updated Tue. April 9, 2024
-
CBC.ca (blog)
November 1, 2017
It was an epic film about an epic disaster. The year was 1997, and at the time Titanic was first released in Japan on Nov. 1, it was the biggest-budget film of all time — and one that incorporated everything from cutting-edge deep-sea submersibles to a life-size model of the ill-fated luxury liner. Made byÃÂ ...
Nature.com
July 29, 2011
"Neither the Russian government nor the Russian Academy of Sciences is seriously supporting manned deep-sea exploration activities any more," says Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology inÃÂ ...
Nature.com
July 29, 2011
"Neither the Russian government nor the Russian Academy of Sciences is seriously supporting manned deep-sea exploration activities any more," says Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology inÃÂ ...
Radio 1
July 8, 2010
Anatoly Sagalevich of Russia's Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, which owns the vessels, said that he had an informal conversation with a BP representative asking if Mirs would be able to help stop the leak. But he said there was no official request and no real discussions about the matter. A BP spokesmanÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
June 3, 2010
Tuesday's 10-hour engineering brainstorming session included representatives from the federal agencies, as well as Anatoly Sagalevich, the Russian Mir sub pilot who first took Cameron to the Titanic; oceanic explorer Joe MacInnis, who participated in Cameron's deep-sea documentary Aliens of the DeepÃÂ ...
Nature.com
July 28, 2008
The expedition has attracted huge media coverage in Russia and is led by Anatoly Sagalevich of the P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in Moscow. Also involved is well-known Russian explorer Artur Chilingarov, a member of the team that used MIR 1 to plant Russia's flag on the seabed more thanÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
April 16, 2008
At the helm of Mir-1 was Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology. Although they officially belonged to the academy, the two Mirs were Sagalevich's babies. Sitting in his office in Moscow, Sagalevich recalls beingÃÂ ...
BBC News
July 29, 2007
"It was the first time a submersible worked under the icecap and it proved they can do this," said the pilot of one of the subs, Anatoly Sagalevich, after the test dives. Thinning ice in the Arctic has raised hopes of accessing energy reserves. Russia's claim to a vast swathe of territory in the Arctic, thought toÃÂ ...
CBC.ca (blog)
November 1, 2017
It was an epic film about an epic disaster. The year was 1997, and at the time Titanic was first released in Japan on Nov. 1, it was the biggest-budget film of all time — and one that incorporated everything from cutting-edge deep-sea submersibles to a life-size model of the ill-fated luxury liner. Made byÃÂ ...
Nature.com
July 29, 2011
"Neither the Russian government nor the Russian Academy of Sciences is seriously supporting manned deep-sea exploration activities any more," says Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology inÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
June 3, 2010
Tuesday's 10-hour engineering brainstorming session included representatives from the federal agencies, as well as Anatoly Sagalevich, the Russian Mir sub pilot who first took Cameron to the Titanic; oceanic explorer Joe MacInnis, who participated in Cameron's deep-sea documentary Aliens of the DeepÃÂ ...
Nature.com
July 28, 2008
The expedition has attracted huge media coverage in Russia and is led by Anatoly Sagalevich of the P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in Moscow. Also involved is well-known Russian explorer Artur Chilingarov, a member of the team that used MIR 1 to plant Russia's flag on the seabed more thanÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
April 16, 2008
At the helm of Mir-1 was Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology. Although they officially belonged to the academy, the two Mirs were Sagalevich's babies. Sitting in his office in Moscow, Sagalevich recalls beingÃÂ ...
Sputnik International
August 6, 2017
Anatoly Sagalevich, who was the pilot of MIR-1, recounted that when they were going up, he had no other choice but to remain calm and do hisÃÂ ...
TASS
August 4, 2017
The idea of diving under the ice on the North Pole came from Anatoly Sagalevich of the Oceanology Institute of the Russian Academy ofÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
June 3, 2010
Tuesday's 10-hour engineering brainstorming session included representatives from the federal agencies, as well as Anatoly Sagalevich, theÃÂ ...
Vanity Fair
April 16, 2008
At the helm of Mir-1 was Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P. P. Shirshov Institute ofÃÂ ...