Maitri
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- This article concerns the Maitri Antarctic station. For discussion of the literal meaning of the word maitri, please see metta.
Maitri is India's second permanent research station in Antarctica. It was built and finished in 1989, after the first station Dakshina Gangotri was buried in ice and abandoned in 1990-91[1]. Maitri is situated on the rocky mountainous region called Schirmacher Oasis.
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[edit] Facilities
The station has modern facilities to carry out research in various disciplines, such as biology, earth sciences, glaciology, atmospheric sciences, meteorology, cold region engineering, communication, human physiology and medicine. It has a capacity to accommodate 25 people for winter. Fresh water is provided through a fresh water lake named Lake Priyadarshini, in front of Maitri.
[edit] Milestones
By virtue of India’s sustained interest and demonstrative capabilities in the domain of polar science, the country has achieved the following milestones:
- 19 August 1983: India was admitted to the Antarctic Treaty and soon thereafter obtained Consultative Status.
- 1983: The permanent station Dakshin Gangotri was built, where the first Wintering was conducted.
- 1 October 1984: India was admitted as a member of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR).
- 1986: India became a member of Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
- 1988-1989: India built its second indigenous station ‘Maitri’.
- 1997: India ratified the Environment Protocol to the Antarctic Treaty, thus upholding its commitment to preserve the pristine continent.
- 2005: India completed its first 25 years in Antarctica and launched an expedition in Dec 2005 called the Silver Jubilee Indian Antarctic Expedition.
[edit] Expeditions
The chapter of the Indian Antarctic Programme opened in December 1981 when the first Indian Expedition was flagged off for Antarctica from Goa. It was led by S.Z. Quasim. Subsequently, annual Antarctic expeditions have been sent through the Department of Ocean Development and the National Centre for Antarctic & Ocean Research. So far, twenty-one such expeditions have been launched, including one to the Weddell Sea; one of these was a krill expedition to the Southern Ocean.
[edit] External links
- National Centre for Antarctic & Ocean Research (NCAOR) of the Department of Ocean Development of Government of India
[edit] References