Nagurskoye
Nagurskoye | |||||||||||
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File:RIAN archive 642075 Frontier station "Nagurskoye".jpg | |||||||||||
IATA: none – ICAO: UODN | |||||||||||
Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Military | ||||||||||
Operator | Russian Air Force | ||||||||||
Location | Franz Josef Land | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 59 ft / 18 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. | ||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Nagurskoye (Russian: Нагу́рское; also written as Nagurskoye, or Nagurskaja) (ICAO: UODN) is an airfield in Franz Josef Land in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia located 1350 km north of Murmansk. It is an extremely remote Arctic base. Nagurskoye was built in 1950s as a staging base for Soviet Long Range Aviation bombers to reach the U.S., and was maintained by the Russian Air Force agency OGA (Arctic Control Group), which maintained all Arctic bomber staging facilities. An An-72 (Coaler) cargo plane crashed here on December 23, 1996 while attempting to land, perhaps one of the northernmost plane crashes ever. The airfield is believed to be operational, maintained by Frontier Guards (FSB) and capable of servicing An-26 and An-72 aircraft.
Satellite photographs of September 2015 show a new base without armored vehicles or air defenses. Instead, the base consists of a central structure, several supporting structures such as fuel depots and heating installations, old and new runways, as well as anchorages that allow for the delivery of construction materials and supplies.[1]
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Orthographic projection centered over Nagurskoye, Russia.png
Orthographic projection centered over Nagurskoye, Russia.
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Lambert Azimuthal projection, showing Nagurskoye, Russia's most northern settlement.jpg
Nagurskoye's position within Franz Josef Land.
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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