Formica aquilonia is a species of wood ant of the genus Formica which are widely distributed in Europe and Asia, occurring from Scandinavia in the north to Bulgaria and Italy in the south, and from the UK eastwards through France and Germany to Russia, while they are also found in the coastal areas of the Sea of Okhotsk in eastern Siberia.
These stations observe ocean waves, tide levels, sea surface temperature and ocean current etc. in the Northwestern Pacific basin, as well as the Sea of Japan and the Sea of Okhotsk basin, and provide marine meteorological forecasts resulted from them, in cooperation with the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department, Japan Coast Guard.
Sea of Okhotsk (Okhotskoye more), a sea in the western Pacific Ocean
During the Cold War, the Sea of Okhotsk was the scene of several successful U.S. Navy operations (including Operation Ivy Bells) to tap Soviet Navy undersea communications cables.
•
These operations were documented in the book Blind Man's Bluff: The Untold Story of American Submarine Espionage.
•
The Dutch captain Maarten Gerritsz Vries in the Breskens entered the Sea of Okhotsk from the south-east in 1643, and charted parts of the Sakhalin coast and Kurile Islands, but failed to realize that either Sakhalin or Hokkaido are islands.
It sits on a circular bay at the southwestern end of the Shelikhov Gulf, a northeastern extension of the Sea of Okhotsk.
Black Sea | Mediterranean Sea | Baltic Sea | North Sea | Red Sea | Caspian Sea | Caribbean Sea | Adriatic Sea | Aegean Sea | South China Sea | Sea of Japan | Irish Sea | Westland Sea King | Dead Sea | Arabian Sea | Tyrrhenian Sea | Southend-on-Sea | East China Sea | Ionian Sea | Bering Sea | White Sea | Kara Sea | First Sea Lord | Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles | Dead Sea Scrolls | British Sea Power | Tasman Sea | Sea Islands | Great Big Sea | Coral Sea |
Sarychev, on ship Slava Rossii (Glory of Russia), described and mapped the coastline of the Sea of Okhotsk from Okhotsk to Aldoma, many of the Aleutian Islands (especially Unalaska).
From there, he boated on a canoe for 700 miles along the Amur River to the Channel of Tartary, down the coast to the Sea of Okhotsk, then back to Nikolayevsk-on-Amur.
E. dofleini is the only member of the genus found in the Northern Hemisphere and also the most widely distributed, occurring from San Diego, California along the North Pacific Rim to Japan, including the Okhotsk and Bering Seas.
The Yam Islands in the Sea of Okhotsk should not be confused with Yam Island in Queensland, Australia.