Category
page 1Meteorological stations
weather station
set of sensors that record and provide physical measurements and meteorological parameters

Alert
settlement in Nunavut, Canada, the northernmost permanently inhabited place on Earth
Progress Station
Antarctic research station

Eureka
research base on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada
Malin Head
most northern part of mainland Ireland
Weather Station Kurt
Nazi German automatic weather station in Canada

Eismitte
thumb|right|Station Eismitte in 1930
thumb|The three scientists manning the station: Ernst Sorge, Fritz Loewe and Johannes Georgi with one of the [[aerosledges of the expedition.]]
Eismitte, also called Mid-Ice in English, was a meteorological station established, in the middle of the Greenland Ice Sheet, by the 1930-31 German Greenland Expedition. The venture took place from July 1930 until August 1931, and established three Arctic stations on the same parallel. The expedition leader, German scientist Alfred Wegener, died during a trip back from Eismitte, in early November 1930. The station w
Biały Słoń Observatory
former Astronomical Observatory
Molodyozhnaya Station
research station
Sornfelli
thumb|250px|The mountain of Skælingsfjall has a height of 749m
Isachsen
Isachsen is a remote Arctic research-weather station named after the Norwegian explorer of the Arctic Gunnar Isachsen. It is on the western shore of Ellef Ringnes Island in the Sverdrup Islands, in the territory of Nunavut in Canada. Isachsen Station was established to participate in a joint Canadian-American weather observation program. Isachsen Station operated from April 3, 1948, through September 19, 1978. Regular weather observations began on May 3, 1948. In October 1949, a Douglas C-47 Skytrain (tail number 316062) crash-landed near the station. No one was killed, but three on board were
Falsterbo lighthouse
lighthouse at Falsterbo, Vellinge Municipality, Sweden
King City weather radar station
weather radar located in King City