"E.Voiskunsky, I.Lukodyanov. The Crew Of The Mekong (англ.)" - читать интересную книгу автораIN WHICH A STRANGE OCCURRENCE TAKES PLACE ON BOARD THE M.S. UZBEKISTAN There is a great temptation to start a novel of adventure with a shipwreck. Something like this: "With a sickening crunch the three-masted bark Aretusa, sailing from the New Hebrides with a cargo of copra, listed heavily to starboard. The raging sea swept over-" But we did not yield to the temptation. This true story of ours will open without a shipwreck. Since we wish, however, to conform throughout to the dictates of good style, we solemnly promise to arrange one later on. So much for that. One fine summer day the m.s. Uzbekistan was approaching a large Caspian town. The time was shortly after lunch, and the promenade deck was deserted except for a man in a green check suit. He was taking his ease in a deck chair, sheltered from the broiling sun by an awning. Nikolai Opratin, a person destined to play no small role in this story, was a lean, dapper man in his late thirties. He had an energetic face, with a bony chin, thin lips and a high brow ending in a carefully concealed bald patch. His close-shaven cheeks and the aroma of his aftershave lotion created the impression that he had just stepped out of a barber's chair. Postprandial naps were a pernicious habit in which Nikolai Opratin did not indulge. He reclined in his deck chair, gazing at the ship's broad, foamy wake. On his right he could see the grayish-yellow strip of coastline was already in sight. The island had been much smaller twenty years ago, Opratin reflected. Through the centuries the level of the ancient Caspian had often risen and fallen, sometimes by as much as eighty metres. In recent years it had dropped greatly. Man, no longer willing to be just a passive observer, had now set himself the difficult task of raising the level of the Caspian. One of the ideas suggested was to seal off, with a dam, the Bay of Kara-Bogaz-Gol, where the hot desert sun evaporates fourteen cubic kilometres of Caspian water annually. Another was to divert northern rivers into the Caspian. Under this bold scheme, the Kama, Vychegda and Pechora rivers were to be pumped across the watersheds and made to flow southwards into the Volga, which empties into the Caspian Sea. Even if Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay were cut off from the sea, northern rivers diverted, and water from Central Asia's great Amu Darya river added, the level of the Caspian would not rise by the desired three metres before the year 2000. That was far too long to wait. Actually, the addition of only one thousand cubic kilometres of water to the Caspian in the course of one year would do the trick. But this was easier said than done. Several thousand giant pumps and a power station with a capacity of scores of millions of kilowatts would be required to shift that amount of water from the Black Sea, say, to the Caspian in one year. Nikolai Opratin, Candidate of Science (Tech.), had all these figures at |
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