Yanovsky Sergey Sergeevich 
(192704.12.1965)


Arctic hydrograph. 
Born in Molotov (now Perm), in 1932 he moved to Leningrad. After graduating from the 7 classes, in 1941 he went to Molotov, where he graduated from the two courses of the oil technical school. 
After the blockade was lifted, Yanovsky returned to Leningrad, externally passed the exams at school, entered the Higher Arctic Naval School, where his uncle, an eminent Soviet magnetologist BM, taught. Yanovsky. After graduating from college in 1949, Yanovsky became an employee of the  Main Directorate of the Northern Sea Route in Leningrad and immediately left for wintering in Yakutia, leading the detachment, and then the party of expedition No. 2 on New Siberia Island. After that, he was the head of the wintering party on the Izvestia Central Executive Committee Islands in the Kara Sea, and the last eight years of his life he devoted to studying the Northern Zemlya. Thousands of kilometers traveled by him here with shooting. Here on Severnaya Zemlya, on Cape Vatutin, he died - his heart could not stand. Interestingly, in his job description, in addition to technical literacy, his good health and stamina are noted. Everything has a limit. 
He was buried in Leningrad at the Novo-Volkovsky cemetery. 
Cape in the Sedov Archipelago in the Kara Sea. The name was approved by the decision of the Krasnoyarsk Regional Executive Committee of June 27, 1973.

 

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