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Reference book crossword. Quick word search by mask. Polar stations in Antarctica

Crosswordist's Handbook / Index

Crosswordist's Handbook

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Science, education, medicine / Science, education, medicine / Polar stations in the Antarctic

(4)

BIRD - USA

SHEVA - Japan

(5)

CASEY - Australia

OASIS - USSR, before 1959

POLE - Amundsen Scott, USA

SANAE - South Africa

SCOTT - New Zealand

WILKS - Australia, before 1969

HALLEY - UK

(6)

VOSTOK - Russia

DIVIS - Australia

MIRNY - Russia

MAWSON - Australia

(7)

LAZAREV - USSR, 1959-1961

RUSSIAN - Russia

(9)

SOVIET - USSR, 1958-1959

ESPERANZA - Argentina

(10)

YOUTH - Russia

PIONERSKAYA - until 1959, the first Soviet

(13)

BELLINGSHAUSEN - Russia

DOBROVOLSKII - Poland, former Oasis

KOMSOMOLSKAYA - Russia

LENINGRAD - Russia

(15)

NOVOLAZAREVSKAYA - Russia

Word search to solve the crossword puzzle:

Replace each unknown letter with *. For example, dog * ka, * oshka, we ** a. Pairs е - ё, and - й are equated.



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Latest news of science and technology, new electronics:

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In modern agriculture, technological progress is developing aimed at increasing the efficiency of plant care processes. The innovative Florix flower thinning machine was presented in Italy, designed to optimize the harvesting stage. This tool is equipped with mobile arms, allowing it to be easily adapted to the needs of the garden. The operator can adjust the speed of the thin wires by controlling them from the tractor cab using a joystick. This approach significantly increases the efficiency of the flower thinning process, providing the possibility of individual adjustment to the specific conditions of the garden, as well as the variety and type of fruit grown in it. After testing the Florix machine for two years on various types of fruit, the results were very encouraging. Farmers such as Filiberto Montanari, who has used a Florix machine for several years, have reported a significant reduction in the time and labor required to thin flowers. ... >>

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Random news from the Archive

Babies are resistant to visual illusions 18.12.2023

Infants under six months of age appear to be resistant to visual illusions that can deceive older children and adults.

As experts have found, the perception of visual illusions in infants depends on their age and the degree of development of the brain’s information processing mechanisms. Understanding this feature may be key to greater insight into the development of human perception and internal processes in early childhood.

In the study, researchers presented a screen with red and green dots to infants aged five to eight months. Dots of one color moved up in the center but down to the right and left, while dots of the other color showed the opposite movement. The visual illusion that occurs when adults look at the center of the screen makes the apparent movement of the dots the opposite.

To find out whether babies succumbed to this illusion, the team conducted an experiment with 40 children, presenting a screen with dots of the same color moving in different directions. Children under six months looked longer at a screen when the dots moved in one direction, while children older than that age preferred a screen where the dots moved in both directions.

Given that infants typically take longer to pay attention to unfamiliar objects, experts conclude that older infants perceive the presented illusion while their younger counterparts do not.

This is probably due to the fact that the information processing mechanism in the brains of the youngest is not yet fully formed, which entails different assumptions about what they see.

Professor Paul Bays from the University of Cambridge, who was not involved in the study, praised the findings. He emphasized that what we see depends on the expectations of the world that are built into our brains during development: “In this case, the illusion occurs because the adult visual system assumes that what you see in the center of the screen is likely , will also occur on the periphery."

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