beyond the horizon: part 2, pp 54-123 from providenya to kyubyume

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Beyond the Horizon: part 2, pp 54- 123 from Providenya to Kyubyume The Road of Bones – construction From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ M56_Kolyma_highway_(Russia)

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Beyond the Horizon: part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume. The Road of Bones – construction From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M56_Kolyma_highway_(Russia). Soviet Union, 1989. Current Map of Russia. Map of Russia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Beyond the Horizon: part 2, pp 54-123from Providenya to Kyubyume

The Road of Bones – constructionFrom Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M56_Kolyma_highway_(Russia)

Page 3: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Current Map of Russia

http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/asia/rularge.htm

Map of Russia

Page 4: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Russia: a brief description•

Russia, the world's largest country, obviously defies a "brief description," as it covers 11 time zones, all climate zones except tropical, with land that stretches almost halfway around the planet. In fact, by jet from Moscow, it takes about 8 hours to reach Vladivostok on its Pacific Ocean coast. If you were to take that trip on the Trans-Siberian Railroad, count on your journey taking four days minimum. Russia has over 1,000 major cities, with 16 having a metro population of more than one million. The most populated cities are Moscow, St. Petersburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk and Yekaterinburg. Moscow, the capital, with over 12 million (metro) residents, is the country's major economic and political center - the seat of the President, the government and the State Duma. The Russian landmass west of the Ural Mountains (shown above in a slightly darker shade of green) is referred to as European Russia by most educational atlases and geography experts. It is not a separate country, but rather called that because of its political, cultural and geographical blendings with Europe. Historically, the land called Russia was occupied by Mongols, and the likes, for centuries. In the early 17th century, the 300 year control of the Romanov family began, and it was Czar Peter I that really began the transformation of the Russian Empire. After the reign of Queen Catherine II, it emerged as an influential and powerful European force. This flexible and durable giant somehow survived decades of political uprisings; a bloody civil war, one led by Vladimir Lenin; its participation in World Wars I and II; the tragic oppression of Joseph Stalin, Communism and a long succession of ideological, often brutal, leaders. In 1991, the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) dissolved, and when that union ended, Russia itself and its former republics all became separate countries. Today, this super-sized country is led by President Vladimir V. Putin, as he attempts to manage this massive slice of real estate, as well as maintain positive relationships with both Asian, European and Western powers.

• http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/asia/rularge.htm

Page 5: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Entering Siberia from Provideniya

Page 6: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Provideniya, Chutkotka Province, Russia – 64.5 degrees north

- The town of 1,900 is at the end of a fjord

Page 8: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Chukotka• Chukotka was historically the land of the Chukchi who throughout the ages herded

reindeer across the tundra. The Chukchi people, descendants if ancient paleosiberian tribes, are believed by anthropologists to have crossed the Bering Strait, 25,000 years ago, and settled in North America.

• After a difficult time during the communist era, when entire native populations were moved to larger city, native people have resettled in their original communities and make up about ten percent of the population of Chukotka: Chukchi (11,924), Eskimo (1,425), Even (1,356), Chuvantsi (944) and Yukagir (100).

• Most Chukchi live in villages across Chukotka. Their major activity is still reindeer herding although some of them live off the rich marine resources. Native Chukchi is still spoken, but almost every one knows Russian. There is some assimilation and trade with smaller Eskimo villages.

• The Eskimo population makes their living as marine mammal hunters and fishermen. They generally live in mixed communities with Russians, Ukrainians and Chukchi. Most Eskimos speak a Siberian language, similar to that spoken by Eskimos living on St Lawrence Island.

• From: http://www.traveleastrussia.com/provideniya.html

Page 9: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Provideniya• Provideniya is situated on a picturesque bay surrounded by

mountains. The city was founded in the late 1930's as the eastern terminus for the northern sea route, the passage along the arctic cost of Siberia, kept open by icebreakers that supplied cities on the mouth of the Lena and Kolyma Rivers. It is the former Soviet administrative and military center of Chukotka.

• Along with its sister city, Nome, Alaska, Provideniya was particularly important during WWII when aircraft and supplies reached Europe via Alaska and Siberia during lend-lease. The city is isolated, only accessible by air and water.

• In the past six years, the population of Provideniya has decreased significantly. Now whole apartment blocks are empty and the city offers a somewhat forlorn sight. Shores along the Emma bay support Bering type flora and habitat for large bird colonies.

• From: http://www.traveleastrussia.com/provideniya.html

Page 10: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

From Provideniya, they shipped their winter gear by boat to Anadyr, 850km away. In Provideniya, they met their guide Yulya from Irkutsk, 5000km away, a

city along their path.

Page 11: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Hiking Through Chutkotka:Only 19,000km of the Eurasian Continent Left

The picture on the right was taken by Tim Harvey

Page 12: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Hiking Through Chutkotka:Colin, Tim and Yulya weren’t quite alone

Page 13: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Egvekinot, Chutkotka Province, Russia650km from Provideniya, 200km to Anadyr

Page 14: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Egvekinot

Page 15: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Colin’s “side trip” to Anadyr

• Top: Anadyr• Bottom: a Soviet-built

Tupolev TU-154 airplane, the kind that took Colin to Moscow, then home to Canada

• No more only-human-powered travel for three months

Page 16: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Back to Egvekinot

• Egvekinot looked like the top photo when they stopped

• By the February 7, when they resumed their trek after Colin’s surgery, it looked like the bottom photo

• Minus 45 degrees, with a windchill of minus 100 degrees

Page 17: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Egvekinot to Ust Nera

• Travelling inland through Chutkotka was only possible with a supply truck

• Top: a diesel 6-wheel Ural truck like the one used in the book

• Often, they travelled along frozen rivers such as this one, the Kolyma

Page 18: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Ust-Nera

http://wikimapia.org/1196677/Ust-039-Nera

Page 19: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Ust Nera: along the “Road of Bones”- pictured in the winter and summer below

Page 20: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Ust Nera, Yakutia Province, Russia- they even have a pamphlet for tourists!

Page 21: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Ust Nera to Yakutsk- Colin, Tim and Yulya meet some “friends” at a bridge camp

Page 22: Beyond the Horizon:  part 2, pp 54-123 from Providenya to Kyubyume

Kyubyume, Yakutia Province, Russia6 days from Ust Nera:

Colin splits from Tim and Yulya