Tatyana ustinova wiki

  • Tatyana Ivanovna Ustinova (November 14, 1913, Alushta — September 4, 2009, Vancouver) was a Soviet geologist, who discovered Valley of Geysers in Kamchatka.
  • Writer · screenwriter · translator · presenter · editing staff · journalist · prose writer · television presenter.
  • Soviet geologist (1913–2009).
  • Talk:Tatyana Ustinova

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  • tatyana ustinova wiki
  • Tatyana Ustinova

    Appearance

    October 7, 2007
    August 6, 2011

    Money won

    100,000 rubles (x2)

    Tatyana Ustinova(April 21, 1968) was celebrity contestant, who appeared on an episode of Kto khochet stat' millionerom?on October 7, 2007, answering the 11th question wrong and winning 100,000 rubles. In second time she appeared on August 6, 2011, have chosen 100,000 rubles as minimum amount, answered the 12th question wrong, lost 100,000 rubles and won them.

    On March 3, 2007 Tatyana was one of Three Wise Men with Vladimir Dashkevich and Viktor Verzhbitsky.

    Tatyana Ustinova

    Tatyana Ustinova

    Born(1913-11-14)14 November 1913
    Died4 September 2009(2009-09-04) (aged 95)
    NationalityUSSR

    Tatyana Ivanovna Ustinova (November 14, 1913, Alushta — September 4, 2009, Vancouver) was a Soviet geologist, who discovered Valley of Geysers in Kamchatka.

    Biography

    [edit]

    Tatyana Ustinova graduated from Kharkiv University and subsequently worked on projects in the Ural Mountains and Reserve Ilmen. In 1940 she was transferred to the Kronotsky Nature Reserve in Kamchatka together with her husband, Yury Averin. In April 1941, while accompanied by the Itelmen guide Anysyfor Pavlovich Krupenin, she found the Valley of Geysers.[1] This was a major geological discovery as, prior to this, geysers were only known in Iceland, New Zealand, and the United States.[2] Ustinova named the first geyser in Kamchatka Pevenets, Russian for "firstling".[3][4]

    Until 1946 Ustinova remained on the Kamchatka peninsula, researching the Valley of Geysers; her description of the geysers' eruptions and their locations was the basis of her master's thesis.[5] She gave the names to the most powerful and impressive hot springs there. Later on she worked in Chişinău. In 1951, she published a b