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Maria Klenova

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Maria Klenova
Мари́я Васи́льевна Клёнова
Born(1898-08-12)12 August 1898
Died6 August 1976(1976-08-06) (aged 77)
NationalityRussian Russia, Soviet Soviet Union
Known forSeabed mapping
Scientific career
FieldsMarine Geology
InstitutionsShirshov Institute of Oceanology, USSR Academy of Sciences
Doctoral advisorVladimir Vernadsky
Notes
A founder of Russian marine science and the first to fully map the seabed of the Barents Sea.

Maria Vasilyevna Klenova (Template:Lang-ru) (12 August 1898 – 6 August 1976)[1] was a Russian and Soviet marine geologist and one of the founders of Russian marine science and contributor to the first Soviet Antarctic atlas.[2]

Klenova studied to become a professor and later on worked as a member of the Council for Antarctic Research of the USSR Academy of Sciences. During that time she spent nearly thirty years researching in the Polar Regions and become the first woman scientist to do research in Antarctica. She joined in the First Soviet Antarctic Expedition (1955–57) and worked with ANARE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions) at Macquarie Island.

Early life

Maria Vasilyevna Klenova was born in Irkutsk, Russia in 1898. She was educated in Ekaterinburg and moved to Moscow during World War I to work in a hospital while undertaking medical studies. She travelled to Siberia to continue her medical studies during the Russian Civil War. In the early 1920s Klenova returned to Moscow and pursued a study of mineralogy. She graduated from Moscow State University in 1924. She undertook her doctoral degree under supervisors Yakov Samoilov and Vladimir Vernadsky.[3]

Career

Klenova began her marine geology career in 1925 as a researcher aboard the Soviet research vessel Perseus, attached to the Floating Marine Research Institute (precursor to the present-day Nikolai M. Knipovich Polar Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography) in the Barents Sea and the archipelagos of Novaya Zemlya, Spitsbergen, and Franz Josef Land. In 1933 Klenova produced the first complete seabed map of the Barents Sea. She identified and named the Barents abyssal plain (85ºN, 40ºE) after the Dutch polar explorer Willem Barentsz (or Barents) who died in 1597 on his third expedition to find the Northeast Passage.

In 1949 Klenova became a senior research associate at the Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Her work included analyses of seabed geology in the Atlantic Ocean and the Antarctic, and in the Caspian, Barents and White Seas. In the austral summer of 1956 she traveled with a Soviet oceanographic team to map uncharted areas of the Antarctic coast.

Contributions

Her contributions helped to create the first Antarctic atlas, a groundbreaking four-volume work published in the Soviet Union. Klenova spent most of her time making observations on board the Russian icebreakers Ob and Lena. Her group took oceanographic measurements in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic waters. Along with Klenova there were seven other women on board the Ob. At that time women were rarely allowed to venture on land and had to rely on their male colleagues to collect and bring back data samples. In between these two voyages she worked at Mirny, a Russian base on the Queen Mary Coast (which is shared by Australian and Polish Research Stations). On the way home Klenova went to Macquarie Island where she became the first female scientist ever to go ashore.[4]

Her book Geologiya Moray (Geology of the sea) published in 1948 was the second textbook dedicated to marine geology.[5]

Honours

The Klenova Valley (84°36′N 55°00′W / 84.600°N 55.000°W / 84.600; -55.000), an oceanographic valley discovered in 1981–1983 by the USSR Northern Fleet Hydrographic Expedition is named after her.[2] Klenova Seamount, about 450 km east of Salvador, Brazil (13º01.5' S, 34º15' W), Klenova crater on Venus and Klenova Peak in Antarctica[6] are also named in her honour.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Биография Мария Клёнова". www.peoples.ru.
  2. ^ a b "Sixteenth Meeting of the GEBCO Subcommittee on Undersea Feature Names" (PDF). International Hydrographic Organization. April 2002. Retrieved 2007-11-15.
  3. ^ Ilic, Melanie (ed) (2017). Kalemeneva, E. and Lajus, J. "Soviet Female Experts in the Polar Regions" in The Palgrave Handbook of Women and Gender in Twentieth-Century Russia and the Soviet Union. Palgrave. p. 269. ISBN 9781137549051. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  4. ^ "The first woman and female scientists in Antarctica". oceanwide-expeditions.com. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
  5. ^ Reed, Christina; Cannon, William J. (2009-01-01). Marine Science: Decade by Decade. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9780816055340.
  6. ^ Klenova Peak. SCAR Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica

Further reading

  • Klenova M.V. and Jastrebova L.A. (1938) Chlorophyll in sediments as an indication of the gas phase of the water. Trans. Inst. Mar. Fisheries, U.S.S.R. 5, 65-70.
  • Klenova, M.V. (1939) "Toward the Study of the Nature of the North Caspian Shore Line (Observations from an Airplane)." Nature no. 1 pp. 72–73 (in Russian).
  • Klenova, M.V. Geology of the Sea (Moscow, 1948), p. 424. (In Russian)
  • Geology of the Volga delta (1951, co-author)
  • Geology of the Barents Sea (Moscow, 1960) (In Russian)
  • Geological structure of the continental slope Caspian Sea (1962, co-author)
  • Precipitation of the Arctic basin based on drift l / s G. Sedov (1962)
  • Geology of the Atlantic Ocean (Moscow, 1975) (In Russian)