Tyukalinsk () is a town in Omsk Oblast, Russia, located northeast of the Nazyvayevsk railway station on the Trans-Siberian Railway and northwest of Omsk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:
Tyukalinsk () is a town in Omsk Oblast, Russia, located northeast of the Nazyvayevsk railway station on the Trans-Siberian Railway and northwest of Omsk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:
==History== In 1759, a post station of Tyukalinsky Stanets () existed on the Tyukala River in place of modern Tyukalinsk. It developed into the sloboda of Tyukalinskaya () in 1763. In 1823, it was granted town status, which was retracted in 1838, and reinstated in 1878. Tyukalinsk lost its commercial importance along with the Siberian Route after the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway. On the outskirts of the town is a geoglyph made of pine trees that spell out "Lenin" (Ленин). Called "Lenin forest" by locals it was supposedly made in 1970, Vladimir Lenin's 100th birthday, though the exact date remains unknown. It is visible in satellite photographs at .
via Wikipedia infobox
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).