KnigaRead.com/
KnigaRead.com » Приключения » Путешествия и география » Рамиз Алиев - Изнанка белого. Арктика от викингов до папанинцев

Рамиз Алиев - Изнанка белого. Арктика от викингов до папанинцев

На нашем сайте KnigaRead.com Вы можете абсолютно бесплатно читать книгу онлайн Рамиз Алиев, "Изнанка белого. Арктика от викингов до папанинцев" бесплатно, без регистрации.
Перейти на страницу:

156. Beattie, O., Geiger, J. Frozen in Time: the Fate of the Franklin Expedition. London: Bloomsbury, 2004. 288 p.

157. Beer, J. Ice Core Data on Climate and Cosmic Ray Changes // Workshop on Ion-Aerosol-Cloud interactions / CERN. Geneva, Switzerland, 2001. P. 3–11.

158. Beer, J., McCracken, K. Evidence for Solar Forcing: Some Selected Aspects // Climate and Weather of the Sun-Earth System (CAWSES): Selected Papers from the 2007 Kyoto Symposium / edited by T. Tsuda, R. Fujii, K. Shibata, and M. A. Geller. 2007. P. 201–216. http://www.terrapub.co.jp/onlineproceedings/ste/CAWSES2007/pdf/CAWSES_201.pdf.

159. Benthic Communities as Influenced by Nuclear Tasting and Radioactive Waste Disposal off Novaya Zemlya in the Russian Arctic / V. B. Pogrebov, S. I. Fokin, V. V. Galtsova, G. I. Ivanov // Marine Pollution Bulletin. 1997. Vol. 35. P. 333–339.

160. Bernard, J. F. Ice Conditions Round Wrangel Island. // The Geographical Journal. 1924. Vol. 63, № 5. P. 463–464.

161. Bosco, P., Stone, I. R. Black Feathers in Svalbard: the Alpini Expeditions, 1928 // Polar Record. 2004. Vol. 40 (215). P. 303–308.

162. Brandt, A. The Man Who Ate His Boots: the Tragic History of the Search for the Northwest Passage. New York: Alfred A. Knopp, 2010. XVI, 441 p.: ill.

163. Bryce, R. M. The Fake Peak Revisisted // DIO. 1997. Vol. 7, Nos. 2. P. 41–76.

164. Carroll, S. Crusades Against Frost: Frankenstein, Polar Ice, and Climate Change in 1818 // European Romantic Review. 2013. Vol. 24, № 2. P. 211–230.

165. Carter, C. «The Sea Fryseth Not»: Science and the Open Polar Sea in the Nineteenth Century // Earth Sciences History. 2013. Vol. 32, № 2. P. 235–251.

166. Cavell, J. Going Native in the North: Reconsidering British Attitudes during the Franklin Search, 1848–1859 // Polar Record. 2009. № 45 (232). P. 25–35.

167. Cavell, J. Publishing Sir John Franklin’s Fate: Cannibalism, Journalism, and the 1881 Edition of Leopold McClintock’s Voyage of the «Fox» in the Arctic Seas // Book History. 2013. № 16. P. 155–184.

168. Chafe, E. F. The Voyage of the Karluk, and Its Tragic Ending // The Geographical Journal. 1918. Vol. 51, № 5. P. 307–316.

169. Change of Diet of the Greenland Vikings Determined from Stable Carbon Isotope Analysis and 14C dating of their Bones / J. Arneborg, J. Heinemeier, N. Lynnerup, H. L. Nielsen, N. Rud, Б. E. Sveinbjörnsdóttir // Radiocarbon. 1999. Vol. 41, № 2. P. 157–168.

170. Climate and Atmospheric History of the Past 420,000 Years from the Vostok Ice Core, Antarctica / Petit, J. R. el al. // Nature. 1999. Vol. 399. P. 429.

171. Cookman, S. Ice Blink: The Tragic Fate of Sir John Franklin’s Lost Polar Expedition. John Wiley & Sons, 2000. 256 p.

172. Cyriax, R. J. Sir James Clark Ross and the Franklin Expedition // Polar Record. 1942. № 24. P. 528–540.

173. Cyriax, R. J. The Two Franklin Expedition Records Found in King William Island // The Mariner’s Mirror. 1958. Vol. 44. № 3. P. 179–189.

174. Cyriax, R. J., Jones, A. G. E. The Papers in the Possession of Harry Peglar, Captain of the Foretop, HMS Terror, 1845 // The Mariners Mirror. 1954. Vol. 40. № 3. P. 186–196.

175. Dick, L. Aboriginal-European Relations During the Great Age of North Polar Exploration // Polar Geography. 2002. Vol. 26, № 1. P. 66–86.

176. Dick, L. «Pibloktoq» (Arctic Hysteria): a Construction of European-Inuit Relations? // Arctic Anthropology. 1995. Vol. 32, № 2. P, 1–42.

177. Dickens, C. The Lost Arctic Voyagers // Household Words. 1854. 2 December.

178. Diubaldo, R. J. Stefansson and the Canadian Arctic. McGeel-Queen`s University Press, 1999. 274 p.

179. Diubaldo, R. J. Wrangling Over Wrangel Island // The Canadian Historical Review. 1967. Vol. XLVIII, № 3. P. 201–226.

180. Durey, M. Exploration at the Edge: Reassessing the Fate of Sir John Franklin’s Last Arctic Expedition. The Great Circle // Journal of the Australian Association for Maritime History. 2008. № 30 (2). P. 3–40.

181. Eddy, J. A. The Maunder Minimum // Science. New Series. 1976. 18 June. Vol. 192. № 4245. P. 1189–1202.

182. Euller, J. The Centenary of the Birth of Frederick A. Cook // Arctic. 1964. Vol. 17, № 4. P. 219–221.

183. Farrer, K. T. H. Lead and the Last Franklin expedition // Journal of Archaeological Science. 1993. № 20. P. 399–409.

184. Gibson, W. Sir John Franklin’s Last Voyage // Beaver 17. 1937. June. № 1, Out. 268. P. 44–75.

185. Gough, B. M. British-Russian Rivalry and the Search for the Northwest Passage in the early 19th Century // Polar Record. 1986. № 23(144). P. 301–317.

186. Grant, Sh. D. Why the St. Roch? Why the Northwest Passage? Why 1940? New Answers to Old Questions // Arctic. 1993. № 46. P. 82–87.

187. Grove, J. M., Battagel, A. Tax Records from Western Norway, as an Index of Little Ice Age Environmental and Economic Deterioration // Climatic Change. 1983. № 5. P. 265–282.

188. Gjertz, I., Mørkved, B. Norwegian Arctic Expansionism, Victoria Island (Russia) and the Bratvaag Expedition // Arctic. 1998. Vol. 51, № 4. P. 330–335.

189. Hall, C. F. Arctic Researches and Life among the Esquimaux: being the Narrative of an Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin, in the Years 1860, 1861 and 1862. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1866. 615 p.

190. Haltia-Hovi, E., Saarinen, T., Kukkonen, M. A 2000-year Record of Solar Forcing on Yarved Lake Sediment in Eastern Finland // Quaternary Science Reviews. 2007. № 26. P. 678–689.

191. Harper, K. The Minik Affair: The Role of the American Museum of Natural History // Polar Geography. 2002. Vol. 26, № 1. P. 39–52.

192. Herschel, W. Observations Tending to Investigate the Nature of the Sun, in Order to Find the Causes or Symptoms of Its Variable Emission of Light and Heat; With Remarks on the Use That May Possibly Be Drawn from Solar Observations // Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 1801. Vol. 91. P. 265–318.

193. Highly Variable Northern Hemisphere Temperatures Reconstructed from Low– and High-Resolution Proxy Data / A. Moberg, D. M. Sonechkin, K. Holmgren, N. M. Datsenko & Wibjorn Karlen // Nature. 2005. Vol. 433. P. 613–617.

194. Horowitz, B. Z. Polar Poisons: did Botulism Doom the Franklin Expedition? // Clinical Toxicology. 2003. Vol. 41. № 6. P. 841–847.

195. Houston, C. S. John Rae (1813–1893) // Arctic. 1987. № 40 (1). P. 78–79.

196. Huntington, P. A. M. Robert E. Peary and the Cape York Meteorites // Polar Geography. 2002. Vol. 26, № 1. P. 53–65.

197. Interdisciplinary Investigations of the End of the Norse Western Settlement in Greenland / L. K. Barlow, J. P. Sadler, A. E. J. Ogilvie, P. C. Buckland, T. Amorosi, J. H. Ingimundarson // Holocene. 1997. № 7. P. 489–499.

198. Jackson, C. I. Three Puzzles from Early Nineteenth Century Arctic Exploration // The Northern Mariner/Le marin du nord. 2007. Vol. XVII, № 3 (July). P. 1–17.

199. Jones, A. G. E. Sir James Clark Ross and the Voyage of the Enterprise and Investigator, 1848–49 // The Geographical Journal. 1971. Vol. 137, № 2. P. 165–179.

200. Jones, H. G. Ada Blackjack and the Wrangel Island Tragedy, 1921–1923 // Terrae Incognitae. 1999. Vol. 31. P. 91–102.

201. Karpoff, J. M. Public Versus Private Initiative in Arctic Exploration: The Effects of Incentives and Organizational Structure // Journal of Political Economy. 2001. Vol. 109, № 1. P. 38–78.

202. Keenleyside, A. Bertulli, M. Fricke, H. C. The Final Days of the Franklin Expedition: New Skeletal Evidence // Arctic. 1997. Vol. 50, № 1. P. 36–46.

203. Kershaw, P. J., McCubbin, D., Leonard, K. S. Continuing contamination of north Atlantic and Arctic waters by Sellafield radionuclides // Science of the Total Environment. 1999. Vol. 237/238. P. 119–132.

204. Kramer, A. E. Warming Revives Dream of Sea Route in Russian Arctic // The New York Times. 2011. 17 October.

205. Lajeunesse, A. The Distant Early Warning Line and the Canadian Battle for Public Perception // Canadian Military Journal. 2007. Summer. P. 51–59.

206. Larsen, H. A. The Conquest of the North West Passage: The Arctic Voyages of the St. Roch, 1940–44 // The Geographical Journal. 1947. Vol. 110, № 1/3. P. 1–16.

207. Levere, T. H. Science and the Canadian Arctic, 1818–76, from Sir John Ross to Sir George Strong Nares // Arctic. 1988. Vol. 41, № 2. P. 127–137.

208. Levere, T. H. Vilhjalmur Stefansson, the Continental Shelf, and a New Arctic Continent // The British Journal for the History of Science. 1988. Vol. 21, № 2. P. 233–247.

209. Lindgren, S., Neumann, J. Crossings of Ice-Bound Sea Surfaces in History // Climatic Change. 1982. Vol. 4. P. 71–97.

210. Lindsay, R., Schweiger, A. Arctic sea ice thickness loss determined using subsurface observations // The Cryosphere. 2015. № 9. P. 269–283.

211. Lloyd-Jones, R. The Royal Marines on Franklin’s last expedition // Polar Record. 2004. № 40 (215). P. 319–326.

212. Loomis, Ch. Weird and Tragic Shores: The Story of Charles Francis Hall, Explorer. 2nd edition. New York: Random House Publishing Group, 2000. 392 p. (Modern Library Exploration Series).

213. Lynnerup, N., Nørby, S. The Greenland Norse: Bones, Graves, Computers, and DNA // Polar Record. 2004. № 40 (213). P. 107–111.

214. Marcus, A. R. Out in the Cold: Canada’s Experimental Inuit Relocation to Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay // Polar Record. 1991. № 27 (163). P. 285–296.

215. Marlow, J. E. The Fate of Sir John Franklin: Three Phases of Response in Victorian Periodicals // Victorian Periodicals Review. 1982. Vol. 15, № 1. P. 2–11.

216. Martin, C. William Scoresby, Jr. (1789–1857) and the Open Polar Sea – Myth and Reality // Arctic. 1988. Vol. 41, № 1. P. 39–47.

217. May, K., Lewis, G. The death of Roald Amundsen and the crew of the Latham 47 // Polar Record. 2015. Vol. 51, Is. 1. P. 1–15.

218. McCannon, J. History of the Arctic: Nature, Exploration and Exploitation. London: Reaktion Books, 2012.

219. McCannon, J. Positive Heroes at the Pole: Celebrity Status, Socialist-Realist Ideals and the Soviet Myth of the Arctic, 1932–1939 // The Russian Review. 1997. Vol. 56. P. 346–365.

220. McCannon, J. Red Arctic: Polar Exploration and the Myth of the North in the Soviet Union, 1932–1939. New York: Oxford University Press,1998. XI, 226 p.

221. McClintock, F. L. The Voyage of the «Fox» in the Arctic Seas. A Narrative of the Discovery of the Fate of Sir John Franklin and his Companions. London: John Murray, 1859. 403 p.

222. McGhee, R. The Timing of the Thule Migration // Polarforschung. 1984. Vol. 54 (1). P. 1–7.

223. McKinlay, W. L. The last voyage of the Karluk: a survivor’s memoir of Arctic disaster. New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1999. XIII, 168 p., [16] p. of plates: ill., maps.

224. McKinzey, K. M., Olafsdottir, R., Dugmore, A. J. Perception, History, and Science: Coherence or Disparity in the Timing of the Little Ice Age Maximum in Southeast Iceland? // Polar Record. 2005. № 41 (219). P. 319–334.

225. Michaels, P. A. Mikhail Kalatozov’s the Red Tent: a Case Study in International Coproduction across the Iron Curtain // Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. 2006. Vol. 26, № 3. P. 311–325.

226. Millar, K., Bowman, A. W., Battersby, W. A re-analysis of the supposed role of lead poisoning in Sir John Franklin’s last expedition, 1845–1848 // Polar Record. 2014. Vol. 51, № 3. P. 224–238.

227. Mitchell, R. Dr. John Rae, Arctic explorer and his search for Franklin // Canadian Medical Association Journal. 1933. Vol. 28(1). P. 85–90.

228. Monetti M. A. Worldwide Deposition of 90Sr through 1990 / Environmental Measurements Laboratory, U. S. Department of Energy Report EML-579. New York, 1996. http://www.eml.doe.gov/publications/reports/.

229. Moore, A. Sir Edwin Landseer’s «Man Proposes, God Disposes»: and the Fate of Franklin // The British Art Journal. 2009. Vol. 9, № 3. P. 32–37.

230. Murray, C. The Use and Abuse of Dogs on Scott’s and Amundsen’s South Pole Expeditions // Polar Record. 2008. Vol. 44 (231). P. 303–310.

231. Nansen, F. How Can The North Polar Region Be Crossed? // The Geographical Journal. 1893. Vol. 1, № 1. P. 1–22.

232. Neatby, L. H. John Ross (1777–1856) // Arctic. 1984. Vol. 37, № 3. P. 298–299.

233. New light on the personal identification of a skeleton of a member of Sir John Franklin’s last expedition to the Arctic, 1845 / S. Mays, A. Ogden, J. Montgomery, S. Vincent, W. Battersby, G. M. Taylor // Journal of Archaeological Science. 2011. Vol. 38. P. 1571–1582.

234. Newsom, G. H. Byrd’s Arctic Flight in the Context of Model Atmospheres // Polar Record. 2013. Vol. 49 (248). P. 62–71.

235. Newsom, G. H. Byrd came oh-so-close, but probably didn’t reach North Pole: New Computer Analysis Suggests Explorer Came Within Sight of His Goal // Research and Innovation Communications / Ohio State University. 4.08.2013. from http: http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/byrdnorth.htm.

236. Nielsen, K. H. Transforming Greenland: Imperial Formations in the Cold War // New Global Studies. 2013. Vol. 7, № 2. P. 129–154.

237. Niven, J. Ada Blackjack. A true story of survival in the Arctic. New York: Hyperion, 2003. 431 p.: ill., maps.

238. Oerlemans, J. Extracting a Climate Signal from 169 Glacier Records // Science. 2005. Vol. 308. P. 675.

239. Olesen, T. B. Tango for Thule: the Dilemmas and Limits of the «Neither Confirm nor Deny» Doctrine in Danish-American Relations, 1957–1968 // Journal of Cold War Studies. 2011. Vol. 13, № 2. P. 116–147.

Перейти на страницу:
Прокомментировать
Подтвердите что вы не робот:*