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Victor Tarasov-Shlishan - Partridge's igloo



Ingliism is a Slavic doctrine, borrowed from the Primordial Ancestors of the Slavic-Aryan Race, which considers the surrounding world as an aggregate plurality of energies distributed in time and space, vectorially projected from a Single, spiritualized Primary Source. Therefore, in the past, the Slavic clan, who studied the energy projections of the original Inglia, called themselves Inglians. Thus, the genetically conditioned, Inglistic worldview of the Russian ethnos of the Slavs allowed Mendeleev to intuitively assume that a certain zero chemical element should exist in nature, and also helped Soviet theorists to model the ideology of Scientific Communism in USSR.


From the author

Dear friends and Comrades! My country USSR exists under occupation of The International Zionism and Usurper of the Colonial Administration on the territory of RSFSR destroys the Russians. Nevertheless, more than 30 millions citizens of the RSFSR hope for the Revival of the Motherland! The story "Partridge igloo" written in the world famous tradition of Soviet science fiction. This story tells in detail about the mysterious adventure of the Soviet topographer that happened with him, during the Development of natural resources in the Far North of RSFSR. Based on idea and notes of my father, Anatoly Nikolayevich Tarasov (1939-2012). Dedicated to all Pioneers of the Far North of the USSR. For a wide range of readers.

Chapter 1. Amazing salvation

This story happened few years ago. The most interesting thing in this story was that under hypnotic suggestion, I completely forgot it. So I did not remember anything until now, but Indirect evidence that something happened with me, was enough. But what exactly happened, where and when, I did not know and did not remember. How did two days fall out from my memory without a trace?! I had to come to terms with the version of the Senior worker of my Topographic Detachment, Mavletdin Badretdinovich Badretdinov, that I sat all the time under the snow, in the small snow cave, that we all calling «Partridge's igloo» where was keeping my body in warm.

Such auto-suggestion reassured me and as it turned out, completely in vain. Because it was on these days that i experienced an adventure, what influenced my whole future life. But it is one thing to gradually acquire different human abilities, another thing is to constantly be surprised, where did they come from, where is the source of my superpowers hidden? That time I worked as the topographer for the Iconic Seismic Group of Taimyr Geophysical Expedition and lived in the Arctic town, Dudinka. With my family in a two-room apartment, and I considered myself an ordinary, unremarkable person. That winter, we worked northeast of the our base, toward the village Volochanka.

I will not describe in detail the specifics of work in the tundra. I will only say that our seismic group, with the help of resonance-frequency explosions and with the help of special reading and receiving equipment, was looking for underground storage of oil and gas, in the strata of rocks. Where they have accumulated over millions of years. My topographic detachment was considered an auxiliary unit of the seismic party. Our responsibilities included laying a road. Installation of geophysical pickets and instrumental shooting of the area.

The hardest time for work, it is the polar night. Twilight, which we out of habit called day, not conducive to performance. In the Far North in extreme climate, everybody hard to work. I mean workers, tractor drivers and of course, the topographers. Need to catch short hours of dusk, when something visible and hurry to take measurements as much distance as possible during this time. Even at such a fast pace, most of the time I had to move in the dark.

This story began precisely at the darkest time of the polar night. When 17 of December 1982 year, in the morning a southwest wind began to blow. Blowing wind made a noise, but visibility remained satisfactory. I gave a command for everyone to go to work and we laid a seismic profile against the wind, on the bare, without a single bush, hilly tundra. On the flat tops of each hill lay large boulders and pebbles, left by the last glaciation. Snow from the tops of the mountains was blown away by snowstorms.