| Komsomolskaya Station | |
|---|---|
|   Komsomolskaya Station Location of Komsomolskaya Station in Antarctica | |
| Coordinates: 74°06′S 94°30′E / 74.1°S 94.5°E | |
| Country |  Soviet Union | 
| Location in Antarctica | Queen Mary Land Antarctica | 
| Administered by | Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute | 
| Established | 1957 | 
| Evacuated | 1962 | 
| Elevation | 3,500 m (11,500 ft) | 
| Type | All-year round | 
| Period | Annual | 
| Status | Closed | 
| Website | Official website | 
Komsomolskaya was a Soviet Antarctic inland research station founded in 1957 in Queen Mary Land,[1] in eastern Antarctica. It was a year-round station till 1959, then used as a seasonal outpost till 1962 when it was shut down permanently. Nonetheless it is still used as a fuel storage stop for supply caravans en route from Mirny Station to Vostok Station.[2]
The station was located 3,500 metres (11,500 ft) above sea level, and 760 kilometres (470 mi) inland from Mirny Station.
Estonian writer Juhan Smuul spent a week in Komsomolskaya in 1958 and described the life and working there in his book Antarctica Ahoy!: The Ice Book, originally published in 1960 as Jäine raamat.
See also
References
- ↑ "Soviet Antarctic expedition". Elsevier. 1965. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
- ↑ "The Unesco Courier, Volume 15". UNESCO. 1962. p. vi.
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