Science is an international activity; it's also a rather small world. I've mentioned both of those points before, I expect, but was a little surprised to be reminded of just how small a world it is. I was in Russia for work recently, specifically St. Petersburg. That's the story behind Dostoevsky being my summer reading. At the meeting, of course, I met a number of Russian scientists in my area. One of them being Dmitry Kiktev, deputy director of the Hydrometeorological Center.
Come ahead a little, and Michael Tobis (whom I know from some years of internet contact) posts a climate/weather news bit at In it for the Gold, regarding heat and fires in Russia. The scientist quoted is ... Dmitry Kiktev. In St. Petersburg, we experienced temperatures 20-25 F (10-12 C) above normal the whole week I was there (normal being 72-75 F, we had 95+). The article is talking about Moscow, but to the same end -- extraordinary temperatures being observed.
A different thing which I'll get to is the Climate Doctrine of the Russian Federation, which I received a copy of when we visited the Main Geophysical Observatory in St. Petersburg. One virtue it has (at least the English version; I don't speak or read Russian) is that it's short -- 22 pages of 5x8" (12x20 cm) text. Not so much a story as points for discussion. Different stories about the visit.
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