SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT ZHURAVLEVA, T.V. - ZHURAVSKAYA, G.YA.

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86-00513R002065030001-4
Release Decision: 
RIF
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
100
Document Creation Date: 
November 2, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 16, 2001
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 31, 1967
Content Type: 
SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86-00513R002065030001-4.pdf5.19 MB
Body: 
It [Liam flill 20718 :'S/12o/61/ooo/ooJ,/o Wo61 9032/E1.14 AUMORS: Kukavadze,* G'0MG Tvanovt :~R*Nol ZI: r Ad u Eivleva, Production of Films or-High Meltiiig Point'Ma TITLE: t erials' in Vacuum .PERIODICAL: Pribory i takhnika ek6perimenta, 106.L 'No.1, P:195~ TEXT: One of the~methods of.~producing thin films of h*gh melting point materials is:, by condensing the varl'ours of. th"O'.;: materials, produced by electron bombardment of sAid specimensiln t 'ver ions vaeuumo The present authors have,us.ed one of;~ he ~possibleq s of this method to, obtain pure deposits of ciob'alt, -iridium a;t'i'd rhodium. The principle of the method is illustrated in Fig.lo~ The metal to be evaporated 1, ~ which is inthe form of a rod in the case of cobalt, a wire in the case of :Lridlum.'and a strip in the case of rhodium, isinserted into the cor 'amic'holder 3. by the tungsten.spiral ~2. A volt 'ago of +2-5-3 kV is is heated . applied to the specimen I through the lead.; 4. ~The spiral is earthed.and carries a.current of 4 to 4-5 A. Th~ i spiral; consists of 2-5 turns and is made of a wire 0.2 MM in ~diwntter. The ' from emission current from the spiralds 15-20 mk.and the elections Card I/jI 20718 S/12o/6i/ooo/ooi/o6i/o6;a; EO~2/zi14 oduction of Films of lligh~Meltin';Point Materials in Vacuum Pr the spiral bombard the metall:raising it to a high;;t'emperatiWe. In the case of cobalt, a.drop of the metal is.3cept'by surfacii tension forces at the end of the ceramic tube. Th , cobalt dloos:: C! not interact with the ceramic and the evaporation.iocc'urs from the surfaceof the drop. In thecase o:f evaporation of iridium:and: rhodium the and of the wire or strip molts) and the' resulting liquid drop,serves as the source of vapour. The method has been used to produce pure cobalt films 0-15-0.411 thick,having w641- i defined magnetic roperties when deposited on glass slides 140 x 110 x 30 mm Iridium and rhodium depozits~about 0.1' thick 3 IL have also been obtained on mass-~spectrometer ion-source elements. There are 1 figure and 3 Soviet references. ASSOCIATION: Institut teoreticheskoy i eksperiihentallnoy fiZtki' AN SSSR (Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Phy6icsi Card 2/ AS USSR) SUBMITTED: December 29, 1959 211.39 ILI 07 S/19 61 O~/00 /014/014!: .4 2 B1 01 0 AUTHORS: Kargin, V. As Plate No* A, 91-W14-60V a Shibayevo V*~'P- TITLE: structure and pro.perties-of the product of of polyethylene_and~aarbon black PERIODICAL: Vysokomolakulyarityke 90yedinehiyal 31 0. 4? 1901;1 65o-654 TEXT. The authors aimed at paring a graft copolyt6r fr6ta polyethylene': pre (PE) and carbon blackfAnd at investigating its.physilcila'l properties., They proceeded from the.assumption that in the mechanical dis;persion of carbon. black on newly formed,surfaces active centers develop'~whio~*reaot with the macroradicals formed by dispersion of PE. The.experiaen".B:were carried out 2 -and PE of~high with ISAF carbon black, with a specific surface of 100,~m 116 densityp whose intrinsic viscosity in decaline was eq6al tol,lat 1000C. Dispersion was performed for 1-5 hr lVmeans of a vibrit6ry mill at rooni tem- perature. The method has already been described in'Ref. A. Plate et al.t Vysokomolek. aoyed., Lf IT13, 1959). The ratio"PE-.. parbon blaok was Card 1/4 11111VIII7111 till allill - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 41139 B/I ~9'0~ 6 03/004/014/014 Structure and ... 1310 207; .,equal to 1 11 2 It- -5 I'l and 7 1.: The mixture:lor=14d :was treiiield hot benzene, A fine carbon black suspension formed in,tbe PR solution.:frbm~ whioht when cooled, PE adsorbed theentire carbor, bla0k InioAhe pretipithte, when introducing a paper filter-intothe~l~ hot solution of.,carbon black containing PE in p-xylenet a 4 om broad continuous tillnsiti'oh from black to colorless was.observed, while a mechanical mixture from neparateky, dispersed carbon black and FE showed'a,clear borderline of carbon blac k separation qn-the filtering paperl thus$ from the formation of &'~chemical compound consisting of PE and carbon black at codispersion is assumed., Study by means of a JEM-5y electron microscope, 30,ooo-6o,ood fon magnification, of. samples obtained by evaporation of the 0.01%lsolution~of the polymer in p-xylene showe Id that, beside aggregates ~of non-reaote.d. car,bon black:a:ad the. epherulites of PE, also packed structures had been formed.'; A mecha4call~ mixture from separately dispersed PE an& carbon black showed only carbon; black aggregates and PE spherulitas. It,is concluded that~ FE orystailizi- tion is inhibited by the presence of the graft polytieIr from PE and carbon ..black; 'The packed structures foini in such a way that Alie carbon bliok particles Uiemically linked with PE, are located in'the interpacked ~! 'space and cause plastification of PEO X-ray analysis showed no'differenceibet~een Card 2/4 0' '0' ~`l 00 7 10 4 3/ 4/ t iure a 8 tu 0 nd o1 /13207. ASSOCIATION: Moskovskiy gobudarstvennyy univer~iteVim 714.: V.:Lomonosola ;(Mos ow.:State Univ6 reity Ain V., Lo~': M. 6no3o SU33MITTED:, October.81,.19_0 Pig---4: Force-elongation'diagrams at 2500 .'.Legona.-.: X ~ohnnicaT jyniit U7 frw~:dispqrsed PE and darbo'n' 'bla6k7 1 2) priodu6t;of jqirit,,:?R and;' lack di ~ I; initi spersionyl ai A v .4 YEI di persed. without cat, ft blac -4j ' V. 20, ilia: -4 ard C lo, 47 O~j 6 2, ti 44i,005/1Gji 2/Pi 7 B124/1313~- kUTHORS; Karg-An, V. A. , Academician, Zhuravleva~- Vi G'- and Berestneva, Z. Ya. T! T- L L Electron microsc epic study of, rub'ber btruc.,tures: PERIODICAL: Akaderlya nauk SSSR. Do 4f no. 1962, 1 080~ 109(~-' klady, v. 5 TEXT: Con',rary tc current views of elastomers as a Consisting of entaneled molecular chains# electron-microsoopdc analysi si~ of thin naturil. and synthet--c rubber (CkZ -30 (SKB-30)) films showed~ ~that:, flieiy: consist 6f a disordered arrangement ~~f bandewhich are shown to,be the truc turd]. 'The nature of the.pattern remai I elements of the film. ns the same~withla different support. When thu film is stretched, fiiiq flibers appear-whibb are the elemLntary structural units of rubber, i-e~~ bundles of chnins. V At -50C, structuree ara produced with a higher degree ot Order. Thler~ are thus ordered regions in rubbers juat an In othdi"amprphods poly;zers. There is 1 figure. The En 1i h* language references are4t ., V. A, Kargiri' J. Pol. Sci.,30, 247 (19501; Z. E. Hall, E. A. Hauser el al lnd.~.and Eng. Chem., 36, 7, 634 (1944);.E. A. Hauser, Rubber Aie"I 78t~ 6p ;611 (1956)i Card 1/2 HII USSR/Chemical Technology Chemical Products and Their 1-12 Application. Fermentation Industry. Abs Jour Ref Zhur Khimiya, No 1, 1958; 2859 Author Mhuravleva~ V.P. Inst Academy of Sciences Turkmen SSR Title Yeast Flora of Fermented Grape Must Under~CondLtions of Turkmenian Viniculture Orig Pub Izv- AN TurkmSSR 2.957, No4 59-63 Abstract In the most completely fermented must of.T~rkmanian grapes! the following yeasts were found: saccharom"Wes (98.18%, including Sacch. vini 85-44, Sacch. oviformis 9.6ro, Sacch. paradoxus 2-,53%, Sacch. 2!~ 2.3~?, ELciiia (1.62%) - - - stances of yeast disea-~ ra7re iii Tlie and Lygopichia (0.25-0- ' ses of wine in Turkmenia is the results of.the low content. of filmy yeasts in the fermented must. Sal'/16-59-6-3/46' 17(12) AUTHORS t Zhuravleva, Ye.D. and Yu, P-'00rchakOva TITLE: The Effects of Antibiotics on the Formation of ~~Antib6dies 30 PERIODICAL- Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobialogil,'1959t.Nr:6, pp 14-18 (USSR) ABSTRACT: There is some confusion as to whether aniiblAits 1~hibit antib6dy production. M.K. Shcheglova, A.G. Xhinabuk, lep. Y~usina~ Ye.V' Chernokhvostova, Kh.Kh..Planelly'es, N.V. Chumicheriko', V.L. Trotiskiy, S.L. Krasinskaya and M.V. Zemskov maintain that-t2iej- do, K.V. Bunin~~ maintains they do not. To solv the authors insti~tutedt I e the problem, experiments to test whether synthomycin therapy inhibits antib Iody pro- duction in dysentery and whether, under theseconditions, it i s,* advisable to combine synthomycin therapy with vaccine thert.:py. . For the.p4rposes of the tests 40 rabbits were infected with sublethal do'ses of Sh1gella shigae and then submitted to synthomycin-vaiacine therapy. " Synthomycizi was in- jected per os, first in a shook dose then 6 tJ Isnes a;day, for 10 ~d' ay~ in doses of 0.02 g per kg of live weight. The first group of rabbits::was then subjected to vaccine therapy 4 hours after Infeation, the:second - Card 1/3 24 hours after infection; the third group was the.control group.; The .. . ....... The Effects of Antibiotics.on the Formation ofAntibodies SOV/16-59-6~~/46;! index to the 'efficacy of the synthomycin-vaocine. th,erapy was a study '-of the agglutinin titre'before treatment and every'5_days after tr6mUent over a period of 20 days. Thel results are given in Uble 1. It was found that synthomycin therapy.did not inhibitlagglutinin production.; Synthom,yoin-vaceine therapy was more effective.than s3mthomycin therapy alone. Administration of the vaccine in five small doses had a ~6tter effect on agglutinin production than a single administration of vaccine in a doze equal to the combined fractional doses, No correlation~coul,d be noted between the dysentery agglutinin titre and the corresponding, preventive properties of the rabbit sera. The a,~tho:n concludes that Card 2/3 synthomycin-vaceine therapy is to be preferred to synthomycin therapy 4111 J1 Hit ....... ..... - - 11111= S4.)1616010CO1061,111651 AMHORSt Bo*ndarenko N,X., Gorchakova; Yu.P. and Miravieva' Ye D J T=.- Changes In the Antigenic Struoture of the Org&ns in White Moe and Kittens Infea~ed With ShigeA4 1~ysenteriae w Vok .31 PERIODICAL: Zhurnal mikrobiologil, ep~demlologll I Imatmobi3b,,41I, 1960i 'No. '6, pp.-43 - 46 TEM M~periments were performed to;study the form#V)n~of foreign: antigens.' in the liver, kidneys, spleen and intest IInes of white mio6, and kittens, infecteil with Shigella flexneri with or without treatment,, Foreign: antigens, which, did pot normally appear,in the organs, were In fact'detected in the'parenohymatous orgws of mice and kittens suffering from experimental dysettery.~ Syn-thomvein-phthalaiol treatment retarded the formation of foreign.antigens in tho, pare~-ioVm~t~us oigand There are 3 tables and 5 Soviet references. e ASSOCIATION: Voronezhskiy meditsinskiy institut (Voronezh Inotjt;~Lt SUBMI-IM% June 27, 1959 Card 1/1 limir."t I'll, . dignil it Hill I litall"ll 111 111111111 11 jilj: J- .... ----- 0 T~f'- - = .i .. I _ .-L- I- it i PMIQ~ Z"r. 10, 30-9f,9 lee tive lifun-41 CA 00 6 ity ) 1. the amt., U. of 1f.0 lakca up lky StAmb h (Ii rt -4-61); wbeft I is linw. At bialwr 0, cob cm the eft", a &P 10 WW W.c dy-, In W4. vapor. The sidsm tun tx""m Cs 4~ full an lasedion F*Int; C14MA9 am (1-20 a( 16 A" IMP resp-ALtjol. 'nberesuttsip"wiah A Those of -%Ir milicutr C 4 36 13070. Adft. of 00,*,, 0 sunflower 0u does not ak,;;~ ti; ;iwptkm isailptsm" ond 00 alkin, of trio CM14 susm inATM-WS LIS above 0 -161, only. 00 9 *0 W ASO, S I, A NtVALLVWG"~ tOMT040 CLAUMPOTION go glo" 111V4 SAWA *00 L I V W 0 ; "t ; & '. '. Ocil - U4 _5 U lad** -C it W 0, 0 0 0 Os o 06090 o0 0 0!0 s e o so 0 Oj 00 6 00000 go 0 -t, 9 9 0 0 0 10 lip 00 WO: 0. c lip's 0 to,* a 0 0 1121,140!f1kil" Uld Ulm =J.,flRiw= 4 Lou 4 MA"i by coin is" 16 sk. (Inst. Fine FbiLviry. ~10110010- : K#4"d, 19-NO); cf. CA. 43, "'Ix* And "quirs. 111to I hi. W, I I I rin, ana, sit I III i is; 16 1111". lltly4f., At w 0,3. the eimit. k Iwd imily one vjltw 111.30,~ Isat All hiShirr v (III - M) k during the flinst 1#1 ilsy* sew* Ammi 3 times pit greut as lairr, Tbr, final a - wa -'a %-A~ n4d: tion i*Abwm at 0 0.8 but OM*td hyotseviils.of milwvt o. : Adda. et Ille, of sunflawer-wLid k but NA no effect on tho drmirtst Iii Is I-whi, 5% of svpr dW not pently alltvt k but dect ked the hysitirmis loop.: flikerm4n, Act-ffk,-AT6036656-- SOURCE COUSs Ui/066166/060/0001028410286 AUTHOR: Ndsing As No; Anashkinp 0, Do,* ZhuravloVa Yo. N." Podyuxw,, V. Maslova, No As ORG: none. TITLE: Ifethod forilming ai rpaper ~p nahtod at, Parmanentdprobe ~n the aWrial 1 4 um' .27 66) the Conference on rob ems o Space He loind old in scow, 09 .SOURCE., Yonforentslya po problemam kosmicheslwy meditsiny' 1966, ProblerW!; kosmicheskoy meditsiny, (Problems of space medicine); material konferentsti~ Moscow, 1966t 284-286 TOPIC TAGSz space medicine,, space..physiology, cardiovascular systeml blopigbot, hemodynamics, arterial lumen, bloinstrumentation, blood circulat~lon ABSTRACTI In order to be abld'to studs. fiemodynamics and the effdcts of, pharwabomo'4 ilogical agents, and in order .to~be able to ta. ke blood samples, friom dogs'ifi! prolonged experiments in the absence of awexperimenter a technique'was' J -developed for chronic implantation of a probe in the vascular lumen. A !series of experiments was performed for this purpose *hich i volved 75 !dogs. The tec-hfiique developed is not difficult to effect and can be proposed 1; ias b f the aorta to obtain het~odyneuniq indiceso Card 1/3 ACC NRI AT6036656 In most of the dogs, the probb was inserted through the right carotid artery and passed down into the abdominal aorta. The probe vias fastened inthe carotid artery and was passed out through the withers Df the animal.. 'A cutoff valve was placed at the proximal end of the probe. Blood clotting is the most frequent postoperative coniplication'which, 'arises in conjunction with insertion of chronic probes. ConsequentlyJ special attention was devoted to the study of coagulatory and anticoagu- latory mechanisms. The nature of the material from-which tho catheter io prepared was found to be most significant. During implan:tIng,of probes best results were obtained by using polyethylene tubes w13ich had been heated!:, over a burner and then shaped. Beginning with the third day after theoperation, theinajoiityof dogs~ 'I; .showed changes in the peripheral blood which manifested! the maielves in an increase in the sedimentation rate and the total numberOf leukocytes, d A decrease in the hemoglobin level and the total number of erythrocytes, The leukogram showed neutrophilia with a sharp shift to the left, as well as lymphopenia and cosinopenia. These processes are viewedas a reaction':' ,.of the organism to the process of thromboemboUsm in the Iddneys and :spleen with its'consequent complications. Card 213 -J iji __J-ACC-7Nkt_-AT&03_665_6 In order to avoid the ti~umatic effect caused by the free ehil'of the probe on the vascular wall and the process of thromboformation, the probe iwas placed into the deep femoral artery and 'fixed a't the junctur.c.of the 1common femoral artery. However, the contracting pulsating Vascular as well as the ligature of the vessel along the path of the probe caused ~an ulceration of the vascular wall on the 7th and the 15th day in all cases.. Promising results were obtained in probing the right ventricle of the 'heart through the jugular.vein. Two dogs'with a normaUy.,functAoning probe .in this position lived for more than a month. . Biochemical investigation of the blood excluded the possibility- Ofthromboformation or'any tendency to-.. :Wards,it. The absence of the process of thromboformation was'. confirmed: by.special morphological investigation. - The research performed has- demonstrated that this techn-liquie divel6pi3d of chronic probing of the aorta can be recommended for re~i ,ration of hemo dynamic indices in experiments performed under spqqiA1 ponditions ~n.thq____ absence of an experimenter A.' Noe 22;, ATD Report: 66-116] SUB CODEt 06 tUBM'DATEt OOMay66 J.. Card 3/3 44u= _~ ~ , 'r - r f-? ~,, ;- .. ,'r i-f 7 z-, ---- .--- - - ---- - -- - -- -- --- - - -- ~ - -- - ---- 0 6Wj: SOV/55II;59-3~-22/~;2. ' AUTHORSs kLz rdn0kiy,, A.:; S., Salimov, M. Avg Zhuravsk~iya, Ye. ~'17.,! TITLE: The.Change in the Structlare o sodium-,;* Butaaiene Rubber b the f Action of-Ionizi Radiationi PERIODICALs Vestnik Moskovskogo uniOersiteta, Sel'iya mhtematikip makhanikil. ~ 1959P Nr 3' 11 : .astronomii, fizikip.khimiig, 77 163 (USER) ABSTRLOTs The structural ohange mentioned in th~.: tLtle: wag investigated "Y means of.infrared absorption spool va, F.iims (thi6kneeb: 30t2,w) made from sodium 1)utadiene rtibber ~Wiith an aad ition of 2% of the antio,xidant phenyl-a-Usphthylamige and with . ouC 071dirAng agent ware iriadiated:with'50-10" r/h (A-~, A X Irradiation was oarried:outp.artly in .air'and:part4;in pure nitrogeno.The films were kept in a lv~ ouum.' As the soiotrg, were recorded in airp oxidation oouid,nctibe compleWy avoided also in the case of samples irreAlated in a, iliti o - , gon t atmosphere. The,spectra,were recorded by ioans of a:spootroT l - gicpn;of 3800 - 650 am graph of the type IKS-2: within the r~ _ (Figs 1 .4), The following results'were obtainedi 1) Decrease card 113 of the intensity of bands corresponding to double bo4ds: ...... 1111 Vill UMVE 6805j 50V/55'594~2/32' The Change in the Structure of Sodium BA'adiene Rubber br the Action of- Jonizing Radiation 0,2-double, bond-.in,the side chain, oiso. E~nd trans -1 P 4,;-double bond in the principil dhainjj' 21 Increase i4 absorption within the region of 1400 - 700,0M I ais a reniit of incieasi4, branching of the molecules of the polyslex., 3..)~iocc~rrence of charaoteristic bands of oxygen-contaitimg 9~9~pap vizil, a) Immediately at the beginning of tWirradiation of~idam rrad n without an antioxidizing agent and withl~a higher i ilaNO', dose for- sa~iples~,riith an,,~ntioxidizinaI erit- bands of 'thei valence'"oscilla ionj of the OH groups 'o:Ccu:r;:,b) absorption to 'car onyl groups and indicate acideg bands which b estersy a1djhydesj or ketones* a) Distifitt absorption ~,b6xds at 2700 cm7 9 which correspond to alde~hyden. 'The natuie'; of Ihe carbonyl groups was investigated according to N. A. Slovokhotavals method (Ref., 2) by co'nveritpion 6f~ the carbo42Ao acids and their este'rs into sodium saltier* !.st,s'h'own by figur'e. 59 thecarboxylia aoide and their Isters participate only little in the absorption band 1710 Om where~,the aillehydeo and Card 2/3 ketones predominate. Table,l shows thei.ratio'between acids -mdtIImv~jU=jjj=- 60053 SOT/55-59-31~2/32 ic ' The Chfihgo in, ~ 0 the,St ctur of.8odium Butadiene Rubber 'by-, the on f; ru Acti 10~izing Ridiation. estere.and aideh*des + ketones in depeidence 'on the iv~adi,ation doso. The intensity of the. bands. of Pxrgert oompounds do'creasee if the aample.contaim the antioxidizing Pg4ntv or it' , irradiation takes'place in nitrogmn. Fj ro~6-s a thi do" gu how crease in double bonds.in,irradiated r-.*Ibvr'wIthoiA n~anti- oxidizing agent. The mosVrapid decrease io'Xound with. Iv2-double bonds and trana-ls4-doubls ~.*adsft'The authors 'thank Professor V. Mo*TatevskiZIor his advicea lrh~reare 6ligureso I tableg and 16 referenceag 5 of which are Soviet., ASSOCIATIONt Kafedra fizicheskoy khimii'.(dhair .bf Physical Chenistry) . NIIRP (Nauchno-issledovatellskly insti .tut.rezinovoy ' promyokennosti Scientific Research I~etitutm of the~Rubb er Industry) SUMTTEDi January 16p 1959 Card 3/3 j AUTHOR'. Zhuravleva, Z. A* TITLE: On the Age of the "Sub-Red" Suite of the Lowier Caabrian of the Olekma and Lena Rivers (0 vozras te podkrasnotsvetn6y svity nizhnego kembriya rr. Olekmy i Lany). FMIODICAL'.' DokladyAN SSSR, 1957, Vol. 116, Ur 1, pp. 12&.128 (USSR). ABSTRACT: The study of thd Cambrian deposits of East Siberjaxas in recent~yeara accompanied by considerable successes, The occurrence of the Middle Cambrian in the strip.of land near the Lenilwan doubted. The,final solution of this problem was rendered~difficull by the absence of a paleontological characterization of the upper part of the Lena limes stones. On the basis of the gradual transition of the Cambrian carbo- nate deposits into the "red-colored" ones of Uie:"Oberlen" many Au- thors separated a package of silent dolomites and limestones as the "sub-red" suit to which a Middle Cambrian ige !.a conventiona14 ass cribed. Interesting results which solve this problem-imre obtained in the Olekma river basin in the year 1953:and on the Lena river in 1:954. On.-the Olekma appear: 1. olekma suite (loo m thick).,Brown, usually spotted, middle- and thicZ~latad Meatones. Numerous fosswe 2Xhambqft suite (16o m): 2o m breccia or splitters of carbonate rocks. Card 1/3 Then-a-Uernating deposits of light-grayj fine-grrained limestonesj on the Age of the "Sub-Red" Suite of the Lower Cambrian of the 20 Olekma and Lena Rivers. spotted dolomitized limestones (fossil-containing) and lighty peliu tomorphous, sometimes algae-containing dolomites. 3-- I'Sub-redn~ stratum (4o-6o m). Alternating deposits of manifold limestonds and dolomites, analogus to the preceding stratum. Numerous fossils* on the stratum ked deposits of the Upper-Cambridn are concordantly.deposited in all cross sections (according to the Yakut geo16 ists). The tri-Ion 1 9 bites found in the stratum accurately date its age, The types are characteristic for the Neudoeteraspis-Parapoliella-Xamanoia-zone of the Ketmen horizon of the flred-qoloreall suitee The s9p-aration of the Charsk suite and the "sub-red" suite is,not to be carried out according to the organic rests and with difficulty according to the lithological stand. On the northeastern border of the Patom. highland the analoues of the transition suite were separated on the Khodat rock cross section: Suite 1. -12o-18o m, buite 2. - 15o m, Thelcharacter of the contact of the Charsksuite and the, "Up]per Lena suite" is hard Jun to judge due to bad denudation. The facts wntioned lead to the cone sion that the Upper-Cambrian deposits are discordantly deposited~on the Lower Cambrian ones. Thereby the viewpoint is confirmed that:a regional interruption occurs on the basis of the Upper-Cambrian.In most of the cross sections the middle Lena river basin is directly Card 2/3 deposited on the masses of the Lower Cambrian# M 111ADISM 11 INN 11 Hit Fill[ 11M I I I a Ifirdlillirdlifil IS M M DIN Willy tit 1111111MIMMINUM 3 (5) AUTHOR:, Zhuravleva, & A. t BOV/20-128-4-44/65 .TITLE: On the Stratigraphy,of the Cambrian :of t he' Mi ddl e and! Lower Course of the Olekma River PERIODICAL: Doklady Akademii nauk:SSSR, 1959, Tol 128, Nr 4, PP 796 7991.1 , (USSR) ABSTRACT: ~er oharacterizeimo~t per,.; The,cross section,of the Olokma ri l , I fectly the Cambrian depo"aitB of thw:n - 1h 'tern 6i6~a~ of t Crt wee he Aldan shield. 1. . A. Airs on I yey: and: tn. A. Nechayeva;were.fir'st to:publish-ar:stratigra hie column:viitt, a description of the in,- dividual strata (Re They.defined 6';suites. A.:K. Bobrov' f later divided the 4thl,.suite in two.~Iand. dorrelatedlbeve~rai oth- ore with synonymous suitea near the Lt~nm riVer. Urxfort~tnatelyj Bobrov's.ooncepts were not discus,spd inipublicati .one, ~Mnd an- I other concept prod Iomin ates at pres6nt (Refs 3-5),~ The `.paleonto- , logical findings of the~%Uthor (1'90) m~,16 possible a ;onvino~ ; ing correlation of the. Olekma crosp:80ciioni with tfiona of the adjacent regions. On the strength, 6f these resultls~:and with re- gard to previous investigations the'axttEor has compiled a gen- eralized stratigraphi,o cross section of~this region. The Card 113 Dikimdinskaya suit,e is lithologically subdivided intof3,parto On the Stratigraphy oftheVambrian~of tho Middle- :507/20-128~4-44 /65 .and' -Lower Course of the~Olekma River (25-3o, 60-70, 20-30 1h respectivei~,~.thick)..The Pbiokhtakh9kaya suite consists of 2 parts (80', 45-.~6 M.xeBpectively).' The ti Yuyedeyskaya suite is,100-150 m thick. Goncordant,6ui%1.,as of the Lenakiy stage, which are faunally ofiaradtorizedl lie higher: Ellgyanskaya~(50-66 m), Tolbachano'kays. having thre6 pacts (60-70, 50, 90-100 m respectively i Olel minskaya also With rts (4, 25 e 00~'226 in). :Aa- 3 pa , 70 m r spectively Charalcaya (2 , cording to the author's concept thL, latter comprises the Charskaya.and the transition suite-(of A. A. ArsenO.Yarand Ye. A. Nechayev3, Ref 1). The Tolbinske,ya suite detected in a n' t only a a itioln. anIa- bore hole at ithe Tolba~ river has 0 ompos, ites, logous to that of the~Dikimdinakaya~ar.d;Porokhtakhbkay~a au but also the came sequence in the' orocs section. he a,imilarity of these formations i1s. confirmed b~ ar, iaitintical ailsemblage of. microscopic organic remains. At prOsent~these formations are regarded as probable late Cambriah~ From the material"given here it follows that the cross section of the Ole~m:a river a- grees well with other cross sections of'~theiadJaceat regio ns. of th ,r It may be regarded as a standard cross 6ection Card 2/3 and perhaps also of late Cambrian deposits of the: 'northwestern, ... I..-.-.-.... I.Aull ~...- ... .................. ...- 1151111flullillill Is. juill 111.1 Imll Jim ........... nVin!-59-4-7388 Translation from: Referati zhurnal, Metall (LIM) _VW Urglya, 1959, hfr 4 6 AU=RS.*. Grobenyuk, A.A., Zhuravl L -40 ~-i,"QuAw TITLE-. The Minufacture'.of Urge4apaolt~; igh-Alumina'Arucibles and Their Testing:in O~Gratio'_ n, PERIODICAL: Sb. nauchn. tr.-Vaes. ri. -i.' in-ta ogneuporov,: 1 95(.;,,: Wr 2, (49)1: pp 159 - 176 ABSMCTs The authoMinvestigated the afteot'of small ~MnbtMrwof TiO' andi , - ' ' : : 9 n i f 4i uml 0 a luml and o Z na sint a t es 6 lbl6s. ering prop r 0 A& ro~ an hifip l uoibles 0ast,or. A technology was.developed:to obtain high-alumina cr drost at 5 relatively, low roasting temperatures and to', manufaotu:r6 paokings for the lining of vacuum :induction Nrnatse* 4p ~ to 17q Capacity, Cast,hlgh-alumina:or~aiblee were made ofialumlna with addition of 3% T102 or 2% ZrO2 + J% T102; the.dross humidity was 32.3and 31.7%, ' The 3-59'Wid .'3.0 respectively. specific. weight 1.97 and 1.98 j/=3, PH , high-alumina crucibles were dried down to 0.23 - 00(o humidity, and were roasted at 1,60000 for eight hours.. From the'~'samjs.~atevlal briquets were Card 1/2 made for packings, which were crushed, until the following fractions were 5~_ (2) AUTHORS.- Grebanyuk, Av A. 0 Mar TITLE Production of Highly Refraotoryltaisiials on the Bzsl~ of' Zirconium Dioxide (Poluebefilye vysokoogmaupo zd0liy na osnove dvuokisi tsiik6z.ij,~a): PERIODICALt Ogneupo SRI, ryt:1959t 1Tr 7Y:Pp 09-325~(U~ ABSTRACT: Among the many payers dedicated to~the :proil-iiation of ihighly refractory matertals on the basis, Of:z1:rcj6Aum. dioxi~ev the papii by -Tsynkizia is mentioned here*~In the jorod6at arti6loi the.authirs' put forward the working results of the pr4Asion of the i technology of zirconium pr .oduots with ijiiitir6d pieces. The' production of zirconitim. materials direj:jtly-':(iom ra*-iate-rial mixtures is Aescribedt the mixturss~re.pr4a6,~%iinig siitg,~the properties of which are Indida ted in~tablsl. The iliysiod- ceramic properties of the burnt aduitleis of raw-Misteltial. mixtures, are shown In table 2.:The~petrogriphic investigitiloAs Were carried out'by N. V. Oulkka- (Footnote 1):*, The pro'duipitioja of zirconium materials from thermally1reated mixtures is.also ass- cribed, Theveight b~ volume and the j;oio0ity of the I burnt briquette are indicate Id in table 3#' Tkie;propertieO of the silts Card 1/2 from briquetted and thermally treated inixiures on'the basis of bliAllill"A'all-M I I It I %Aft,, I IN It I I I I; Vt' ~~J'rji H [I q. 7 11 fu~ P "I 1411 V U ~ I III 11i 111111 Will If III I Iflif If 11111111101111 [lilllliltlllfj I I [I Fill 111111 P#will 31EIIAMIF. H1110.111111EAll N i1 V, I liVIVIVIII - - - - - - I It MA M : 111.11 Lit MY EM, W Z A-ir~--+__ ~:o --l-, -11 --171- 41 -- e ,;if b 'IF It J# 0 41 Q #3 If If 1 11 14 if to I., I-OLL-11 -Alk- 00 Goal it- Oat j"Pk"r dd tij 00 twit 4wwa -Lism vG A~;Jll! A "-6 i.li AM-- 1.16 00.4 kda" FM*d d, i O'x R*WA40" %L (wow* wMM#Ibmuwl 410 0 coo 00,3 00.1 0 0..4 as* too A 5 0 1 L L011401011 CtA%%#ItAtI0I 7-1- 'F Al I I If. 0 to CNI,m K a it .1 It a is It 11 ; 0 1 0 00 so 0 ose Oolb OG!G ~-l 0 *GOOD 0 41 q 0 0 to I's 0, 0 - 0 0 *0000 0, 4! .0 40 1.0 o 0' 0 0 0 * 0 : : 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 _ I W1, .., . . 'A ir A in 1h: 0 . 1,, , , , - - 4 0 0 9,0 0,01414 * 11 070; ~ 1 1 it Role 1, v to a~ Ili ~A_P_ I t "t.- Ike 1040M1 "4 woofflett of (a Pr tob Iffill, 0010~004 1. Nil. 11, .14. W ibe ututwe pff" A, bivit (Igo p.-The sp; V., I" with tu adl*Dm w the ul jhv butw imm" "dy and We, Ittkhro-Mvild too, Om"m -04 4*0 of 'Oil too so &III-ILV: OtIALLUROICALAITCOAttAt CLAUJIFICATfOll 48-1 0 10 4 U~* At )0 11 it a It to to s,le x a It It It, 99 a It of m fl 1 1.4 11 Oc 0 it of 0 Aq a t. 0 of is I OW, 0`0 0 6 49 0 0 0 0 4614 00 00 0 0 0, 0 40 0; 40 0 is *~* * 4I 1111DIIIS11611111111 11111fillil Will -*IV, W V W 0 41 0 0 0 * Ohm .111 0 0 a if ti is OWt 0 '.A. A_ r 10 A L h 10 .J.; A facclitts mod Floptsins I-oll 00 ~4 008 ~t!![ in thii 6,A aid morM diurlot ON It (Ultivint) 141 &W "'Auto a . _, 443 linglish, s Its- 17) tbeiveirt, and It" prominently so (a the suits. of rabbits so -.4&fvases lip to the. With da*., and after that there WIt, j, tend particularly In adults. TherrOdualAnd Cory to rim, 00 and in adisits.- Th giotypepiWeN ri* an the Will day e total N, charittv, in.the muit way. with am r COO The 11pawdircm4mmes up taitble drop an the OM dayo I5Mh day. showing an upward tendtocy from therilon The entire prmis of devirloMent and x-wth is partied br debytitorWri a iardisedsvite. u. Guilit! Iif moo So"Na -to &.9 apt a v j % st % 94 6 0 0 0 00 0 0 04) 0 to BURLAKOV, B.S., inzh.; GLMUN, D.Ta.. inzh.;, GrMIBOVSKIT, V.V., inzh.; GUM, Tu.S., Inzh.; TMTMOV, T.Te., inzh,;.YjMkTI4PTAI~,'Q-T4&:# inzh.; KAGAN. T.G., insh.; KALTSHIT, I.I... inzh.; PUMOT. T.H4. inzb.; SAPIRSETM, V.Z.. inzh.-, SMIARIN, Yu.P., lnth.~ IGLITM9 I.L., red.; LARIONOT, G.Te., tekhn.red* [Adjustmnt of high-frequency communication and ri)m6t* control channels utilizing electric power transmission 111660 NalaAka vysok.6chastotnykh kanalov eviazi-i telemokhaniki po;-provodam libli alektroperedachi. Xoakva, Gos.energ.izd-vo. 1958. 236 p. (H33LA 13:16) 1. Russia (1923- U.S.S.R.) Hinisterotvo elektroistantsil. Tekhnl-~ c~eekoye upravleni (Remote control (Telec'OMMInication)