MF Coastal Radio Stations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MF Coastal Radio Stations M.F. Coastal & Maritime Stations 1608 kHz to 4000 kHz This list was last amended 17th September 2008 TX Freq. RX Freq. Mode Callsign Station Name/Frequency Usage Country 1609 2144 SITOR TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1612 2417 SITOR SUQ Ismaila Radio Egypt 1613 2148 SITOR TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1614 2149 SITOR SUH El Iskandariya (Alexandria) Radio Egypt 1615 2150 SITOR TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1615.5 2150.5 SITOR SVH Iraklion Kritis Radio Crete Greece 1618.5 2153.5 SITOR SUK Kosseir Radio Egypt 1621.5 2156.5 DSC LGP Bödo Radio Norway 1621.5 2156.5 DSC National Norwegian Channel Norway 1621.5 2156.5 DSC LGS Svalbard Radio Svalbard 1621.5 2156.5 DSC LGT Tjome Radio Norway 1621.5 2156.5 DSC LGV Vardö Radio Norway 1624.5 2159.5 DSC OXZ Lyngby Radio Denmark 1624.5 2159.5 DSC OXJ Torshavn Radio Faeroe Islands 1627.5 2162.5 DSC Den Helder Rescue Traffic Service Netherlands 1635 2060 SSB LGV Vardö/Hammerfest Radio Norway 1636.4 2045 SSB HZH Jeddah Radio Saudi Arabia 1638 2022 SSB OFK Turku/Vaasa Radio Finland 1641 2045 SSB OXJ Torshavn Radio Faeroe Islands 1641 2066 SSB OXJ Torshavn Radio Faeroe Islands 1642.5 1642.5 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch Coast Guard) Netherlands 1644 2069 SSB EAL Las Palmas/Arrecife Radio Canary Islands 1644 2069 SSB EJM Malin Head Coast Guard Radio Republic of Ireland 1650 2075 SSB TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1650 Broadcast SSB CROSS Griz-Nez France 1650 Broadcast SSB CROSS Corsen France 1650 Broadcast SSB CROSS Jobourg France 1650 SSB Kardla Piirivalve MRSCC Estonia 1650 SSB Kuressaare Piirivalve MRSCC Estonia 1650 2182 SSB 5VA Lome Radio Togo 1650 2075 SSB IPP Palermo Radio Sicily 1650 1650 SSB ESP Parnu Radio Estonia 1650 SSB Narvia-Joesuu Piirivalve MRSCC Estonia 1650 2075 SSB TFA Reykjavik Radio Iceland 1651 SSB Kurushima Martis TAS Japan 1653 2078 SSB Olhao Fisheries Radio Portugal 1656 2182 SSB ETC Assab Radio Eritrea 1656 2081 SSB IQN Lampedusa Radio Italy 1656 2081 SSB EAC Malaga/Chipiona Radio Spain 1657.5 1657.5 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch Coast Guard) Netherlands 1659 2084 SSB LGP Bödo/Andenes Radio Norway 1659 2084 SSB TFT Hornfjördur Radio Iceland 1660 1660 SSB DGzRS Bremen RCC Germany 1662 2087 SSB LZL Bourgas Radio Bulgaria 1662.5 1662.5 SSB GUC St Peter Port Radio Trinity House SAR Guernsey 1663 2182 SSB ETC Assab Radio Eritrea 1663.5 2182 SSB Faial Radio The Azores 1663.5 2182 SSB CUG San Miguel Radio The Azores 1665 SSB Nagoya Harbour Radar Japan 1665 2090 SSB LGT Tjome Radio Norway 1665 SSB Tokyo Martis TAS Japan 1665 2090 SSB LZW Varna Radio Bulgaria 1669 SSB Lighthouses (allocated 1670.5 KHz) Japan 1670.5 SSB Japanese Lighthouses Japan 1671 SSB Radio Vacation Peche (Saint Guénolé) France 1 1674 2099 SSB SDJ Stockholm Radio Sweden 1674 2182 SSB 9GX Tema Radio Ghana 1677 2102 SSB EAS Bilbao/Cabo Penas Radio Spain 1677 2102 SSB EJM Malin Head Coast Guard Radio Republic of Ireland 1677 2102 SSB OFK Turku/Mariehamn Radio Finland 1680 2105 SSB LGL Florö Radio Norway 1680 2105 SSB Matosinhos Fisheries Radio Portugal 1680 2105 SSB Setubal Fisheries Radio Portugal 1680 2023 SSB IPN Venezia Radio Italy 1683.5 2182 SSB Faial Radio The Azores 1686 SSB CROSS Med France 1686 2111 SSB LZW Varna Radio Bulgaria 1687.4 SSB 3VB Bizerte Radio Tunisia 1689 2114 SSB EAL Las Palmas Radio Canary Islands 1689 2114 SSB Peniche Fisheries Radio Portugal 1692 2117 SSB TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1692 2117 SSB LGQ Rogaland/Vigre Radio Norway 1695 2120 SSB LGV Vardö /Berlevag Radio Norway 1696 Broadcast SSB CROSS La Garde France 1696 Broadcast SSB CROSS Med France 1696.4 2182 SSB 3VM Mahdia Radio Tunisia 1698 2123 SSB SXE Aspropirgos Attikis JRCC Greece 1698 2132 SSB EAR La Coruna Radio Spain 1698 SSB SXE2 Piraeus Coast Guard Greece 1701 2126 SSB Portimáo Fisheries Radio Portugal 1704 2129 SSB TYA Cotonou Radio Benin 1704 2045 SSB OXZ Lyngby Radio Denmark 1704 2129 SSB EAC Malaga/Tarifa Radio Spain 1707 2132 SSB Bilbao/Machichaco Radio Spain 1710 2135 SSB LGP Bödo/Sandnessjoen Radio Norway 1710 2135 SSB SDJ Stockholm Radio Sweden 1713 2525 SSB TFV Vestmannaeyjar Radio Iceland 1713 2138 SSB LGV Vardö Radio Norway 1715 1715 SSB Limited Coastal & Ship Stations Australia 1715 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1716 2060 SSB IDC Cagliari Radio Sardinia 1719 2002 SSB OFK Turku/Hailuoto Radio (Oulu) Finland 1720.4 2182 SSB 4OB Bar Radio Serbia & Montenegro 1722 2066 SSB LJB Bödo/Bjornöya Radio Bear Island 1722 SSB PBF3 Rotterdam Marine Netherlands 1725 1725 SSB Limited Coastal & Ship Stations Australia 1726 1965.6 SSB HZH Jeddah Radio Saudi Arabia 1728 2072 SSB LGN Rogaland/Bergen Radio Norway 1728.5 1728.5 SSB JFC Misaki Radio Japan 1731 2075 SSB LGS Svalbard Radio Svalbard 1734 2078 SSB SXE Aspropirgos Attikis JRCC Greece 1734 2078 SSB OXZ Lyngby/Blaavand Radio Denmark 1735 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1737 2023 SSB IQM Trapani Radio Sicily Is. Italy 1739 2449 SSB LJN Nylesund Radio Svalbard 1740 2084 SSB Aveiro Fisheries Radio Portugal 1743 2087 SSB LMJ Jan Mayen Radio Controlled from Bödo Jan Mayen Island Radio 1743 2084 SSB 3VW La Goulette Port Radio Tunisia 1743 2182 SSB CND3 Safi Radio Morocco 1743 1743 SSB Stornoway Coastguard Scotland 1746 2090 SSB EJK Valentia Coast Guard Radio Republic of Ireland 1750 Broadcast SSB LMR Hopen Metro Radio Svalbard 1752 2045 SSB EJK Valentia Coast Guard Radio Republic of Ireland 1752 2096 SSB EJK Valentia Coast Guard Radio Republic of Ireland 1755 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1755 2099 SSB EAO Valencia/Palma Radio Spain 2 1757 SSB LJB Bödo/Bjornöya Metro Radio Bear Island 1757 SSB Jan Mayen Metro Radio Jan Mayen Island 1758 2102 SSB OXZ Lyngby/Skagen Radio Denmark 1758 2102 SSB OXJ Torshavn Radio Faeroe Islands 1761 2105 SSB IPL Livorno Radio Italy 1761 2105 SSB TFM Nestkaupstadur Radio Iceland 1764 2108 SSB EAF Coruna/Finisterre Radio Spain 1764 2108 SSB IPC Crotone Radio Italy 1764 SSB V5W Walvis Bay Radio (MMSI Broadcasts) Namibia 1764 2108 SSB V5W Walvis Bay Radio (Not currently used) Namibia 1767 2111 SSB OXZ Lyngby/Bovbjerg Radio Denmark 1767 2111 SSB EAO Valencia/Cabo Gata Radio Spain 1767 1767 SSB Milford Haven Coastguard Wales 1768.4 2182 SSB 3VT Tunis Radio Tunisia 1770 2114 SSB LGP Bödo Radio Norway 1770 2114 SSB TFA Reykjavik Radio Iceland 1770 1770 SSB Shetland Coastguard Scotland 1771 2182 SSB 3VM Mahdia Radio Tunisia 1772 2120 SSB IQA Augusta Radio Sicily Is Italy 1773 2117 SSB IPD Civitavecchia Radio Italy 1775 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1775 1775 SSB Limited Coastal & Ship Stations Australia 1779 2123 SSB SDJ Stockholm Radio Sweden 1782 2126 SSB LFO Florö /Oerlandet Radio Norway 1782 2126 SSB IQQ Mazara del Vallo Radio Italy 1785 SSB Fixed links for Maritime Surveying Service United Kingdom 1785 2129 SSB LGZ Rogaland/Farsund Radio Norway 1792 2182 SSB 7TA Alger Radio Algeria 1794 2138 SSB ICB Genova Radio Italy 1794 2138 SSB LZW Varna Radio Bulgaria 1797 2060 SSB SDJ Stockholm Radio Sweden 1803 2406 SSB LGP Bödo/Andenes Radio Norway 1813 SSB 3XC Conakry Radio Guinea 1813 Broadcast SSB TYA Cotonou Radio Metro Benin 1813 2182 SSB J2A Djibouti Radio Djibouti 1848 2182 SSB IQM Trapani Radio Sicily Is. Italy 1849 SSB A7D Doha Radio Qatar 1850 2182 SSB TAT Canakkale Radio Turkey 1852 2182 SSB IPP Palermo Radio Sicily 1855 2182 SSB IQP San Benedetto del Tronto Radio Italy 1856 2037 SSB HZH Jeddah Radio Saudi Arabia 1862 SSB IPP Palermo Naval Radio Sicily 1862 2023 SSB TFT Hornfjördur Radio Iceland 1862 2023 SSB TFZ Isafjördur Radio Iceland 1869 1 869 SSB Yarmouth Coastguard England 1876 2182 SSB IQN Lampedusa Radio Italy 1876 2506 SSB TFA Reykjavik Radio Iceland 1880 1880 SSB Cheju Port Service South Korea 1880 1880 SSB Holyhead Coastguard Wales 1881 SSB 5TA Nouadhibou Radio Mauritania 1881.4 1881.4 SSB P’ohang PTMS South Korea 1883 2484 SSB TFX Siglufjörour Radio Iceland 1883 1883 SSB Clyde Coastguard Scotland 1888 2182 SSB IPD Civitavecchia Radio Italy 1890 2045 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch C.G.) Netherlands 1890 2048 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch C.G.) Netherlands 1890 2051 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch C.G.) Netherlands 1890 2054 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch C.G.) Netherlands 1890 2057 SSB Den Helder Rescue (Dutch C.G.) Netherlands 1890 2586 SSB TFA Reykjavik Radio Iceland 1904 SSB SXE2 Piraeus Coast Guard Greece 1911 2182 SSB CND Agadir Radio Morocco 3 1911 2182 SSB 7TB Annaba Radio Algeria 1911 2182 SSB CNW Tangier Radio Morocco 1915 SITOR German Coast Guard Germany 1918 3765 SSB 4XT Tel Aviv Radio Israel 1925 1925 SSB Humber Coastguard England (Fishing Vessel working channel) 1981 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1982 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1983 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1984 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1985 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1986 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1987 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1988 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 1989 CW Fishing Buoys New Zealand 2003 2003 SSB Canadian inter-ship Lower St. Lawrence River to West Point, Anticosti Island 2003.5 2182 SSB VWB Mumbai (Bombay) Radio India 2003.5 2182 SSB VWT Tuticorin Radio India 2008 2008 SSB Limited Coastal & Ship Stations Australia 2009 2312 SSB HLU Pusan/Ullung Radio South Korea 2012 2012 SSB Auckland Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZMH74 Gisborne Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZMH61 Lyttleton Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB Manukau Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB Onehunga Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZKJ Penrhyn Radio Cook Islands 2012 2012 SSB ZMH32 Tairoa Head Signal Station New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZMH211 Wanganui Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZMH28 Wellington Harbour Radio New Zealand 2012 2012 SSB ZMH92 Westport Harbour Radio New Zealand 2019
Recommended publications
  • C a Se Stud Y
    This project is funded by the European Union November 2020 Culture in ruins The illegal trade in cultural property Case study: Algeria and Tunisia Julia Stanyard and Rim Dhaouadi Summary This case study forms part of a set of publications on the illegal trade in cultural property across North and West Africa, made up of a research paper and three case studies (on Mali, Nigeria and North Africa). This study is focused on Algeria and Tunisia, which share the same forms of material culture but very different antiquity markets. Attention is given to the development of online markets which have been identified as a key threat to this region’s heritage. Key findings • The large-scale extraction of cultural objects in both countries has its roots in the period of French colonial rule. • During the civil war in Algeria in the 1990s, trafficking in cultural heritage was allegedly linked to insurgent anti-government groups among others. • In Tunisia, the presidential family and the political elite reportedly dominated the country’s trade in archaeological objects and controlled the illegal markets. • The modern-day trade in North African cultural property is an interlinked regional criminal economy in which objects are smuggled between Tunisia and Algeria as well as internationally. • State officials and representatives of cultural institutions are implicated in the Algerian and Tunisian antiquities markets in a range of different capacities, both as passive facilitators and active participants. • There is evidence that some architects and real estate entrepreneurs are connected to CASE STUDY CASE trafficking networks. Introduction The region is a palimpsest of ancient material,7 much of which remains unexplored and unexcavated by Cultural heritage in North Africa has come under fire archaeologists.
    [Show full text]
  • "Online" Application the Candidates Need to Logon to the Website and Click Opportunity Button and Proceed As Given Below
    1 JOIN INDIAN COAST GUARD (MINISTRY OF DEFENCE) AS NAVIK (GENERAL DUTY) 10+2 ENTRY - 02/2020 BATCH APPLICATION WILL BE ACCEPTED ‘ONLINE’ FROM 26 JAN TO 02 FEB 2020 1. Applications are invited from male Indian nationals possessing educational qualifications and age as prescribed below, for recruitment to the post of Navik (General Duty) in the Indian Coast Guard, an Armed Force of the Union. 2. Educational Qualification. 10+2 passed with Maths and Physics from an education board recognised by Central/State Government with minimum 50% aggregate marks. (5 % relaxation in minimum cut off will be given for SC/ST candidates and outstanding sports personnel of National level who have obtained Ist , IInd or IIIrd position in any field sports events at the Open National Championship/ Inter-state National Championship. 3. Age. Minimum 18 Years and maximum 22 years i.e. born between 01 Aug 1998 to 31 Jul 2002 (both dates inclusive). Upper age relaxation of 5 years for SC/ST and 3 years for OBC candidates. 4. Pay, Perks and Others Benefits. On joining Indian Coast Guard, you will be placed in Basic pay of Rs. 21700/- (Pay Level-3) plus Dearness Allowance and other allowances based on nature of duty/place of posting as per the prevailing regulations. 5. Vacancy. The total post for Navik (GD) 02/2020 batch is 260 (approximately). UR(GEN) EWS OBC ST SC Total 113 26 75 13 33 260 Note: - These vacancies are tentative and may change depending on availability of training slots. 6. Promotion and Perquisites. (a) Promotion prospects exist upto the rank of Pradhan Adhikari with pay scale Rs.
    [Show full text]
  • Atlantic Disjuncture: Recent Historiography of Transoceanic Diasporas, Communities, and Empires
    Cromwell, Jesse. 2019. Atlantic Disjuncture: Recent Historiography of Transoceanic Diasporas, Communities, and Empires. Latin American Research Review 54(4), pp. 1023–1030. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25222/larr.631 BOOK REVIEW ESSAYS Atlantic Disjuncture: Recent Historiography of Transoceanic Diasporas, Communities, and Empires Jesse Cromwell University of Mississippi, US [email protected] This essay reviews the following works: Staying Afloat: Risk and Uncertainty in Spanish Atlantic World Trade, 1760–1820. By Jeremy Baskes. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2013. Pp. ix + 381. $54.57 hardcover. ISBN: 9780804785426. The Material Atlantic: Clothing, Commerce, and Colonization in the Atlantic World, 1650–1800. By Robert S. DuPlessis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016. Pp. vii + 332. $29.99 hardcover. ISBN: 9781107105911. The Temptations of Trade: Britain, Spain, and the Struggle for Empire. By Adrian Finucane. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016. Pp. 1 + 211. $45.00 hardcover. ISBN: 9780812248128. Guiana and the Shadows of Empire: Colonial and Cultural Negotiations at the Edge of the World. By Joshua R. Hyles. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2014. Pp. ix + 185. $76.56 hardcover. ISBN: 9780739187791. The Portuguese-Speaking Diaspora: Seven Centuries of Literature and the Arts. By Darlene J. Sadlier. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2016. Pp. 314. $29.95 paperback. ISBN: 9781477311486. Amsterdam’s Atlantic: Print Culture and the Making of Dutch Brazil. By Michiel van Groesen. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016. Pp. xx + 272. $47.50 hardcover. ISBN: 9780812248661. Atlantic history is an ever-evolving discipline. For decades, it has sought to disrupt the myopia of discrete colonial and regional studies of early modern polities by emphasizing the transimperial and transnational interactions between people of the four continents surrounding the Atlantic Ocean.
    [Show full text]
  • Thiruvallur District
    DISTRICT DISASTER MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR 2017 TIRUVALLUR DISTRICT tmt.E.sundaravalli, I.A.S., DISTRICT COLLECTOR TIRUVALLUR DISTRICT TAMIL NADU 2 COLLECTORATE, TIRUVALLUR 3 tiruvallur district 4 DISTRICT DISASTER MANAGEMENT PLAN TIRUVALLUR DISTRICT - 2017 INDEX Sl. DETAILS No PAGE NO. 1 List of abbreviations present in the plan 5-6 2 Introduction 7-13 3 District Profile 14-21 4 Disaster Management Goals (2017-2030) 22-28 Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability analysis with sample maps & link to 5 29-68 all vulnerable maps 6 Institutional Machanism 69-74 7 Preparedness 75-78 Prevention & Mitigation Plan (2015-2030) 8 (What Major & Minor Disaster will be addressed through mitigation 79-108 measures) Response Plan - Including Incident Response System (Covering 9 109-112 Rescue, Evacuation and Relief) 10 Recovery and Reconstruction Plan 113-124 11 Mainstreaming of Disaster Management in Developmental Plans 125-147 12 Community & other Stakeholder participation 148-156 Linkages / Co-oridnation with other agencies for Disaster 13 157-165 Management 14 Budget and Other Financial allocation - Outlays of major schemes 166-169 15 Monitoring and Evaluation 170-198 Risk Communications Strategies (Telecommunication /VHF/ Media 16 199 / CDRRP etc.,) Important contact Numbers and provision for link to detailed 17 200-267 information 18 Dos and Don’ts during all possible Hazards including Heat Wave 268-278 19 Important G.Os 279-320 20 Linkages with IDRN 321 21 Specific issues on various Vulnerable Groups have been addressed 322-324 22 Mock Drill Schedules 325-336
    [Show full text]
  • Åland's Xxxi Organ Festival 26.6
    ÅLAND’S XXXI ORGAN FESTIVAL 26.6 - 3.7.2005 The theme for the Organ festival's jubilee year is French organ music from the 1800's and 1900's. There will also be some improvisational organ music. Artists from ten countries will participate. The Festival begins with a magnificent jubilee concert in the Jomala church where Frauenchor Spandau, the orchestra Musica da Camera, Carl Borsuk and André Mielewczyk of Berlin will perform. The next day we will listen to the frequently cele- brated French-Italian organist Silvano Rodi. Maria and Roman Perucki of Poland will give a matinee concert on organ and violin in St. Göran's church in Mariehamn. The same night the duo will perform in Föglö while the internationally renowned organist Jean-Christophe Geiser plays in Mariehamn. For the first time in the Organ festival's 30-year history we'll hear an Icelandic artist; Kári Thormar of Hallgrimskirkja in Reykjavik, play in Saltvik. The internationally celebrated organ improviser Hampus Lindwall of Stockholm will hold a concert on the Grönlund organ in Mariehamn. David Saint of Birmingham performs at an organ matinee in Jomala. Jean-Pierre Leguay, of the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris, will the same day perform in Finström. At the grand finale in Mariehamn, we will listen to the popular European Organ Duo play fourhanded. In Kumlinge and Sottunga, we'll hear the soprano Therese Karlsson of Åland, accompanied by the organist Heikki Seppänen of Turku. Katrin and Henryk Gwardak will participate in the children's concert in the gallery in St. Göran's church in Mariehamn.
    [Show full text]
  • Join Indian Coast Guard (Ministry of Defence) As Navik (General Duty) 10+2 Entry - 02/2018 Batch Application Will Be Accepted ‘Online’ from 24 Dec 17 to 02 Jan 18
    1 JOIN INDIAN COAST GUARD (MINISTRY OF DEFENCE) AS NAVIK (GENERAL DUTY) 10+2 ENTRY - 02/2018 BATCH APPLICATION WILL BE ACCEPTED ‘ONLINE’ FROM 24 DEC 17 TO 02 JAN 18 1. Applications are invited from male Indian nationals possessing educational qualifications and age, as prescribed below, for recruitment to the post of Navik (General Duty) in the Indian Coast Guard, an Armed Force of the Union. 2. Educational Qualification. 10+2 passed with 50% marks aggregate in total and minimum 50% aggregate in Maths and Physics from an education board recognized by Central/State Government. (5 % relaxation in above minimum cut off will be given for SC/ST candidates and outstanding sports person of National level who have obtained 1st, 2nd or 3rd position in any field sports events at the Open National Championship/ Interstate National Championship. This relaxation will also be applicable to the wards of Coast Guard uniform personnel deceased while in service). 3. Age. Minimum 18 Years and maximum 22 years i.e. between 01 Aug 1996 to 31 Jul 2000 (both dates inclusive). Upper age relaxation of 5 years for SC/ST and 3 years for OBC candidates. 4. Pay, Perks and Others Benefits:- On joining Indian Coast Guard, you will be placed in Basic pay Rs. 21700/- (Pay Level-3) plus Dearness Allowance and other allowances based on nature of duty/place of posting as per the regulation enforced time to time. 5. Promotion and Perquisites. (a) Promotion prospects exist up to the rank of Pradhan Adhikari with pay scale Rs. 47600/- (Pay Level 8) with Dearness Allowance.
    [Show full text]
  • Cost Effective Water Protection in the Gulf of Finland
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE The Finnish Environmentprovided by Helsingin yliopiston632 digitaalinen arkisto ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION Mikko Kiirikki, Pirjo Rantanen, Riku Varjopuro, Anne Leppänen, Marjukka Hiltunen, Heikki Pitkänen, Petri Ekholm, Elvira Moukhametshina, Arto Inkala, Harri Kuosa and Juha Sarkkula Cost effective water protection in the Gulf of Finland Focus on St. Petersburg . .......................... FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE The Finnish Environment 632 Mikko Kiirikki, Pirjo Rantanen, Riku Varjopuro, Anne Leppänen, Marjukka Hiltunen, Heikki Pitkänen, Petri Ekholm, Elvira Moukhametshina, Arto Inkala, Harri Kuosa and Juha Sarkkula Cost effective water protection in the Gulf of Finland Focus on St. Petersburg HELSINKI 2003 . .......................... FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE The publication is also available in the Internet www.environment.fi/publications ISBN 952-11-1426-6 ISBN 952-11-1427-4 (PDF) ISSN 1238-7312 Cover photo: Karri Eloheimo/ Water sampling in the Central Waste Water Treatment Plant in St. Petersburg. Graphics: Paula Väänänen & Mikko Kiirikki Layout: Ritva Koskinen Printing: Dark Ltd Helsinki 2003 2 ..........................................................The Finnish Environment 632 Contents Summary ..........................................................................................5 1 Introduction ..................................................................................7 2 Nutrient load ..............................................................................10
    [Show full text]
  • Part 23.5 Aeronautical Radio Frequency
    GHANA CIVIL AVIATION (AIR NAVIGATION SERVICE) DIRECTIVES PART 23: SUBPART 5 – AERONAUTICAL RADIO FREQUENCY SPECTRUM UTILIZATION 23.5-1 NOV 2018 GHANA CIVIL AVIATION DIRECTIVES Part 23 Subpar 5 - Aeronautical Radio Spectrum Frequency Utilization TABLE OF CONTENT AERONAUTICAL RADIO FREQUENCY SPECTRUM UTILIZATION............................. 1 TABLE OF CONTENT ............................................................................................... 2 23.5.1 DEFINITIONS ........................................................................................ 4 23.5.2 DISTRESS FREQUENCIES .................................................................... 5 23.5.3 UTILIZATION OF FREQUENCIES BELOW 30 MHz ................................... 7 23.5.4 UTILIZATION OF FREQUENCIES ABOVE 30 MHz ............................... 10 23.5-2 NOV 2018 GHANA CIVIL AVIATION DIRECTIVES Part 23 Subpar 5 - Aeronautical Radio Spectrum Frequency Utilization Introduction In Subpart 5 of Part 23, the requirements and guidance material on the utilization of aeronautical frequencies are defined. The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has set up a framework in which the demands for radio spectrum from the State of Ghana are balanced with the interests of different radio service users to produce a planned radio environment incorporating interference-free, effective and efficient radio spectrum use. Subpart 5 contains information on the assignment planning of individual aeronautical radio stations operating or planned to operate in different frequency bands.
    [Show full text]
  • ORNAMENTAL GARDEN PLANTS of the GUIANAS: an Historical Perspective of Selected Garden Plants from Guyana, Surinam and French Guiana
    f ORNAMENTAL GARDEN PLANTS OF THE GUIANAS: An Historical Perspective of Selected Garden Plants from Guyana, Surinam and French Guiana Vf•-L - - •• -> 3H. .. h’ - — - ' - - V ' " " - 1« 7-. .. -JZ = IS^ X : TST~ .isf *“**2-rt * * , ' . / * 1 f f r m f l r l. Robert A. DeFilipps D e p a r t m e n t o f B o t a n y Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. \ 1 9 9 2 ORNAMENTAL GARDEN PLANTS OF THE GUIANAS Table of Contents I. Map of the Guianas II. Introduction 1 III. Basic Bibliography 14 IV. Acknowledgements 17 V. Maps of Guyana, Surinam and French Guiana VI. Ornamental Garden Plants of the Guianas Gymnosperms 19 Dicotyledons 24 Monocotyledons 205 VII. Title Page, Maps and Plates Credits 319 VIII. Illustration Credits 321 IX. Common Names Index 345 X. Scientific Names Index 353 XI. Endpiece ORNAMENTAL GARDEN PLANTS OF THE GUIANAS Introduction I. Historical Setting of the Guianan Plant Heritage The Guianas are embedded high in the green shoulder of northern South America, an area once known as the "Wild Coast". They are the only non-Latin American countries in South America, and are situated just north of the Equator in a configuration with the Amazon River of Brazil to the south and the Orinoco River of Venezuela to the west. The three Guianas comprise, from west to east, the countries of Guyana (area: 83,000 square miles; capital: Georgetown), Surinam (area: 63, 037 square miles; capital: Paramaribo) and French Guiana (area: 34, 740 square miles; capital: Cayenne). Perhaps the earliest physical contact between Europeans and the present-day Guianas occurred in 1500 when the Spanish navigator Vincente Yanez Pinzon, after discovering the Amazon River, sailed northwest and entered the Oyapock River, which is now the eastern boundary of French Guiana.
    [Show full text]
  • Islandscapes Under Question: the Maltese Archipelago, Pantelleria and Marettimo and Their Contexts in Classical Antiquity
    Islandscapes under question: the Maltese Archipelago, Pantelleria and Marettimo and their contexts in classical Antiquity. PASCAL ARNAUD “Malta, my dear sir, is in my thoughts, sleeping and waking” (Sir Horatio Nelson) During the last two decades, three new concepts were introduced in the field of maritime archaeology, and in maritime history as a whole. The first was that of “Maritime Cultural Landscape” defined as the “whole network of sailing routes, old as well as new, with ports and harbours along the coast, and its related con- structions and remains of human activity, underwater as well as terrestrial” (Westerdhal 1992: 6). It opposed Natural Landscape (i.e. geo-biological determin- isms) and Cultural Landscape (human impact) and reached a fair success in the fol- lowing years among many scholars (Parker 1999). It quickly led to the specializa- tion of the notion of Landscape as to indicate natural landscape, as opposed to other particular, mainly cultural, landscapes (Gosden & Head 1994). The concept of “Seascape” (Gosden & Pavlides 1994) was thus applied to islands considered as lands partially determined by the sea, in a balanced view of the complementary im- pacts of Man and Nature. Increased interest in Island Archaeology, especially among prehistorians, led many to consider islands as a world per se and insularity as a sufficient common feature. In other words, the implicit premise of island ar- chaeology was “that insular human societies show intrinsic characteristics essen- tially dissimilar from those on mainlands” (Boomert & Bright 2007: 3). In 1996, a dissertation about Archaeology of the Early Cyclades, published four years later (Broodbank 2000) introduced the notion of “Islandscape”, which focused on the Islands, especially under the cultural aspect of maritime connectivity, a concept made essential by recent research in the history of the classical Mediterranean as a whole (Horden & Purcell 2000).
    [Show full text]
  • General Disclaimer One Or More of the Following Statements May Affect
    General Disclaimer One or more of the Following Statements may affect this Document This document has been reproduced from the best copy furnished by the organizational source. It is being released in the interest of making available as much information as possible. This document may contain data, which exceeds the sheet parameters. It was furnished in this condition by the organizational source and is the best copy available. This document may contain tone-on-tone or color graphs, charts and/or pictures, which have been reproduced in black and white. This document is paginated as submitted by the original source. Portions of this document are not fully legible due to the historical nature of some of the material. However, it is the best reproduction available from the original submission. Produced by the NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI) . AE (NASA-TM-74770) SATELLITES FOR DISTRESS 77-28178 ALERTING AND LOCATING; REPORT BY TNTERAG .ENCY COMMITTEE FOR SEARCH AND RESCUE !^ !I"^ U U AD HOC WORKING GROUP Final Report. ( National. Unclas Aeronautics and Space Administration) 178 p G3 / 15 41346 0" INTERAGENCY COMMITTEE FOR SEARCH AND RESCUE AD HOC WORKING GROUP REPORT ON SATELLITES FOR DISTRESS ALERTING AND LOCATING FINAL REPORT OCTOBER 1976 r^> JUL 1977 RASA STI FACIUIV INPUT 3DNUH ^;w ^^^p^112 ^3 jq7 Lltl1V797, I - , ^1^ , - I t Y I FOREWORD L I^ This report was prepared to document the work initiated by the ad hoc working group on satellites for search and rescue (SAR). The ad hoc L working group on satellites for distress alerting and locating (DAL), formed 1 in November 1975 by agreement of the Interagency Committee on Search and Rescue (ICSAR), consisted of representatives from Maritime Administration, NASA Headquarters, Goddard Space Flight Center, U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Ideology of the Air
    IDEOLOGY OF THE AIR: COMMUNICATION POLICY AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN, 1896-1935 A Dissertation presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School at the University of Missouri-Columbia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by SETH D. ASHLEY Dr. Stephanie Craft, Dissertation Supervisor MAY 2011 The undersigned, appointed by Dean of the Graduate School, have examined the dissertation entitled IDEOLOGY OF THE AIR: COMMUNICATION POLICY AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN, 1896-1935 presented by Seth D. Ashley a candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and hereby certify that, in their opinion, it is worthy of acceptance. ____________________________________________________________ Professor Stephanie Craft ____________________________________________________________ Professor Tim P. Vos ____________________________________________________________ Professor Charles Davis ____________________________________________________________ Professor Victoria Johnson ____________________________________________________________ Professor Robert McChesney For Mom and Dad. Thanks for helping me explore so many different paths. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS When I entered the master’s program at the University of Missouri School of Journalism, my aim was to become a practitioner of journalism, but the excellent faculty members I worked with helped me aspire to become a scholar. First and foremost is Dr. Stephanie Craft, who has challenged and supported me for more than a decade. I could not have completed this dissertation or this degree without her. I was also fortunate to have early encounters with Dr. Charles Davis and Dr. Don Ranly, who opened me to a world of ideas. More recently, Dr. Tim Vos and Dr. Victoria Johnson helped me identify and explore the ideas that were most important to me.
    [Show full text]