Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / NewStats: 3,158,189 members, 7,835,950 topics. Date: Tuesday, 21 May 2024 at 05:57 PM |
Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Travel / Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. (79969 Views)
A Trip With My Girlfriend To Obudu Cattle Ranch (pictures) / A Trip To Ogbunike Cave, Anambra State / A Trip To Gberefun Village, Badagry, Lagos (Video, Photos) (2) (3) (4)
(1) (2) (3) ... (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (Reply) (Go Down)
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by kambah(m): 7:34am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Very educative and informative.
Unlike some thread on this forum that makes people nauseate. More of it |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by toprealman: 7:39am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Funjosh:honey pie, strawberry......o yeah, just realised that. 1 Like |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by KingRex1(m): 7:43am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Explorers:Why's that? Cos according to physics, when ice melts in a full glass of water, it doesnt overflows. The melted ice occupies same space the intial ice occupied. So xplain ur theory |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by cirmuell(m): 7:45am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Brigadier7: |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Liljeez(m): 8:04am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Explorers we made fp oh |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Brannyslim: 8:06am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Explorers:quote author=CassieV post=43971549] Why's that? [/quote] People with emerging wisdom teeth will notice that the pain increases during the cold. The pain is intense in the night meaning cold temperature has a way of inducing pain on growing teeth. 1 Like |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 8:15am On Mar 23, 2016 |
PUSIDRILA:u nor get work |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 8:16am On Mar 23, 2016 |
PUSIDRILA:OK oh |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Heart2heart(m): 8:17am On Mar 23, 2016 |
SO I TOOK THIS WISDOM TOOTH OF A THING TO QUORA, here are the responses from voyagers and people who work with the australia expedition department first response: "many years ago I was denied by the Australian Antarctic Expedition because I still had my appendix. I was outraged at their stupidity. Until about 6 months later when my appendix burst. I don't know whether it is still like this but occasionally I am asked to examine prospective Antarctic workers teeth to try and predict future problems". second response: Realistically, it would be very wise to have both done before going to work there. If either caused you great trouble while you're there, you'd be useless until you were returned to a place where they could reasonably be addressed... and in the case of the appendix, you may very well die if it bursts before you can be transported to a hospital. Transporting you would be at great cost, and may - depending upon the weather - may also cost other lives. third response: "False. I was cleared by the US Antarctic Program despite having wisdom teeth and an appendix. However, to get clearance, I did have to undergo a root canal for a tooth that had been marginal but otherwise fine with watchful waiting. The USAP medical/dental clearance program strives to identify conditions whose likelihood of becoming emergent during an Antarctic stay exceeds a certain threshold. Perhaps, in their experience, a normal appendix and stable wisdom teeth don't exceed that threshold." The last respponse (throws more light): "The British (British Antarctic Survey (BAS)) were the ones noted for this (this influenced the other Commonwealth Programs (well, the Kiwis at Scott Base (the guys in the yellow polar suits) can drive 2 miles over to the US base for their MD services for free)). 1) Their budget was not able to afford full time physicians in their bases. 2) No countries' budget can afford a full time dentist down there and dental problems which are considered avoidable in the first place and hence minor. The US budget can afford 3 physicians for each of the 3 permanent bases, and MDs are in great demand for these positions and especially after a famous book when the over-winter Pole MD contracted breast cancer. The MDs are taught the basics of dental extractions but not much more. The MDs can't do more than basic meatball surgery. Hence other specialties such as (most notably) OB/GYNs are handled off continent as well. There have been a few hand waving exceptions among staff. I've been asked to write one recommendation for an MD applying for one of the MD slots (after he finished his other NSF obligations). I'm chosen frozen from another country's Antarctic Program. We have our own national interests down there. Check with your own country's Antarctic Program requirements. " gungab: 2 Likes |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 8:18am On Mar 23, 2016 |
RaptorX:really,interesting |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by fejikudz(m): 8:26am On Mar 23, 2016 |
interesting piece |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Chijosky(m): 8:30am On Mar 23, 2016 |
to tell you the truth when I saw the heading,
automatically I know its coming from Explorer Alubarika follow me pls.. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 8:34am On Mar 23, 2016 |
MetaHuman:.I didn't say catholic did bad stuff in africa,i said they have done bad stuff in their history and slave trade(you go to Wikipedia and see what it was all about), am not thinking straight because i told that slave trade had nothing to do with the Catholic church,I keep you to go to wikipedia and see it up for yourseft,who do say I was hating? questioning stuff like what exactly, so because am not an atheist like you I no longer think straight ? nothing was forced on her by any slave master,its her life and none my business, why wasn't it also forced on you by the "slave master" lazy you say,who is lazy the citizen who has graduated and have no job or the government? please spell all this emotional crap. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Funjosh(m): 8:41am On Mar 23, 2016 |
KingRex1: You have 50liters of water in a bowl filled to its brim, and you now melted some Ice into the water bowl no Jupiter will stop the overflow. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Adek15(m): 8:42am On Mar 23, 2016 |
yetdam4ril:I used to know that Australia is a country and a contingent on its own until I started hearing abt Oceania as the continent in which Australia is inside and other countries like Tahiti and new Zealand. Pls which 1 is correct? |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Nobody: 8:50am On Mar 23, 2016 |
erusen:your case is even worse.. DENIAL. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Heart2heart(m): 8:50am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Auto-appendectomy in the Antarctic: case report The Russian surgeon Leonid Rogozov’s self operation, undertaken without any other medical professional around, was a testament to determination and the will to life “A job like any other, a life like any other” "—Leonid Rogozov" The ship Ob, with the sixth Soviet Antarctic expedition on board, sailed from Leningrad on 5 November 1960. After 36 days at sea she decanted part of the expedition onto the ice shelf on the Princess Astrid Coast. Their task was to build a new Antarctic polar base inland at Schirmacher Oasis and overwinter there. After nine weeks, on 18 February 1961, the new base, called Novolazarevskaya, was opened. They finished just in time. The polar winter was already descending, bringing months of darkness, snowstorms, and extreme frosts. The sea had frozen over. The ship had sailed and would not be back for a year. Contact with the outside world was no longer possible. Through the long winter the 12 residents of Novolazarevskaya would have only themselves to rely on. One of the expedition’s members was the 27 year old Leningrad surgeon Leonid Ivanovich Rogozov. He had interrupted a promising scholarly career and left on the expedition shortly before he was due to defend his dissertation on new methods of operating on cancer of the oesophagus. In the Antarctic he was first and foremost the team’s doctor, although he also served as the meteorologist and the driver of their terrain vehicle. 29 April 1961 After several weeks Rogozov fell ill. He noticed symptoms of weakness, malaise, nausea, and, later, pain in the upper part of his abdomen, which shifted to the right lower quadrant. His body temperature rose to 37.5°C.1 2 Rogozov wrote in his diary: “It seems that I have appendicitis. I am keeping quiet about it, even smiling. Why frighten my friends? Who could be of help? A polar explorer’s only encounter with medicine is likely to have been in a dentist’s chair.” As a surgeon Rogozov had no difficulty diagnosing acute appendicitis. In this situation, however, it was a cruel trick of fate. He knew that if he was to survive he had to undergo an operation. But he was in the frontier conditions of a newly founded Antarctic colony on the brink of the polar night. Transportation was impossible. Flying was out of the question, because of the snowstorms. And there was one further problem: he was the only physician on the base. 30 April All the available conservative treatment was applied (antibiotics, local cooling), but the patient’s general condition was getting worse: his body temperature rose, vomiting became more frequent.1 2 “I did not sleep at all last night. It hurts like the devil! A snowstorm whipping through my soul, wailing like a hundred jackals. Still no obvious symptoms that perforation is imminent, but an oppressive feeling of foreboding hangs over me . . . This is it . . . I have to think through the only possible way out: to operate on myself . . . It’s almost impossible . . . but I can’t just fold my arms and give up. “18.30. I’ve never felt so awful in my entire life. The building is shaking like a small toy in the storm. The guys have found out. They keep coming by to calm me down. And I’m upset with myself—I’ve spoiled everyone’s holiday. Tomorrow is May Day. And now everyone’s running around, preparing the autoclave. We have to sterilise the bedding, because we’re going to operate. “20.30. I’m getting worse. I’ve told the guys. Now they’ll start taking everything we don’t need out of the room.” Preparation for the operation Following Rogozov’s instructions, the team members assembled an improvised operating theatre. They moved everything out of Rogozov’s room, leaving only his bed, two tables, and a table lamp. The aerologists Fedor Kabot and Robert Pyzhov flooded the room thoroughly with ultraviolet lighting and sterilised the bed linen and instruments. As well as Rogozov, the meteorologist Alexandr Artemev, the mechanic Zinovy Teplinsky, and the station director, Vladislav Gerbovich, were selected to undergo a sterile wash. Rogozov explained how the operation would proceed and assigned them tasks: Artemev would hand him instruments; Teplinsky would hold the mirror and adjust the lighting with the table lamp; Gerbovich was there in reserve, in case nausea overcame either of the assistants. In the event that Rogozov lost consciousness, he instructed his team how to inject him with drugs using the syringes he had prepared and how to provide artificial ventilation. Then he gave Artemev and Teplinsky a surgical wash himself, disinfected their hands, and put on their rubber gloves for them. When the preparations were complete Rogozov scrubbed and positioned himself. He chose a semi-reclining position, with his right hip slightly elevated and the lower half of the body elevated at an angle of 30°. Then he disinfected and dressed the operating area. He anticipated needing to use his sense of touch to guide him and thus decided to work without gloves. The operation[size=12pt][/size] The operation began at 2 am local time. Rogozov first infiltrated the layers of abdominal wall with 20 ml of 0.5% procaine, using several injections. After 15 minutes he made a 10-12 cm incision. The visibility in the depth of the wound was not ideal; sometimes he had to raise his head to obtain a better view or to use the mirror, but for the most part he worked by feel. After 30-40 minutes Rogozov started to take short breaks because of general weakness and vertigo. Finally he removed the severely affected appendix. He applied antibiotics in the peritoneal cavity and closed the wound. The operation itself lasted an hour and 45 minutes.1 2 Partway through, Gerbovich called in Yuri Vereshchagin to take photographs of the operation. BMJ 2009; 339:b4965 doi: 10.1136/bmj.b4965 (Published 15 December 2009) Cite this as: BMJ 2009; 339:b4965 Feature Christmas 2009 Auto-appendectomy in the Antarctic: case report Vladislav Rogozov, consultant anaesthetist12, Neil Bermel, professor of Russian and Slavonic studies3 + Author Affiliations 1Department of Anaesthetics, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Sheffield S10 2JF 2Department of Anaesthesiology and Resuscitation, Cardiac Centre, Institute of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Prague, 140 21, Czech Republic 3Department of Russian and Slavonic Studies, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S37RA Correspondence to: V Rogozov v.rogozov@sheffield.ac.uk The Russian surgeon Leonid Rogozov’s self operation, undertaken without any other medical professional around, was a testament to determination and the will to life “A job like any other, a life like any other” "—Leonid Rogozov" The ship Ob, with the sixth Soviet Antarctic expedition on board, sailed from Leningrad on 5 November 1960. After 36 days at sea she decanted part of the expedition onto the ice shelf on the Princess Astrid Coast. Their task was to build a new Antarctic polar base inland at Schirmacher Oasis and overwinter there. After nine weeks, on 18 February 1961, the new base, called Novolazarevskaya, was opened. They finished just in time. The polar winter was already descending, bringing months of darkness, snowstorms, and extreme frosts. The sea had frozen over. The ship had sailed and would not be back for a year. Contact with the outside world was no longer possible. Through the long winter the 12 residents of Novolazarevskaya would have only themselves to rely on. One of the expedition’s members was the 27 year old Leningrad surgeon Leonid Ivanovich Rogozov. He had interrupted a promising scholarly career and left on the expedition shortly before he was due to defend his dissertation on new methods of operating on cancer of the oesophagus. In the Antarctic he was first and foremost the team’s doctor, although he also served as the meteorologist and the driver of their terrain vehicle. 29 April 1961 After several weeks Rogozov fell ill. He noticed symptoms of weakness, malaise, nausea, and, later, pain in the upper part of his abdomen, which shifted to the right lower quadrant. His body temperature rose to 37.5°C.1 2 Rogozov wrote in his diary: “It seems that I have appendicitis. I am keeping quiet about it, even smiling. Why frighten my friends? Who could be of help? A polar explorer’s only encounter with medicine is likely to have been in a dentist’s chair.” As a surgeon Rogozov had no difficulty diagnosing acute appendicitis. In this situation, however, it was a cruel trick of fate. He knew that if he was to survive he had to undergo an operation. But he was in the frontier conditions of a newly founded Antarctic colony on the brink of the polar night. Transportation was impossible. Flying was out of the question, because of the snowstorms. And there was one further problem: he was the only physician on the base. 30 April All the available conservative treatment was applied (antibiotics, local cooling), but the patient’s general condition was getting worse: his body temperature rose, vomiting became more frequent.1 2 “I did not sleep at all last night. It hurts like the devil! A snowstorm whipping through my soul, wailing like a hundred jackals. Still no obvious symptoms that perforation is imminent, but an oppressive feeling of foreboding hangs over me . . . This is it . . . I have to think through the only possible way out: to operate on myself . . . It’s almost impossible . . . but I can’t just fold my arms and give up. “18.30. I’ve never felt so awful in my entire life. The building is shaking like a small toy in the storm. The guys have found out. They keep coming by to calm me down. And I’m upset with myself—I’ve spoiled everyone’s holiday. Tomorrow is May Day. And now everyone’s running around, preparing the autoclave. We have to sterilise the bedding, because we’re going to operate. “20.30. I’m getting worse. I’ve told the guys. Now they’ll start taking everything we don’t need out of the room.” Preparation for the operation Following Rogozov’s instructions, the team members assembled an improvised operating theatre. They moved everything out of Rogozov’s room, leaving only his bed, two tables, and a table lamp. The aerologists Fedor Kabot and Robert Pyzhov flooded the room thoroughly with ultraviolet lighting and sterilised the bed linen and instruments. As well as Rogozov, the meteorologist Alexandr Artemev, the mechanic Zinovy Teplinsky, and the station director, Vladislav Gerbovich, were selected to undergo a sterile wash. Rogozov explained how the operation would proceed and assigned them tasks: Artemev would hand him instruments; Teplinsky would hold the mirror and adjust the lighting with the table lamp; Gerbovich was there in reserve, in case nausea overcame either of the assistants. In the event that Rogozov lost consciousness, he instructed his team how to inject him with drugs using the syringes he had prepared and how to provide artificial ventilation. Then he gave Artemev and Teplinsky a surgical wash himself, disinfected their hands, and put on their rubber gloves for them. When the preparations were complete Rogozov scrubbed and positioned himself. He chose a semi-reclining position, with his right hip slightly elevated and the lower half of the body elevated at an angle of 30°. Then he disinfected and dressed the operating area. He anticipated needing to use his sense of touch to guide him and thus decided to work without gloves. The operation The operation began at 2 am local time. Rogozov first infiltrated the layers of abdominal wall with 20 ml of 0.5% procaine, using several injections. After 15 minutes he made a 10-12 cm incision. The visibility in the depth of the wound was not ideal; sometimes he had to raise his head to obtain a better view or to use the mirror, but for the most part he worked by feel. After 30-40 minutes Rogozov started to take short breaks because of general weakness and vertigo. Finally he removed the severely affected appendix. He applied antibiotics in the peritoneal cavity and closed the wound. The operation itself lasted an hour and 45 minutes.1 2 Partway through, Gerbovich called in Yuri Vereshchagin to take photographs of the operation. Gerbovich wrote in his diary that night3: “When Rogozov had made the incision and was manipulating his own innards as he removed the appendix, his intestine gurgled, which was highly unpleasant for us; it made one want to turn away, flee, not look—but I kept my head and stayed. Artemev and Teplinsky also held their places, although it later turned out they had both gone quite dizzy and were close to fainting . . . Rogozov himself was calm and focused on his work, but sweat was running down his face and he frequently asked Teplinsky to wipe his forehead . . . The operation ended at 4 am local time. By the end, Rogozov was very pale and obviously tired, but he finished everything off.” After the operation Afterwards Rogozov showed his assistants how to wash and put away the instruments and other materials. Once everything was complete, he took sleeping tablets and lay down for a rest. The next day his temperature was 38.1°C; he described his condition as “moderately poor” but overall he felt better. He continued taking antibiotics. After four days his excretory function came back to normal and signs of localised peritonitis disappeared. After five days his temperature was normal; after a week he removed the stitches.1 2 Within two weeks he was able to return to his normal duties and to his diary. 8 May 1961 “I didn’t permit myself to think about anything other than the task at hand. It was necessary to steel myself, steel myself firmly and grit my teeth. In the event that I lost consciousness, I’d given Sasha Artemev a syringe and shown him how to give me an injection. I chose a position half sitting. I explained to Zinovy Teplinsky how to hold the mirror. My poor assistants! At the last minute I looked over at them: they stood there in their surgical whites, whiter than white themselves. I was scared too. But when I picked up the needle with the novocaine and gave myself the first injection, somehow I automatically switched into operating mode, and from that point on I didn’t notice anything else. “I worked without gloves. It was hard to see. The mirror helps, but it also hinders—after all, it’s showing things backwards. I work mainly by touch. The bleeding is quite heavy, but I take my time—I try to work surely. Opening the peritoneum, I injured the blind gut and had to sew it up. Suddenly it flashed through my mind: there are more injuries here and I didn’t notice them . . . I grow weaker and weaker, my head starts to spin. Every 4-5 minutes I rest for 20-25 seconds. Finally, here it is, the cursed appendage! With horror I notice the dark stain at its base. That means just a day longer and it would have burst and . . . “At the worst moment of removing the appendix I flagged: my heart seized up and noticeably slowed; my hands felt like rubber. Well, I thought, it’s going to end badly. And all that was left was removing the appendix . . . “And then I realised that, basically, I was already saved.” Leaving Antarctica More than a year later the Novolazarevskaya team left Antarctica, and on 29 May 1962 their ship docked at Leningrad harbour. The next day Rogozov returned to his work at the clinic. Shortly thereafter he successfully defended his dissertation. He worked and taught in the Department of General Surgery of the First Leningrad Medical Institute. He never returned to the Antarctic and died in St Petersburg, as Leningrad had by then become, on 21 September 2000. The boundary of the humanly possible There are some references to auto-appendectomies in the literature. The earliest one was possibly that performed by Dr Kane in 1921 (although the operation was completed by his assistants).4 5 We know that Rogozov had not heard about it before he performed his operation. Rogozov’s self operation was probably the first such successful act undertaken in the wilderness, out of hospital settings, with no possibility of outside help, and without any other medical professional around. It remains an example of determination and the human will for life. In later years Rogozov himself rejected all glorification of his deed. When thoughts like these were put to him, he usually answered with a smile and the words: “A job like any other, a life like any other.”6
|
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Nobody: 8:55am On Mar 23, 2016 |
U get work. erusen: |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 8:57am On Mar 23, 2016 |
PUSIDRILA:hahahaha,wentin you say make I talk |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Churchillsaug(m): 9:00am On Mar 23, 2016 |
MetaHuman:to be sincere with u, I never supported u for once, because I am a christian, a die hard christian. But I think u made sense here. If the catholic did not force us into christianity by violence, scope, preaching and stuffs, we could'nt have known anything about christianity because it came from they, they brouth it to us, we knew nothing about it. They were using crusaders that time to force people into it.... I am a christian. But I dnt argue religion because I've not known anything about it, I am still learning. The thing that mostly freaks me out about christians is that most of us dont have facts, it is only based on belief and u cant argue based on belief with someone that have facts. Most of the christians does not even know how this church things came about. I think those protestants were the group that broke out from catholic and started giving birth to all other churches that full everywere now. I'm still following u though |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 9:05am On Mar 23, 2016 |
MetaHuman:please,am not an hater like u that accuse something of a crime It didn't commit,simply because I don't like it,show me wikipedia proofs and u resorted to am not thinking straight and "Africa's problem" blah and emotional rant,i thought u said you have preffered not have contacted the europeans?and will be still living in a primitive tribe mtceeev. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 9:07am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Adek15:yea I think sp |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 9:07am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Adek15:yea I think so |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Adek15(m): 9:08am On Mar 23, 2016 |
@op, If south pole, Antarctica is a continent. Is north pole, arctic also a continent? Pls pardon my ignorance. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Adek15(m): 9:10am On Mar 23, 2016 |
erusen:you think so? I don't get you |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by erusen: 9:18am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Adek15:pardon,Oceania is different from Australia(which is a continent where Australia country and island such as new gunea,team belong to),new Zealand does no belong to Australia. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by mekybabe1: 9:22am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Pls which countries are found in the Antarctica? |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by agarawu23(m): 9:37am On Mar 23, 2016 |
helphelp: |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by justjify(m): 9:40am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Oya, over to you igbo men, now that the heat has increased and no light go and start importing iceblock (to cool our drinks)from there before its too late. |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Mekurexx: 9:52am On Mar 23, 2016 |
Very informative! |
Re: Antarctica: A Trip To The Coldest, Windiest, And Driest Continent On The Planet. by Mekurexx: 9:56am On Mar 23, 2016 |
This guy was Russian not Australia. I read his story on BBC News. He did a self-operation. Faced with the consequence of death except he carried out an operation Explorers: |
(1) (2) (3) ... (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (Reply)
Tourists Worldwide Flock To See This Strange Ice Volcano In Kazakhstan (Photos) / How Anambra Is Closing Borders With Neighboring States (Photos) / Coronavirus Scare: Masked Man Gets Seats All To Himself (Photo, Video)
(Go Up)
Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 93 |