkaline-carbonatite province. The first data on the composition of alkaline rocks of the Bogdo massif were obtained, which correspond to a group of feldspathic rocks of the main composition: rischorrites, biotite-aegirine libenerite syenites, carbonatized, with symplectites and nepheline-feldspar aggregates, pseudo-leucite nepheline syenites. Sphenes were extracted from various types of rocks of the Bogdo massif and their U-Pb age was determined using the SHRIMP-II secondary-ion microprobe. The calculated U-Pb age corresponds to 394,4 3,2 Ma, which is close to the age stage established for the Tomtor massif and the age of the rocks of the Kola alkaline province. One of the reasons for the manifestation of alkaline plume magmatism in this territory may be the influence of the peripheral zone Africa Large Low Shear Velocity Province (Tuzo) in the Baltic and Siberia during the Devonian era.
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21

Puzanov, Vladimi D. "The russian army in siberia in the 30–50 years of the XVIII century." Bulletin of Nizhnevartovsk State University 55, no. 3 (September 27, 2021): 84–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.36906/2311-4444/21-3/08.

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The reforms of Peter I became the basis for the gradual restructuring of all the military forces of Siberia. The main role in the Russian military cavalry of the Peter's era was played by dragoons. Under Peter I, dragoon regiments were the only type of Russian regular cavalry. In the field army, Peter I ordered the formation of 34 dragoon regiments. In addition, garrison dragoon regiments were formed in the province in the strategically important cities of Azov, Astrakhan, Kazan, and Tobolsk. In the 3050s of the XVIII century, the number of field dragoon regiments of the Russian Empire decreased to 20. In 1744, 3 field dragoon regiments Olonetsky, Vologda and Lutsk, and 2 field infantry regiments Shirvan and Nasheburg were sent to Siberia to protect the region from the Dzungars. By the decree of the Senate of September 29, 1744, all the Russian troops of Siberia were subordinated to the chief commander of the Siberian Corps, who was subordinate to the Military College. Major-General Christian Kinderman was appointed the main commander in Siberia. In March 1756, the Russian army consisted of 3 cuirassiers, 29 dragoons, and 46 infantry regiments, totaling 78 army regiments, with 172,440 men. As a result, during the Seven Years ' War, the number of field dragoon units in Russia decreased by 3 times and by 1763 was only 7 regiments. As a result, if in 1754 the dragoons were 36,627 people (92.6 %), then by 1767 there were only 4,802 people (12.8%) from the Russian cavalry in their ranks.
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22

Bryukhanova, E. A., and N. V. Nezhentseva. "Foreigners in the Cities of the Tobolsk Province: Approaches to Analyzing Data from the First General Population Census of the Russian Empire in 1897." Izvestiya of Altai State University, no. 5(115) (November 30, 2020): 69–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.14258/izvasu(2020)5-10.

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The cities of Siberia at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries were a complex socio-cultural and economic phenomenon, a feature of which was the presence in it not only of "traditional" urban estates, but also of other social groups such as military Cossacks or foreigners. Despite the abundant historiography of both cities and Siberian indigenous peoples of the period under review, the study of foreigners in cities was not carried out. But in order to form a comprehensive idea of the social structure of Siberian cities, it is necessary to study all groups of the population. The paper presents the analysis of the data of the First general population census of the Russian Empire of 1897 on the socio-demographic and professional composition of foreigners living in the cities of the Tobolsk province. The analysis of the 1897 census materials made it possible to distinguish several trends characteristic of foreigners in the cities of the Tobolsk province. Such trends included: self-determination of representatives of many nationalities of Siberian foreigners to the peasant class; seasonal employment of foreigners in urban services; settlement of some foreigners in cities such as Berezov, Tobolsk, Tara. It is noted that the indicated phenomena were characteristic of people in the "rural state," which included foreigners, and determined the general directions of the socio-economic development of the region.
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23

Kozmenko, A. "Arctic oil and the eastern direction of Russia's energy policy." SHS Web of Conferences 84 (2020): 03004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20208403004.

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The article describes the main features of Russia’s position in the traditional and promising oil markets of Europe and China in the context of the importance of oil and gas income in the country’s economy in the formation of the Federal budget of the Russian Federation. The resource base of the eastern direction of oil transportation “Polar region - Eastern Siberia - Pacific Ocean” is evaluated and the geo-economic feasibility of increasing oil supplies to China is justified. At the same time, the developed resource base the West Siberian oil and gas province will not be enough to ensure growing supplies in the east while maintaining the level of oil exports to Europe. Therefore, the task is to develop oil energy resources in the Arctic.
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24

Nefediev, Pavel S., Gyulli Sh Farzalieva, Ivan H. Tuf, Khozhiakbar Kh Nedoev, and Saparmurad T. Niyazov. "Millipede and centipede assemblages on the northern and southern slopes of the lowland Altais, southwestern Siberia, Russia (Diplopoda, Chilopoda)." ZooKeys 741 (March 7, 2018): 219–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.741.21936.

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The total species richness in the myriapod assemblages of the lowland Altais near Charyshskoe Village, Altai Province, southwestern Siberia, Russia is estimated to be at least 19 species from ten genera, eight families, five orders, and two classes. The following species are new to SW Siberia: Lithobius (Ezembius) ostiacorum Stuxberg, 1876,L. vagabundusStuxberg, 1876, and L. (Monotarsobius) nordenskioeldii Stuxberg, 1876, while L. (E.) proximus Sseliwanoff, 1880 and L. (M.) insolens Dányi & Tuf, 2012 are recorded for the first time from the Altai Province of Russia. A species ofStrigamiawhich is morphologically similar to Strigamia cf. transsilvanica (Verhoeff, 1928) has been found in the study area but its true specific identity is yet to be determined. The seasonal dynamics of myriapod assemblages in terms of the species diversity, density, sex-age structure, and vertical distribution along the soil profile have been studied with regard to the different slope exposures.
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25

Serebryakov, E. A., and S. I. Goldfarb. "Political and Social Aspects of A. D. Goremykin’s Activities during His Time as Irkutsk Governor General." Bulletin of Irkutsk State University. Series Political Science and Religion Studies 35 (2021): 28–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.26516/2073-3380.2021.35.28.

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The article examines the activities of A. D. Goremykin as Governor General of the Irkutsk Governorate. The authors paid attention to the analysis of his relations with the scientific and cultural intelligentsia of the province. Multidirectional political views of the governor have been considered through the prism of social conflicts with the representatives of the Siberian regionalism. The article focuses on the memoirs of the contemporaries with first-hand knowledge of A. D. Goremykin’s activities. The authors considered the approach of the governor in solving acute social issues concerning the life of political exiles. A liberal aspect of the political activity of the governor making his decisions with understanding of the realities of the Siberian socio-economic situation has been highlighted. The analysis of the personality of A. D. Goremykin shows a pragmatic politician with a balanced approach to solving socio-political problems of the region rather than the reformer of Siberia with imperial ambitions.
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26

Fayzullina, G. Ch, E. Kh Kadirova, and A. A. Fattakova. "Mosque Books of the Tobolsk Province of the 19th - Early 20th Centuries as a Literary Text of the Siberian Tatars: Books Contents and Vocabulary." Nauchnyy Dialog, no. 2 (February 28, 2020): 127–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2020-2-127-140.

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The question is raised about the study of mosque books of the Tobolsk province of the XIX - early XX centuries, stored in the State Budgetary Institution of the Tyumen region “State Archives of Tobolsk”. It is reported that the documents cover the period from 1830 to 1917 and are the metric books of the Siberian Tatars “on a note on births, about marriage, divorce and death”. The relevance of the study is due to the preservation and study of the literary texts of the indigenous Turkic people of Western Siberia - the Siberian Tatars. A review of the geography and chronology of preserved manuscripts is carried out, the features of the composition of the information contained in mosque books of the Sauskan and Chebourg yurts are considered. The authors emphasize the value of metric books as a source, since some traditional features of Tatar writing of the 18th-19th centuries have been preserved in them, which is associated with generally accepted standards for the design of official business papers. The scientific prospects of the study are considered: the creation of a written corpus of manuscript books of Siberian Tatars; analysis of the unexplored literary texts in the corpus, archaeographic (paleographic description, the study of graphics, spelling and punctuation), linguistic-textological and linguocultural aspects; application of the genealogical approach in describing the anthroponymic of Tobolsk province of the 19th - early 20th centuries on the basis of metric data on births, marriages, divorces and death.
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27

Rynkov, Vadim. "War Communism Dawn of the NEP: the Fishing Industry Management of the Northern Ob-Irtysh Region (1920-1921)." Journal of Economic History and History of Economics 19, no. 3 (October 15, 2018): 330–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/2308-2588.2018.19(3).330-366.

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The author analyzes historiography of soviet fishing industry establishment at the Northern Ob-Irtysh region and examines sources from the funds of Sibrevcom authorities and all-Siberian co-operative organizations that have not been earlier introduced into scientific research of the problem of establishment of the NEP policy in the provinces. This allowed validating a conclusion about complex interaction between cooperative organizations and food activities, and about contradictions between all-Siberian and Tyumen organizations. In 1920, cooperation actively used individual suppliers, individual agents, traders, salespeople and manufacturers to fulfill state procuring tasks. Cooperative organizations were interested to establish equivalent barter in the Northern part of Tyumen province. Creation of state trust Oblastryba aimed to exclude co-operation from organization of fishery. The task was solved by concentration of all resources in the possession of food establishments and neglection of taken liabilities. Thus, beginning of NEP in the Northern region coincided with tightening of administrative pressure on cooperative unions, depriving them of the opportunity to buy fish. These led to formation of monopoly in fishing industry in the Northern Ob-Irtysh region with the help of administrative pressure of Oblastryba that could procure by interaction with different economic sectors. Thus, establishment of NEP in the North of West Siberia coincided with weakening of competition and straightening of centralization in fisheries sector.
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28

Gonina, N. V., and S. V. Bershadskaia. "NEP and Nepmen Representation in Siberian Periodicals." Izvestiya of Altai State University, no. 5(115) (November 30, 2020): 19–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.14258/izvasu(2020)5-02.

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This article examines the nature of the new economic policy and Nepmen - Russia’s capitalists of 1920s - representation from the regional perspective of Siberia and textual evidence of the local periodicals during the period 1921-1925. Given the lack of materials of personal origin (diaries, letters, memoirs, etc.), textual evidence of the Siberian periodicals is an important source of information to understand the local situation despite certain ideological and censorship restrictions associated with the Soviet press. Using the texts of the daily newspaper “Krasnoyarsk Worker” (“Krasnoyarsky Rabochy”) and the monthly magazine “Our Printed Word” (“Nashe Pechatnoe Slovo”), the official periodicals of the Yenissei province, the article analyses the image of the “new economic policy”, considers the nature of Nepmen representation and identifies those characteristics of the images that reflect the trends common to Russia and those that represent the specifics of Siberia. The problem-chronological method is the basis of this study. The methodological basis is traditional for research of this type - the principles of consistency and objectivity. The theoretical and practical significance of the study is to create the basis for the further research on this issue. The results can be applied to courses in higher education institutions in subjects such as Russian history and Regional studies.
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29

Krivolutskaya, Nadezhda, Boris Belyatsky, Bronislav Gongalsky, Alexander Dolgal, Andrey Lapkovsky, Kreshimir Malitch, Vladimir Taskaev, and Natalya Svirskaya. "Petrographical and Mineralogical Characteristics of Magmatic Rocks in the Northwestern Siberian Traps Province, Kulyumber River Valley. Part I: Rocks of the Khalil and Kaya Sites." Minerals 10, no. 5 (April 30, 2020): 409. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min10050409.

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The origin of the Siberian Traps province has been under discussion for the last three decades. Up to now, there is no real model of its formation in a good agreement with geological data on the magmatic evolution at P–T boundary in Eastern Siberia. Modern geochemical data on magmatic rocks around the province is a key to reconstructing magmatic development in time and space. Such data have been obtained for the Norilsk and Meimecha–Kotuy and not for other parts of the Siberian province. For the first time, we studied the geochemistry and mineralogy of magmatic rocks at the Kulyumber river valley, located in the intersection of the Tunguska syneclise and Norilsk–Igarka zone in the NW Siberian platform. In this article, we present data from the Khalil and Kaya sites of this area belonging to the Syverminsky, Gudchikhinsky, Khakanchansky and Nadezhdinsky formations. Their mineralogical and geochemical features (including Sr, Nd and Pb isotope data) are similar to the same formations in the Norilsk area, while the rocks belonging to the Gudchikhinsky formation show differences. The Syverminsky tuffs are also described for the first time. The intrusive rocks are attributed to four intrusive complexes, i.e., Ergalakhsky, Kureysky, Katangsky and Norilsk. The Ergalakhsky complex comprises trachydolerites similar to the trachydolerites of the Norilsk area. The rocks of the Norilsk complex at the Khalil site differ from the rocks of the same complex at the Norilsk area by the (U/Nb)n = 1.8, (La/Yb)n = 2.1 in comparison with 3.7 and 2.3 of the rocks of the Norilsk 1 intrusion. The intrusions of the Kureysky complex are more differentiated than those of the Katangsky intrusions but show comparable TiO2 and trace elements distribution. Thus, the magmatism of the Kulyumber area is characterized by features matching those of the Tunguska syneclise and Norilsk area, i.e., suggesting rift and platform regimes.
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30

Golovneva, L. B., and P. I. Alekseev. "The genus Trochodendroides Berry in the cretaceous floras of Siberia." Palaeobotany 1 (2010): 120–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.31111/palaeobotany/2010.1.120.

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Seventeen species of the genus Trochodendroides and one species of the genus Nyssidium are described from the Albian-Maastrichtian deposits of the Chulym-Yenisei depression (Western Siberia), Lena-Vilyui depression (Eastern Siberia) and Kolyma River basin. The study of recently collected materials and revision of previous data allow us to describe 4 new species (T. buorensis Golovn., sp. nov, T. beketovii Golovn., sp. nov., T. rostrata Golovn. et P. Alekseev, sp. nov.) and to offer 6 new combinations (T. tiungensis (Budants.) Golovn., comb. nov., T. heterophylla (Budants.) Golovn., comb. nov., T. kemensis (Ananjev) Golovn., comb. nov., T. sibirica (Tcherepnin) P. Alekseev, comb. nov., T. bajkovskae (I. Lebed.) Golovn., comb. nov., T. gromovii (E. Lebed.) Golovn., comb. nov). The new names were proposed for two species (T. budantsevii Golovn., nom. nov., T. ananjevii Golovn., nom. nov.). The morphological diversity, variability and value of different characters for distinction of species are discussed. The epidermal features were firstly examined for T. heterophylla and T. ananjevii. They are mostly similar to epidermal features of Cercidiphyllum. The genus Trochendroides firstly appeared in Siberia in the early-middle Albian as a minor component of the conifer-dominated Mesophytic floras. The determination of this genus is verified by the findings of Nyssidium fruits. During the Late Cretaceous the genus Trochodendroides was common member in floras of the Siberian-Canadian phythogeographic region. The systematic and morphology diversity of Trochodendroides was comparatively low in the late Albian–Cenomanian and the findings of these leaves are rare. The abundance of Trochodendroides leaves was increased in the Turonian and the Coniacian. During the Coniacian this genus reached the highest systematic and morphologic diversity (the Antibes and the Vilyui floras). In the Santonian-Campanian the abundance of Trochodendroides leaves was decreasing again. In this time the lanceolate or narrow-ovate leaf morphotypes were most usual. They were often described as Macclintockia, Zizyphus or Paliurus. Genus Trochodendroides is not presented in the Cretaceous deposits of Europe and firstly appeared there in the Tertiary. This genus is rare in the Late Cretaceous deposits of the Turan province, near the boundary between Siberian-Canadian and Euro-Sinian phythogeographic regions.
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31

Kogarko, L. N., and R. E. Zartman. "A Pb isotope investigation of the Guli massif, Maymecha-Kotuy alkaline-ultramafic complex, Siberian flood basalt province, Polar Siberia." Mineralogy and Petrology 89, no. 1-2 (September 7, 2006): 113–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00710-006-0139-3.

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32

Sobanski, Florian. "The Southern Selkups of Tomsk Province before and after 1991." Nationalities Papers 29, no. 1 (March 2001): 171–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905990120036448.

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The Selkups, a linguistic community known as Ostyak Samoyeds until the middle of the twentieth century, currently exist in two separate territorial groups in the regions of west-central and northwestern Siberia. In all, 3,612 people identified themselves as Selkups in the last Soviet census of 1989. Since there is great divergence in dialects among the various groups, some specialists suggest classifying them as three different languages: Northern, Central, and Southern Selkup. Here the Selkups of Tomsk province, who speak the central and southern dialects, will be referred to collectively as Southern Selkups.
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33

PRZHIBORO, ANDREY A., NIKOLAY M. PARAMONOV, and NATALIA V. BAZOVA. "Distribution of Hexatoma (Eriocera) ussuriensis Alexander (Diptera: Limoniidae)." Zoosymposia 3, no. 1 (December 22, 2009): 221–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.3.1.18.

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The distribution of Hexatoma (Eriocera) ussuriensis Alexander is analyzed on the basis of the authors' original material and the specimens kept in the collection of the Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg (including the types). Diagnostic characters of H. ussuriensis are summarized. H. ussuriensis is recorded for the first time from Mongolia, Japan and eastern Siberia (including new records from five provinces of Russia: Kemerovo Province, Republic of Altai, Krasnoyarsk Territory, Irkutsk Province, and Buryatia). The known distribution of this species is wide; it ranges from ca. 61° to 43°N, from 30 to 650 m above the sea level, and covers different landscape-climatic zones (from boreal forest to dry steppe). Records of H. ussuriensis are confined mostly or entirely to different-type running waters, which probably serve as larval habitats. They are briefly characterized and illustrated. Adults of H. ussuriensis were for the first time reared from larvae collected in the Chikoi River (Buryatia, Russia).
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34

Kuzmin, Yaroslav V. "Obsidian provenance studies in the far eastern and northeastern regions of Russia and exchange networks in the prehistory of Northeast Asia." Documenta Praehistorica 46 (December 9, 2019): 296–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/dp.46-18.

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This overview is based on the results of 25+ years of provenance studies to identify the sources of high-quality volcanic glass (obsidian) in prehistoric cultural complexes of the far eastern and northeastern regions of Russia (Maritime Province, the Amur River basin, Sakhalin Island, the Kurile Islands, Kamchatka Peninsula, Chukotka region, the Kolyma River basin, and the High Arctic), as well as in adjacent parts of Northeast Asia (Hokkaido Island, the Korean Peninsula, and Manchuria). The extended networks of obsidian exchange in antiquity are reconstructed for the southern Russian Far East and Northeastern Siberia. A possible mechanism of long-distance obsidian exchange/trade in Northeastern Siberia is suggested.
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35

Kuzmin, Yaroslav V. "Obsidian provenance studies in the far eastern and northeastern regions of Russia and exchange networks in the prehistory of Northeast Asia." Documenta Praehistorica 46 (December 9, 2019): 296–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/dp.46.18.

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This overview is based on the results of 25+ years of provenance studies to identify the sources of high-quality volcanic glass (obsidian) in prehistoric cultural complexes of the far eastern and northeastern regions of Russia (Maritime Province, the Amur River basin, Sakhalin Island, the Kurile Islands, Kamchatka Peninsula, Chukotka region, the Kolyma River basin, and the High Arctic), as well as in adjacent parts of Northeast Asia (Hokkaido Island, the Korean Peninsula, and Manchuria). The extended networks of obsidian exchange in antiquity are reconstructed for the southern Russian Far East and Northeastern Siberia. A possible mechanism of long-distance obsidian exchange/trade in Northeastern Siberia is suggested.
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36

Falkovich, Svetlana M. "On some aspects of Russian-Polish bilingualism in the Russian Empire in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries." Central-European Studies 2019, no. 2 (11) (2020): 327–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2619-0877.2019.2.15.

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This article deals with the issues of Russian-Polish bilingualism in the Russian Empire in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Within the framework of the empire, the area of settlement of Poles was not limited to the territory of the Kingdom of Poland. Their presence in various Russian regions is shown by the example of the activities of “Polonies” in the Kharkov province, the North Caucasus, and Siberia. The migration of the Poles occurred both voluntarily, as was the case in the Kharkov province, or was forced, as a result of the repressions of the tsarist authorities and the exile of members of the Polish national movement, as in the North Caucasus and Siberia. It was not unusual that after the expiration of the term of exile, Poles voluntarily remained in the place they had been exiled to. Their occupation depended largely on the nature of the region and their social status. In the Kharkov province, representatives of the Polish intelligentsia carried out professional and cultural-educational activities, served as provincial officials, and were engaged in the improvement of urban infrastructure. In Siberia, Polish exiles became teachers as well as taking part in scientific expeditions that conducted research in the fields of geography, hydrography, geology, flora and fauna, meteorology, and ethnography of the region. To obtain better opportunities and adapt to the surrounding reality, the Poles needed, to one degree or another, knowledge of the Russian language. They acquired the language in various ways in addition to self-education: they were in constant contact with the local population and some even married those of the Orthodox faith. The participation of Poles in the social and cultural life of the regions under consideration contributed to a certain rapprochement and greater assimilation of the culture of both peoples.
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37

Sarayeva, Yelena L., and Igor’ A. Tsoy. "PETER KROPOTKIN, THE PARTICIPATION OF ENLIGHTENED LEADERS OF EASTERN SIBERIA IN THE PREPARATION OF REFORMS IN THE EARLY 1860S." Vestnik of Kostroma State University, no. 3 (2020): 40–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/1998-0817-2020-26-3-40-50.

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The article gives an interpretation of the views of Peter Kropotkin on the reform process in Russia in the late 1850s and the early 1860s and his ideas about the role of the provincial administration of Eastern Siberia in the preparation of the reforms. The novelty of the research lies in the analysis of Peter Kropotkin’s judgements about the perception and implementation of the reformist plans of ministries by the provincial administration, which was the most important link in the mechanism of the transformation of society. Peter Kropotkin was an active participant in this preparatory work in Chita Province and knew all the persons involved in it, therefore his testimonies and judgements are of interest for historical science. Historiography has not sufficiently studied the problem of perception by the participants of the transformations in the provinces of the course of practical implementation of the reforms conceived by the central government, in particular in Eastern Siberia. The article analyses the way of thinking of Peter Kropotkin in 1857-1863, reproduces the characteristics given by Peter Kropotkin to the governors of Eastern Siberia, his judgements about their participation in the preparation of projects of transformations in this region, we also analyse the forms of interaction of the provincial administration with the local community, interpreted Peter Kropotkin’s views on the reasons for the turn of power to reaction in the early 1860s and on the results of the transformations.
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38

Kogarko, L. N., I. D. Ryabchikov, and D. V. Kuzmin. "High-Ba mica in olivinites of the Guli massif (Maimecha–Kotui province, Siberia)." Russian Geology and Geophysics 53, no. 11 (November 2012): 1209–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rgg.2012.09.007.

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39

Vasil'ev, Yu R., M. P. Gora, and D. V. Kuz'min. "Petrology of foiditic and meymechitic volcanism in the Maimecha-Kotui province (Polar Siberia)." Russian Geology and Geophysics 58, no. 6 (June 2017): 659–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rgg.2017.05.001.

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40

Rafikov, Azat Minnegayazovich. "A.N. RADISHCHEV IN THE VYATKA PROVINCE ON THE WAY FROM SIBERIA IN 1797." Sovremennye issledovaniya sotsialnykh problem, no. 1 (March 8, 2016): 50. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2077-1770-2016-1-50-61.

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41

Brandenberger, David, and James Hughes. "Stalinism in a Russian Province: A Study of Collectivization and Dekulakization in Siberia." Slavic and East European Journal 43, no. 4 (1999): 757. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/309455.

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42

SURKOV, V., M. GRISHIN, A. LARICHEV, V. LOTYSHEV, N. MELNIKOV, A. KONTOROVICH, A. TROFIMUK, and A. ZOLOTOV. "The riphean sedimentary basins of the Eastern Siberia province and their petroleum potential." Precambrian Research 54, no. 1 (December 1991): 37–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0301-9268(91)90067-k.

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43

Petin, Dmitry I. "Regulation of Money Circulation in Yenisei Province (January–June 1920)." Izvestia of the Ural federal university. Series 2. Humanities and Arts 23, no. 1 (2021): 178–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/izv2.2021.23.1.012.

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This article considers the understudied aspect of financial history in the final period of the Civil War in Eastern Siberia. The author aims to describe the correlation between the financial and economic activities of the partisans and the Yenisei Provincial Revolutionary Committee during the restoration of Soviet power and their policies. With the help of a comparison between the forms of financial policies of the rebels and the Soviet government, the comparative-historical and problem-chronological methods make it possible to track the dynamics in the economic sphere of the region. The author demonstrates the connection of the issue considered in the article and the general historiography of the situation with the circulation of money in Siberia during the Civil War. The research is based on office records from the Soviet period as well as unpublished documents (orders, minute books, correspondence) of revolutionary committees of Yenisei Region which are first introduced into scholarly circulation (from the funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation, the Russian State Archive of the Economy, the State Archive of Krasnoyarsk Krai, the State Archives of Novosibirsk and Tomsk Regions, and the Krasnoyarsk Regional Museum of Local History). Having examined the monetary activities of the partisans and the Soviet authorities in Yenisei Province, the author concludes that in the first half of 1920, the “rebel view” on the regulation of the financial and economic spheres persisted in the region. The experience of the pro-Soviet and Soviet authorities of Yenisei Province is another indication of the fact that during the Civil War, the issue of their own money was the key method for solving financial difficulties for all authorities, regardless of the degree of their legitimacy and political stance.
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44

Svetlana V., Bershadskaia. "Journey from Krasnoyarsk to Moscow in 1923." Humanitarian Vector 16, no. 3 (June 2021): 71–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.21209/1996-7853-2021-16-3-71-78.

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By examining the personal journal of Marfa Solov’eva, one of the staff of Krasnoyarsk Local History Museum (Yenissei Province), the article aims to analyze some changes of everyday life at the beginning of the 1920s. Aged 33, Ms. Solov’eva found herself among the members of the Yenissei Province delegation sent to participate in the First All-Union Agriculture and Orchard Industry Exhibition in Moscow in 1923. She wrote down her personal experiences of travelling from Krasnoyarsk to Moscow. Given that anthropological shift has taken the lead in historical research, the materials of personal origin (like personal journals) provide an additional avenue to get firsthand information on how contemporaries interpreted the turning points in history. By focusing on the findings from the personal journal introduced for the first time the article investigates the transformations in early Soviet society at the grassroots level and from the point of view of a young representative of Siberian intelligentsia. The article demonstrates how day-to-day and leisure practices of those who took part in the trip were organized. Additionally, it considers the emotional sphere, which is missed to a greater extent by official sources. A mixture of interdisciplinary, systematic and sociocultural approaches and descriptive methods for interpreting sources has been adopted. Keywords: personal journal, everyday life, the intelligentsia, Siberia, the Yenissei province, the onset of NEP, the First All-Union Agriculture and Orchard Industry Exhibition in Moscow in 1923
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45

Zhong, Yihai, Zejian Li, and Meicai Wei. "Review of the Pachyprotasis flavipes group (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) from China with descriptions of two new species." Zoologia 38 (April 19, 2021): 1–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zoologia.38.e59733.

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The flavipes group of Pachyprotasis Hartig, 1837, with twenty-four species recognized in China, is reviewed. This number includes two newly described species, Pachyprotasis rufodorsata sp. nov., from Sichuan, Hubei, Ningxia, and Shaanxi provinces, and Pachyprotasis nigritarsalia sp. nov., from Hunan province. The mesopleuron and metapleuron of the two new species are reddish-brown, distinguishing them from other similar species of the P. flavipes group. Thirty-four species of this group have been recorded from China, one species (P. variegate Fallén, 1808) was found to be widespread throughout Europe and Siberia, twenty-four were originally described from the China and Burma-Yunnan frontier, eleven from India, and five from Japan. A key to the species of this group from China is provided.
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46

Polonskiy, V. I., N. A. Surin, S. A. Gerasimov, A. G. Lipshin, A. V. Sumina, and S. A. Zute. "Evaluation of barley genotypes for the content of β-glucans in grain and other valuable features in Eastern Siberia." Proceedings on applied botany, genetics and breeding 182, no. 1 (April 3, 2021): 48–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.30901/2227-8834-2021-1-48-58.

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Background.The aim of the research was to identify barley germplasm accessions with the minimum and maximum content of β-glucans in their grain in combinations with other improved useful traits.Material and methods.The material for analysis were 18 hulled and 8 naked barley accessions of various ecogeographic origin from the collection of the N.I. Vavilov AllRussian Institute of Plant Genetic Resources (VIR), which were grown under the conditions of Eastern Siberia in 2016–2018.Results.Hulled accessions yielded grains with β-glucan content from 3.18 to 4.51%; naked ones, from 3.18 to 5.21%. According to the minimum value of the studied qualitative trait (3.18–3.43%), cultivars of Siberian breeding were identified: ‘Mayak’ (k-29622, Krasnoyarsk Territory) and ‘Tarsky 3’ (k-30719, Omsk Province), plus cv. ‘AC Albright’ (k-30599, Canada); according to the maximum value (5.06–5.21%), the naked accessions Nudum 155 (k-13328, Ukraine) and ‘Nudum 95’ (k-31125, Chelyabinsk Province). The highest protein content in grain (16.63–18.36%) was found in the accessions Nudum 155, Nudum 7566 (k-29453, Kyrgyzstan) and ‘Nudum 95’. The accessions Nudum 155 and ‘Nudum 95’ were characterized by combined high contents of β-glucans and protein in their grain. Early maturity and increased productivity were shown by the cultivars ‘Tarsky 3’, ‘Kolchan’ (k-31039, Altai Territory), ‘Zolotnik’ (k-30845, Altai Territory), ‘Abalak’ (Krasnoyarsk Territory, Tyumen Province), and ‘AC Albright’ (Canada). A significant positive relationship was found between the content of β-glucans and the weight of 1000 grains in both forms of barley.Conclusion.According to β-glucan content combined with other valuable characteristics in grain, the accessions ‘Mayak’, ‘Tarsky 3’ and ‘AC Albright’ are of interest for the improvement of fodder cultivars, while ‘Nudum 95’ and Nudum 155 are promising for breeding for food.
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47

Anosova, M. A., Yu A. Kostitsyn, and L. N. Kogarko. "Correlation high-calc undersaturated earth silicon complex of Maymecha-Kotuy province with Siberian flood basalts. New age data of massif Kugda (Polar Siberia)." Геохимия 64, no. 12 (December 20, 2019): 1269–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0016-752564121269-1273.

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Perovskite crystals from ore-bearing olivinite and phoscorite of Kugda Massif were analyzed by LA-ICP-MS. Age obtained for alkaline rocks of Kugda Massif is 2576 Ma. It means that Kugda massif was formed simultaneously with the Siberian flood basalts and Guli Massif (2509 Ma) which is the largest pluton in the Maymecha-Kotuy Province and is highly differentiated. The melilite-bearing Kugda Complex was formed synchronously with Siberian Trapps and Guli Massif, which suggests that these rocks might be genetically related.
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Ovchinnikov, V. A. "The Role of Educational and Demonstration Workshops in the Development of Vocational Education and Training for the Handicraft Industry of Tomsk Province in the Early XX Century." Bulletin of Kemerovo State University 21, no. 4 (December 31, 2019): 948–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/2078-8975-2019-21-4-948-961.

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The present research featured educational and demonstration handicraft workshops in the Tomsk Province in the early XX century. The research objective was to determine the general course and features of the workshops that played a significant role in the modernization of technology and handicrafts in the region, along with other institutions of the Tomsk State Handicraft Committee, e.g. museums, warehouses, and libraries. The workshops became an important part of vocational education. A major role on the state level belonged to the administration of land management and agriculture and the Imperial Russian technical society. In the Tomsk province it belonged to the Tomsk Provincial Handicraft Committee and the Tomsk Department of the Russian Technical Society. By 1917, seventeen settlements in six parishes of the Province had seventeen workshops in nine areas of handicraft industry. Weaving, wagon-making, and agricultural engineering workshops predominated. They became centers for the development of vocational education and the popularization of new technologies. They organized educational support workshops for the adult population, sold modern machinery and materials, built warehouses for handicrafts and repair shops, instructor schools, etc. The network of workshops, along with vocational educational institutions, became the basis for the Soviet system of vocational education in Siberia in the post-revolutionary period. The paper contains an analysis of researches and historical sources. The results helped to fill the gaps in the history of vocational education in the South of Western Siberia.
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Audisio, Paolo, Alessandro Campanaro, Stefano Chiari, Agnese Zauli, Laura Spada, and Giuseppe Maria Carpaneto. "EPURAEA DEUBELI REITTER, 1898, A CONFIRMED SAPROXYLIC SAP BEETLE FOR THE ITALIAN FAUNA (Coleoptera, Nitidulidae)." Fragmenta Entomologica 45, no. 1-2 (October 31, 2013): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/fe.2013.20.

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During ecological investigations on saproxylic beetle communities at Monte Baldo (Veneto, Verona province), two specimens of <em>Epuraea</em> <em>deubeli</em> Reitter, 1898 (Coleoptera, Nitidulidae) were recently collected. It is the first known sure record of this species in Italy (previously known from Northern, Eastern, and Central Europe, southwards to Austria, and from Western Siberia).
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NEFEDIEV, PAVEL S., JULIA S. NEFEDIEVA, and TATIANA M. KRUGOVA. "The millipede genus Sibiriulus Gulička, 1963 revisited, with the description of a new species from the Altais, southwestern Siberia, Russia (Diplopoda: Julida: Julidae)." Zootaxa 4869, no. 3 (November 3, 2020): 421–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4869.3.8.

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Sibiriulus mikhaljovae sp. nov. is described from the Altai Province, southwestern Siberia, Russia. This new species differs from its congeners mainly by the presence of a longitudinal crest inside the apical fovea of the gonopod mesomere. Brief descriptive remarks concerning several previously described Sibiriulus species allow for the definition of the genus to be supplemented and refined. All eight currently known species of Sibiriulus are keyed.
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