elena lantseva was also born, studied and now , together with her husband, works here at udokan as aand mining engineer. this is something amazing, especially when you are at 2,000 m and the view is incredible. i really like it, but udokan copper it might not have happened. at first it didn’t work out in the sixties. explore hard-to-reach mineral resources. they even wanted to open the rock with an atomic bomb explosion, but the valley was saved by the agreement between moscow and washington, namely andrei gromyko, one of the developers of this document. yes, you can say, he put an end to it. this is precisely the signing of this treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons on water in the air, underground, and so on. it’s just luck that the explosion didn’t take place; later they couldn’t bring in the heavy equipment until they built one of the branches to the amur baikal highways, but it turned out that in these mountains the mixed sulfide and oxidized ore in soviet times could not be divided into fractions, there were no technologies, the project was recognized as unprofitab