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Indian Antarctic Programme

The Indian Antarctic Programme is a multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional programme under the control of the National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research, Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India. It was initiated in 1981 with the first Indian expedition to Antarctica.[1] The programme gained global acceptance with India's signing of the Antarctic Treaty and subsequent construction of the Dakshin Gangotri Antarctic research base in 1983,[1] superseded by the Maitri base from 1989. The newest base commissioned in 2012 is Bharati, constructed out of 134 shipping containers. Under the programme, atmospheric, biological, earth, chemical, and medical sciences are studied by India, which has carried out 40 scientific expeditions to the Antarctic.

An aerial view of the Indian Station Maitri on 25 February 2005
Mohammed Ghous uzzaman, a member of 7th Indian Antarctic Expedition Team at library, Dakshin Gangotri. (26 January 1988)
Mohammed Ghous uzzaman (Left) and M.Vyghreswara Rao (Right), members of 7th Indian Antarctic Expedition Team at Dakshin Gangotri, Antarctica. (26 January 1988)
Col. Jatinder Kumar Bajaj, a member of one of the Indian expeditions to Antarctica, standing at the South Pole (17 January 1989)

History

The origin of the Indian missions to the Antarctic are traced to the joint Indian Space Research OrganisationHydrometeorological Centre of Russia agreements, which led to Indians, such as Dr. Paramjit Singh Sehra, joining the 17th Soviet Antarctic expedition of 1971–1973.[2]

India officially acceded to the Antarctic Treaty System on 1 August 1983. On 12 September 1983, the country became the fifteenth Consultative Member of the Antarctic Treaty.[3]

Organization

The National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research—a research and development body functioning under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India—controls the Indian Antarctic Programme.[4] The NCPOR and the Department of Ocean Development select the members for India's Antarctic expeditions.[2] After medical tests and subsequent acclimatisation training at the Himalayas, these selected members are also trained in survival, environment ethics, firefighting and operating in a group.[2]

One expedition costs up to 200 million (US$2.5 million).[2] Logistical support to the various activities of the Indian Antarctic Programme is provided by the relevant branches of the Indian armed forces.[4] The launching point of Indian expeditions has varied from Goa in India to Cape Town in South Africa on 19th expedition during the time of NCAOR Founding Director Dr. P C Pandey in December 1999.[2] Over 70 institutes in India contributed to its Antarctic Programme as of 2007.[2]

Global cooperation

The Indian Antarctic Programme is bound by the rules of the Antarctic Treaty System, which India signed in 1983.[4] Pandey (2007) outlines the various international activities that India has undertaken as a part of its Antarctic Programme:

On 12 September 1983, India achieved the status of Consultative Party, on 1 October became a member of Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR), and in 1986 became a member of the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR). In 1997 India also ratified the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty thus reaffirming India's commitment to protecting the Antarctic environment. India hosted the eleventh COMNAP/SCALOP (Standing Committee on Antarctic Logistics and Operations) meeting in Goa in 1999, and the working group meeting on eco-system monitoring and management of CCAMLR in August 1998 at Cochin. India occupied the CCAMLR chair beginning in November 1998 for a period of 2 years.[2]

India also collaborates with the international community as a member of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, Regional Committee of Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission in Coastal Indian Ocean (IOCINDIO), International Seabed Authority (ISBA), and the State Parties of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS).[4][5][6]

Research

 
Krill distribution on a NASA SeaWIFS image – the main concentrations are in the Scotia Sea at the Antarctic Peninsula. India carries out krill exploration in the Southern Ocean region of the Antarctic.[4][7]

Antarctica holds scientific interest for global research projects due to a number of reasons: 'Origin of continents, climate change, meteorology and pollution' are among the reasons cited by S.D. Gad (2008).[4] Mrinalini G. Walawalkar (2005) holds that: 'ice–ocean interaction and the global processes; paleoenvironment and paleoclimatic studies; geological evolution of earth and Gondwanaland reconstruction; Antarctic ecosystems, biodiversity and environment physiology; solar terrestrial processes and their coupling; medical physiology, adaptation techniques and human psychology; environment impact assessment and monitoring; enabling low temperature technology development; and studies on earthquakes' are among the areas of study under the Indian Antarctic Programme.[6]

Close to 1,300 Indians had been to the continent as of 2001 as a part of the country's Antarctic Programme.[7] Indian expeditions to the Antarctic also study the fauna and the molecular biodiversity of the region.[8][9] A total of 120 new microbes had been discovered as a result of international scientific effort in the Antarctic by 2005.[6] 30 of these microbes had been discovered by Indian scientists.[6] India has also published over 300 research publications based on Antarctic studies as of 2007.[2]

The 'ice cores' retrieved by drilling holes in Antarctic's vast ice-sheets yield information 'on the palaeoclimate and eco-history of the earth as records of wind-blown dust, volcanic ash or radioactivity are preserved in the ice as it gets accumulated over time'.[4] The NCAOR developed a polar research & development laboratory with a 'low-temperature laboratory complex at −20 °C for preservation and analysis of ice core and snow samples' according to S.D. Gad (2008).[4] The 'ice core' samples are held, processed, and analysed in containment units designed by such technology.[4] Storage cases made of poly propylene also ensure that the samples do not alter characteristics and are preserved for analysis in the form that they were recovered.[4]

Research stations

In 1981 the Indian flag unfurled for the first time in Antarctica, marking the start of Southern Ocean expeditions under the environmental protocol of the Antarctic Treaty (1959).

Dakshin Gangotri

The first permanent settlement was built in 1983 and named Dakshin Gangotri. In 1989 it was excavated and is being used again as supply base and transit camp. Dakshin Gangotri was decommissioned in the year 1990 after half of it got buried under the ice. It is nothing more than a historical site now. In its times, it used to double up as a place for multiple support systems, including the presence of an ice-melting plant, laboratories, storage, accommodation, recreation facilities, a clinic and also a bank counter.

Maitri

The second permanent settlement, Maitri, was put up in 1989 on the Schirmacher Oasis and has been conducting experiments in geology, geography and medicine. India built this station close to a freshwater lake around Maitri known as Lake Priyadarshini. Maitri accomplished the mission of geomorphologic mapping of Schirmacher Oasis.

Bharati

Located beside Larsmann Hill at 69°S, 76°E, Bharati is established in 2015. This newest research station for oceanographic research will collect evidence of continental break-up to reveal the 120-million-year-old ancient history of the Indian subcontinent. In news sources this station was variously spelled "Bharathi",[10] "Bharti"[11] and "Bharati".[12]

India Post Office in Antarctica

It was established in the year 1984 during the third Indian expedition to Antarctica. It was located at Dakshin Gangotri. As many as 10,000 letters were posted and cancelled in this post office in total in the first year of its establishment. Although the post office is no more there, it is a favourite stopover for Indian tourists who visit the place in cruise ships.

The current Indian post office in Antarctica is situated at Maitri, where the country's current research station is also situated.

Indian Antarctic expeditions

Date Expedition Leader Deputy Leader Leader (Summer Team) Deputy Leader (Summer Team)
1981–1982 First Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. Sayed Zahoor Qasim C. P. Vohra, H. N. Siddiquie
1982–1983 Second Indian Expedition to Antarctica V. K. Raina Dr. C. R. Sreedharan
1983–1985 Third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Harsh K. Gupta Lieutenant Colonel Satya Swarup Sharma
1984 Fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. B.B. Bhattacharya Col. P. Kumaresh
1985-86 Fifth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr M.K Kaul Dr Vinod K Dhargalkar
1986-87 Sixth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr A M Parulekar Col. V.S.Iyer (V.S.M)
1987-1989 Seventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr R. Sen Gupta Col P Ganeshan Dr. G. S. Mittal
1988–1990 Eighth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Amitava Sen Gupta Col S Jagannathan Lt Col J P Khadilkar
1989–1991 Ninth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Rasik Ravindra
1990–1992 Tenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr A. K. Hanjura
1991–1993 Eleventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. Shardendu Mukherjee
1992-94 Twelfth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Vinod K Dhargalkar
1993-95 Thirteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr G Sudhakar Rao
1994-96 Fourteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr S D Sharma
1995-1996 Fifteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh Arun Chaturvedi
1996-98 Sixteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Anand L. Koppar
1997-99 Seventeenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh K. R. Shivan
1998-2000 Eighteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica sh. Ajay Dhar
1999-2001 Nineteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh, Arun Chaturvedi
2000-2003 Twentieth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr Marvin D'Souza
2001–2003 Twenty first Indian Expedition to Antarctica Shri Ram Prasad Lal
2002-04 Twenty Second Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Arun Hanchinal
2003-05 Twenty third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh S Jayaram
2004-06 Twenty fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh Rajesh Asthana
2005-2007 Twenty fifth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh L Prem Kishore
Twenty sixth Indian Expedition to Antarctica
Twenty seventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica
2008–2009 Twenty eighth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. P. Malhotra Ajay Dhar
2009–2010 Twenty ninth Indian Expedition to Antarctica P. Elango Rajesh Asthana
2010–2011 Thirtieth Indian Expedition to Antarctica K. Jeeva Rajesh Asthana
2011–2012 Thirty first Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. Rupesh M. Das (Bharati) & Shree Uttam Chand (Maitri) Rajesh Asthana
2013–2014 Thirty third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mohd. Yunus Shah (Bharati) Abhijit Patil (Bharati)
2014–2015 Thirty fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Kailash Bhindwar (Bharati) Syed Shadab (Bharati)
2017–2018 Thirty seven Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr. Shailesh Pednekar (Bharati) Bagati Sudarshan Patro (Bharati)
2018–2020 38th Indian Expedition to Antarctica K. Jeeva, Matri- P. Elengo, Bharati

Notes

  1. ^ a b Walawalkar (2015), Gad (2008)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Anas (2007)
  3. ^ Department of Ocean Development, Government of India. Annual Report 1983-1984, TECHNICAL PUBLICATION NO. 3., Printed at Dee Kay Printers Kirtinagar, New Delhi
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Gad (2008)
  5. ^ Pursuit and Promotion of Science – The Indian Experience (2001), 351
  6. ^ a b c d Walawalkar (2005)
  7. ^ a b Pursuit and Promotion of Science – The Indian Experience (2001), 352
  8. ^ Pursuit and Promotion of Science – The Indian Experience (2001), 173
  9. ^ Pursuit and Promotion of Science – The Indian Experience (2001), 213
  10. ^ . 11 April 2009. Archived from the original on 11 April 2009.
  11. ^ , The Times of India, 6 August 2009
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2010.

References

  • Gad, S. D. (2008), "India in the Antarctic", Current Science, 95 (2): 151, Bangalore: Indian Academy of Sciences.
  • Pandey, P.C. (2007) in "India: Antarctic Program", Encyclopedia of the Antarctic edited by Beau Riffenburgh, pp. 529–530, Abingdon and New York: Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0-415-97024-5.
  • Pursuit and Promotion of Science – The Indian Experience (2001), New Delhi: Indian National Science Academy.
  • Walawalkar, M. G. (2005), "Antarctica and Arctic: India's contribution", Current Science, 685, Bangalore: Indian Academy of Science.
  • "Scientific Report of First Indian Expedition to Antarctica" (PDF). Department of Ocean Development, Government of India. 2016.

External links

  • National Centre for Antarctic & Ocean Research (NCAOR), Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India.

indian, antarctic, programme, multi, disciplinary, multi, institutional, programme, under, control, national, centre, polar, ocean, research, ministry, earth, sciences, government, india, initiated, 1981, with, first, indian, expedition, antarctica, programme,. The Indian Antarctic Programme is a multi disciplinary multi institutional programme under the control of the National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research Ministry of Earth Sciences Government of India It was initiated in 1981 with the first Indian expedition to Antarctica 1 The programme gained global acceptance with India s signing of the Antarctic Treaty and subsequent construction of the Dakshin Gangotri Antarctic research base in 1983 1 superseded by the Maitri base from 1989 The newest base commissioned in 2012 is Bharati constructed out of 134 shipping containers Under the programme atmospheric biological earth chemical and medical sciences are studied by India which has carried out 40 scientific expeditions to the Antarctic An aerial view of the Indian Station Maitri on 25 February 2005 Mohammed Ghous uzzaman a member of 7th Indian Antarctic Expedition Team at library Dakshin Gangotri 26 January 1988 Mohammed Ghous uzzaman Left and M Vyghreswara Rao Right members of 7th Indian Antarctic Expedition Team at Dakshin Gangotri Antarctica 26 January 1988 Col Jatinder Kumar Bajaj a member of one of the Indian expeditions to Antarctica standing at the South Pole 17 January 1989 Contents 1 History 2 Organization 3 Global cooperation 4 Research 5 Research stations 5 1 Dakshin Gangotri 5 2 Maitri 5 3 Bharati 5 4 India Post Office in Antarctica 6 Indian Antarctic expeditions 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe origin of the Indian missions to the Antarctic are traced to the joint Indian Space Research Organisation Hydrometeorological Centre of Russia agreements which led to Indians such as Dr Paramjit Singh Sehra joining the 17th Soviet Antarctic expedition of 1971 1973 2 India officially acceded to the Antarctic Treaty System on 1 August 1983 On 12 September 1983 the country became the fifteenth Consultative Member of the Antarctic Treaty 3 Organization EditThe National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research a research and development body functioning under the Ministry of Earth Sciences Government of India controls the Indian Antarctic Programme 4 The NCPOR and the Department of Ocean Development select the members for India s Antarctic expeditions 2 After medical tests and subsequent acclimatisation training at the Himalayas these selected members are also trained in survival environment ethics firefighting and operating in a group 2 One expedition costs up to 200 million US 2 5 million 2 Logistical support to the various activities of the Indian Antarctic Programme is provided by the relevant branches of the Indian armed forces 4 The launching point of Indian expeditions has varied from Goa in India to Cape Town in South Africa on 19th expedition during the time of NCAOR Founding Director Dr P C Pandey in December 1999 2 Over 70 institutes in India contributed to its Antarctic Programme as of 2007 2 Global cooperation EditThe Indian Antarctic Programme is bound by the rules of the Antarctic Treaty System which India signed in 1983 4 Pandey 2007 outlines the various international activities that India has undertaken as a part of its Antarctic Programme On 12 September 1983 India achieved the status of Consultative Party on 1 October became a member of Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research SCAR and in 1986 became a member of the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources CCAMLR In 1997 India also ratified the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty thus reaffirming India s commitment to protecting the Antarctic environment India hosted the eleventh COMNAP SCALOP Standing Committee on Antarctic Logistics and Operations meeting in Goa in 1999 and the working group meeting on eco system monitoring and management of CCAMLR in August 1998 at Cochin India occupied the CCAMLR chair beginning in November 1998 for a period of 2 years 2 India also collaborates with the international community as a member of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission Regional Committee of Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission in Coastal Indian Ocean IOCINDIO International Seabed Authority ISBA and the State Parties of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas UNCLOS 4 5 6 Research Edit Krill distribution on a NASA SeaWIFS image the main concentrations are in the Scotia Sea at the Antarctic Peninsula India carries out krill exploration in the Southern Ocean region of the Antarctic 4 7 Antarctica holds scientific interest for global research projects due to a number of reasons Origin of continents climate change meteorology and pollution are among the reasons cited by S D Gad 2008 4 Mrinalini G Walawalkar 2005 holds that ice ocean interaction and the global processes paleoenvironment and paleoclimatic studies geological evolution of earth and Gondwanaland reconstruction Antarctic ecosystems biodiversity and environment physiology solar terrestrial processes and their coupling medical physiology adaptation techniques and human psychology environment impact assessment and monitoring enabling low temperature technology development and studies on earthquakes are among the areas of study under the Indian Antarctic Programme 6 Close to 1 300 Indians had been to the continent as of 2001 as a part of the country s Antarctic Programme 7 Indian expeditions to the Antarctic also study the fauna and the molecular biodiversity of the region 8 9 A total of 120 new microbes had been discovered as a result of international scientific effort in the Antarctic by 2005 6 30 of these microbes had been discovered by Indian scientists 6 India has also published over 300 research publications based on Antarctic studies as of 2007 2 The ice cores retrieved by drilling holes in Antarctic s vast ice sheets yield information on the palaeoclimate and eco history of the earth as records of wind blown dust volcanic ash or radioactivity are preserved in the ice as it gets accumulated over time 4 The NCAOR developed a polar research amp development laboratory with a low temperature laboratory complex at 20 C for preservation and analysis of ice core and snow samples according to S D Gad 2008 4 The ice core samples are held processed and analysed in containment units designed by such technology 4 Storage cases made of poly propylene also ensure that the samples do not alter characteristics and are preserved for analysis in the form that they were recovered 4 Research stations EditIn 1981 the Indian flag unfurled for the first time in Antarctica marking the start of Southern Ocean expeditions under the environmental protocol of the Antarctic Treaty 1959 Dakshin Gangotri Edit Main article Dakshin Gangotri The first permanent settlement was built in 1983 and named Dakshin Gangotri In 1989 it was excavated and is being used again as supply base and transit camp Dakshin Gangotri was decommissioned in the year 1990 after half of it got buried under the ice It is nothing more than a historical site now In its times it used to double up as a place for multiple support systems including the presence of an ice melting plant laboratories storage accommodation recreation facilities a clinic and also a bank counter Maitri Edit Main article Maitri The second permanent settlement Maitri was put up in 1989 on the Schirmacher Oasis and has been conducting experiments in geology geography and medicine India built this station close to a freshwater lake around Maitri known as Lake Priyadarshini Maitri accomplished the mission of geomorphologic mapping of Schirmacher Oasis Bharati Edit Main article Bharati Located beside Larsmann Hill at 69 S 76 E Bharati is established in 2015 This newest research station for oceanographic research will collect evidence of continental break up to reveal the 120 million year old ancient history of the Indian subcontinent In news sources this station was variously spelled Bharathi 10 Bharti 11 and Bharati 12 India Post Office in Antarctica Edit It was established in the year 1984 during the third Indian expedition to Antarctica It was located at Dakshin Gangotri As many as 10 000 letters were posted and cancelled in this post office in total in the first year of its establishment Although the post office is no more there it is a favourite stopover for Indian tourists who visit the place in cruise ships The current Indian post office in Antarctica is situated at Maitri where the country s current research station is also situated Indian Antarctic expeditions EditDate Expedition Leader Deputy Leader Leader Summer Team Deputy Leader Summer Team 1981 1982 First Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Sayed Zahoor Qasim C P Vohra H N Siddiquie1982 1983 Second Indian Expedition to Antarctica V K Raina Dr C R Sreedharan1983 1985 Third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Harsh K Gupta Lieutenant Colonel Satya Swarup Sharma1984 Fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr B B Bhattacharya Col P Kumaresh1985 86 Fifth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr M K Kaul Dr Vinod K Dhargalkar1986 87 Sixth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr A M Parulekar Col V S Iyer V S M 1987 1989 Seventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr R Sen Gupta Col P Ganeshan Dr G S Mittal1988 1990 Eighth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Amitava Sen Gupta Col S Jagannathan Lt Col J P Khadilkar1989 1991 Ninth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Rasik Ravindra1990 1992 Tenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr A K Hanjura1991 1993 Eleventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Shardendu Mukherjee1992 94 Twelfth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Vinod K Dhargalkar1993 95 Thirteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr G Sudhakar Rao1994 96 Fourteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr S D Sharma1995 1996 Fifteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh Arun Chaturvedi1996 98 Sixteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Anand L Koppar1997 99 Seventeenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh K R Shivan1998 2000 Eighteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica sh Ajay Dhar1999 2001 Nineteenth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh Arun Chaturvedi2000 2003 Twentieth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mr Marvin D Souza2001 2003 Twenty first Indian Expedition to Antarctica Shri Ram Prasad Lal2002 04 Twenty Second Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Arun Hanchinal2003 05 Twenty third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh S Jayaram2004 06 Twenty fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh Rajesh Asthana2005 2007 Twenty fifth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Sh L Prem KishoreTwenty sixth Indian Expedition to AntarcticaTwenty seventh Indian Expedition to Antarctica2008 2009 Twenty eighth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr P Malhotra Ajay Dhar2009 2010 Twenty ninth Indian Expedition to Antarctica P Elango Rajesh Asthana2010 2011 Thirtieth Indian Expedition to Antarctica K Jeeva Rajesh Asthana2011 2012 Thirty first Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Rupesh M Das Bharati amp Shree Uttam Chand Maitri Rajesh Asthana2013 2014 Thirty third Indian Expedition to Antarctica Mohd Yunus Shah Bharati Abhijit Patil Bharati 2014 2015 Thirty fourth Indian Expedition to Antarctica Kailash Bhindwar Bharati Syed Shadab Bharati 2017 2018 Thirty seven Indian Expedition to Antarctica Dr Shailesh Pednekar Bharati Bagati Sudarshan Patro Bharati 2018 2020 38th Indian Expedition to Antarctica K Jeeva Matri P Elengo BharatiNotes Edit a b Walawalkar 2015 Gad 2008 a b c d e f g h Anas 2007 Department of Ocean Development Government of India Annual Report 1983 1984 TECHNICAL PUBLICATION NO 3 Printed at Dee Kay Printers Kirtinagar New Delhi a b c d e f g h i j Gad 2008 Pursuit and Promotion of Science The Indian Experience 2001 351 a b c d Walawalkar 2005 a b Pursuit and Promotion of Science The Indian Experience 2001 352 Pursuit and Promotion of Science The Indian Experience 2001 173 Pursuit and Promotion of Science The Indian Experience 2001 213 The Hindu Tamil Nadu Cuddalore News Third Antarctica research station by 2011 11 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Bharti to be 3rd Indian station in Antarctica The Times of India 6 August 2009 The Hindu News Update Service Archived from the original on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2010 References EditGad S D 2008 India in the Antarctic Current Science 95 2 151 Bangalore Indian Academy of Sciences Pandey P C 2007 in India Antarctic Program Encyclopedia of the Antarctic edited by Beau Riffenburgh pp 529 530 Abingdon and New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 415 97024 5 Pursuit and Promotion of Science The Indian Experience 2001 New Delhi Indian National Science Academy Walawalkar M G 2005 Antarctica and Arctic India s contribution Current Science 685 Bangalore Indian Academy of Science Scientific Report of First Indian Expedition to Antarctica PDF Department of Ocean Development Government of India 2016 External links EditNational Centre for Antarctic amp Ocean Research NCAOR Ministry of Earth Sciences Government of India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian Antarctic Programme amp oldid 1136493978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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