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BaikalAmur Mainline





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(Redirected from Baikal-Amur Mainline)
 


The Baikal–Amur Mainline (Russian: Байкало-Амурская магистраль, БАМ, Baikalo-Amurskaya magistral', BAM) is a 1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) broad-gauge railway line in Russia. Traversing Eastern Siberia and the Russian Far East, the 4,324 km (2,687 mi)-long BAM runs about 610 to 770 km (380 to 480 miles) north of and parallel to the Trans-Siberian Railway.

Baikal–Amur Mainline
RZD 3TE25K2M hauling freight at the Baikal–Amur Mainline
Overview
Native nameБайкало-Амурская магистраль
StatusOperational
OwnerRussian Railways
Locale
  • Russian Far East
  • Termini
  • Sovetskaya Gavan
  • Continues fromTrans-Siberian Railway
    Service
    Type
  • Freight rail
  • System
  • Far Eastern Railway (Khani–Sovetskaya Gavan)
  • Operator(s)Russian Railways
    Technical
    Line length4,324 km (2,687 mi)
    Number of tracks2–1
    Track gauge1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) Russian gauge
    Electrification25kV 50Hz AC overhead lines

    Route map

    km

    0
    Tayshet

    293
    Anzyobi

    10
    Akulshet

    Tayshet diversion line to Yurty

    30
    Kostomarovo

    48
    Toporok

    57
    Nevelskaya

    97
    Parchum

    to Lesosibirsk via Kodinsk

    117
    Novochunka

    124

    129
    Sosnovye Rodniki
    (Oktyabrsky)

    142
    Chuna
    (Chunsky)

    154
    Izykan

    167
    Targiz

    177
    Chuksha

    191
    Keshevo

    210
    Toreya

    226
    Ognevka

    246
    Turma

    259
    Balaga

    269
    Vikhorevka

    284
    Morgudon

    toBratsk city centre

    293
    Anzyobi

    toBratsk city centre

    304
    Galachinsky

    310
    Bratskoye More

    326
    Padunskoye Porogi

    328
    Energetik

    329

    Bratsk Reservoir wall (4.4 km)

    339
    Gidrostroytel

    369
    Zyaba

    378
    Pashenny

    403
    Kezhemskaya

    416
    Mamyr

    436
    Rechushka

    461
    Vidim

    480
    Sokhaty

    502
    Chornaya

    523
    Seleznyovo

    533
    Ilim River (Ust-Ilimsk Reservoir)

    535
    Sredneilimskaya

    541
    Zhelezny

    550
    Korshunovsky-Tunnel (1.1 km)

    552
    Korshunikha-Angarskaya
    (Zheleznogorsk-Ilimsky)

    562
    Sibirishnaya

    573
    Khrebtovaya

    589
    Karstovaya

    611
    Semigorsk

    620
    Merelotnaya

    646
    Kaymonovo

    652

    661
    Rychey

    672
    Yantal

    685
    Kuta

    713
    Ust-Kut

    720
    Lena

    730
    Yakurim

    734
    Lena-Vostochnaya

    to Lensk

    737

    739
    Predlensky

    759
    Chudnichny

    769
    Kalpshny

    784
    Zvyozdnaya

    805
    Irdykan

    823
    Niya

    853
    Nebel

    867
    Marikta

    874
    Ukhanga

    889
    Kirenga
    (Magistralny)

    908
    Okunaysky

    915

    930
    Ulkan

    948
    Umbella

    960
    Kalakachan

    982
    Kunerma

    997
    Delbichinda

    1,010
    Baikal (Daban) tunnel (6,686 m)
    Irkutsk Oblast
    Buryatia

    1,014
    Daban

    1,028
    Goudzhekit

    1,043
    Tyya

    1,063
    Severobaykalsk

    1,067
    4 tunnels (4.5 km total)

    1,090
    Nizhneangarsk

    1,105
    Kholodnaya

    1,127
    Kichera

    1,164
    Kiron

    1,182
    Angoya

    1,193
    Ogdynda

    1,210
    Ogney

    1,228
    Anamakit

    1,235

    1,242
    Novy Uoyan

    1,249
    Bakany

    1,277
    Yanchuy

    1,296
    Churo

    1,315
    Kyukhelbekerskaya
    (Yanchikan)

    1,330
    Kovokta

    1,344
    Angarakan

    Severomuysky Tunnel bypass

    1,354

    Severomuysky Tunnel bypass

    1,370
    Okusikan

    1,374
    Kasankan
    (Severomuysk)

    1,385
    Severomuysk

    1,397
    Arkum

    1,414
    Ulgi

    1,460
    Muyakan

    1,469
    Taksimo
    1

    ↓planned electrification

    1,492
    Lodya

    1,508
    Aku

    1,533
    Shivery

    1,535

    1,543
    Koyra

    1,561
    Kuanda

    1,584
    Taku

    1,602
    Balbukhta

    1,617
    Syulban

    1,637
    Naledny

    1,645
    Kodar tunnel (1,981 m)

    1,650
    Kodar

    1,668
    Leprindo

    1,679
    Sallikit

    1,713

    to Chineyskoye mines

    1,719
    Novaya Chara

    1,740
    Kemen

    1,757
    Ikabya

    1,770
    Olongo

    1,835

    1,864
    Khani

    1,866

    Olyokma

    Tas-Yuryakh

    1,918

    1,922

    1,927

    2,013
    Yuktali

    2,033
    Taluma

    2,058
    Dyugabul

    2,121
    Chilchi

    2,171
    Lopcha

    2,186
    Elgakan

    2,216
    Larba

    2,241
    Lumbir

    2,268
    Khorogochi

    2,309
    Kuvykta

    2,348
    Tynda

    2,369
    Shakhtaum

    2,365

    2,375
    Bestuzhevo

    2,409

    2,436
    Marevaya

    2,494
    Unakha

    2,511
    Dipkun

    2,560
    Tutaul

    to Elginskoye
    (under construction)

    2,687

    2,690
    Verkhnezeysk

    2,706
    Apetenok

    2,734
    Izhak

    2,757
    Ulyanovsky Stroitel

    2,779
    Ogoron

    2,803
    Moldavsky

    2,833
    Miroshnichenko

    2,846
    Tungala

    2,865
    Kamnega

    2,894
    Dugda

    2,919
    Nora

    2,940
    Meun

    2,957
    Drogoshevsk

    2,983
    Skalisty

    3,000
    Chervinka
    1

    3,012

    3,017
    Fevralsk
    2

    3,035
    Zvonkoye

    3,060
    Demchenko

    3,082
    Isakan

    3,101
    Isa

    3,129
    Mustakh

    3,149
    Ulma

    3,155

    3,162
    Etyrken

    3,195
    Shugara

    3,247
    Alonka

    3,292

    3,298
    Novy Urgal

    3,312
    Urgal-I

    3,324
    Chemchuko

    3,339
    Mugule

    3,365
    Soloni

    3,384
    Dusse-Alin

    3,382
    Dusse-Alin Tunnel (1.8 km)

    3,402
    Suluk

    3,422
    Mogdy

    3,434
    Orokot

    3,456
    Gerbi

    3,481
    Ukraltu

    3,494
    Badzhal

    Amgun River (3 bridges)

    3,513
    Dzhamku

    3,525
    Sektali

    3,542
    Eanga

    3,562
    Amgun

    3,579
    Sonakh

    3,595
    Ebgun

    3,615
    Postyshevo
    (Beryosovy)

    Komsomolsk-on-Amur diversion line
    to Chumikan & Magadan

    3,621

    3,638
    Bolen

    3,659
    Moni

    3,679
    Evoron

    3,702
    Kharpichan

    3,715
    Gorin

    3,740
    Mavrinsky

    3,750
    Khurmuli

    3,775
    Lian

    3,789
    Khalgaso

    3,799
    Silinka
    2

    3,819
    0
    Komsomolsk-Sortirovochny

    3

    0
    Pivan

    28
    Gayter

    41
    Kartel

    52
    Selikhino

    to Sakhalin via Sakhalin Tunnel

    63
    Eldigan

    82
    Poni

    95
    Kun

    112
    Gurskoye

    139
    Uktur

    160
    Kenay

    182
    Oune

    Kuznetsovsky tunnel (3,996 m)

    220
    Vysokogornaya

    240
    Datta

    261
    Kenada

    274
    Dzhigdasi

    to De-Kastri & Sakhalin

    303
    Tuluchi

    318
    Akur

    340
    Tumnin
    3

    366
    Khutu

    376
    Imbo

    to Khabarovsk & Nakhodka

    380
    Ust-Orochi

    399
    Kamenny Ruchey

    403
    Landyshi

    424
    Toki

    434
    Vanino

    442
    Sovetskaya Gavan-
    Sortirovochny

    458
    Desna

    468
    Sovetskaya Gavan
    km

    Key

    existing

    Electrification
    0

    planned
    phase number

    The Soviet Union built the BAM as a strategic alternative route to the Trans–Siberian Railway, seen as vulnerable especially along the sections close to the border with China. The BAM cost $14 billion, and it was built with special, durable tracks since much of it ran over permafrost. Due to the severe terrain, weather, length and cost, Soviet general secretary Leonid Brezhnev described BAM in 1974 as "the construction project of the century".[1]

    If the permafrost layer that supports the BAM railway line were to melt, the railway would collapse and sink into peat bog layers that cannot bear its weight. In 2016 and 2018 there were reports about climate change and damage to buildings and infrastructure as a result of thawing permafrost.[2][3]

    Route

    edit
     

    Map of major railways in Russia, with Trans-Siberian Railway shown in red, the Baikal-Amur Mainline in green and the Amur–Yakutsk Mainline (including "Little BAM") shown in orange

    The BAM departs from the Trans-Siberian railway at Tayshet, then crosses the Angara RiveratBratsk and the Lena RiveratUst-Kut, proceeds past Severobaikalsk at the northern tip of Lake Baikal, past Tynda and Khani, crosses the Amur RiveratKomsomolsk-on-Amur and finally reaches the Pacific OceanatSovetskaya Gavan. There are 21 tunnels along the line, with a total length of 47 km (29 mi). There are also more than 4,200 bridges, with a total length of over 400 kilometres (250 mi).[4]

    Of the whole route, only the western Tayshet-Taksimo sector of 1,469 km (913 mi) is electrified. The route is largely single-track, although the reservation is wide enough for double-tracking for its full length, in the case of eventual duplication. The unusual thing about the railway is that it is electrified with a 27.5 kV, 50 Hz catenary minimum height at 6.5 metres (21 ft 4 in) above top of the rails to suit double-stacking under the overhead wires on the Russian gauge tracks, which requires rolling stock to be modified for service on the railway.

    At Tynda the route is crossed by the Amur–Yakutsk Mainline, which runs north to Neryungri and Tommot, with an extension to Nizhny Bestyakh opened in 2019.[5] The original section of the AYaM connecting the Trans-Siberian at Bamovskaya with the BAM at Tynda is also referred to as the "Little BAM".

    During the winter the passenger trains go from Moscow past Tayshet and TyndatoNeryungri and Tommot and there are also a daily trains from Tynda to Komsomolsk-on-Amur and from Komsomolsk-on-Amur to Sovetskaya Gavan on the Pacific Ocean via Vanino ("Vladivostok-Sovetskaya Gavan" train No.351Э). Travel time from Tayshet to Tynda is 48 hours.[6] Travel time from Tynda to Komsomolsk-on-Amur is 36 hours.[6] Travel time from Komsomolsk-on-Amur to Sovetskaya Gavan is 13 hours.[6]

    There are ten tunnels along the BAM railway, totaling 30 kilometres (19 miles) of route. They include:[7]

    These are among the longest tunnels in Russia.

    In addition, the route crosses 11 full-flowing rivers (including the Lena, Amur, Zeya, Vitim, Olyokma, Selemdzha and Bureya).[7] In total, 2230 large and small bridges were built on it.

    History

    edit

    Early plans and start of construction

    edit

    The route of the present-day BAM first came under consideration in the 1880s as an option for the eastern section of the planned Trans-Siberian railway.

    In the 1930s labor-camp inmates, in particular from the Bamlag camp of the Gulag system, built the section from Tayshet to Bratsk. In a confusing transfer of names, the label BAM applied from 1933 to 1935 to the project to double-track the Trans-Siberian east of Lake Baikal, constructed largely using forced labor.[9]

    1945 saw the finalisation of plans for upgrading the BAM for diesel or electric instead of steam traction, and for the heavier axle-loads of eight-axle oil tankers to carry new-found oil[10] from Western Siberia. The upgrading required 25 years and 3,000 surveyors and designers, although much of the redesign work (particularly as regards the central section) took place between 1967 and 1974.[9]

    Construction project of the century

    edit
     
    A rally in Ust-Ilimsk, Irkutsk Region, on the occasion of the arrival of a building team for construction of the Baikal-Amur Railway. 1979.

    In March 1974, Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev proposed that the BAM would be one of the two major projects in the Tenth Five Year Plan (1976–80).[9] He famously stated that "BAM will be constructed with clean hands only!" and firmly rejected the suggestion to again use prison labor. A few weeks later he challenged the Young Communist League (Komsomol) to join in "the construction project of the century".[1] 17th Komsomol congress (held in April 1974) announced BAM a Komsomol shock construction project, created the central Komsomol headquarters of BAM construction, and appointed Dmitry Filippov the chief of the headquarters.

    By the end of 1974 perhaps 50,000 young people of the 156,000 young people who applied had moved to the BAM service area. In 1975 and 1976, 28 new settlements were inaugurated and 70 new bridges, including the Amur and Lena bridges, were erected. And while 110 miles (180 km) of track was laid, the track-laying rate would have needed to nearly triple to meet the 1983 deadline.[9]

    In September 1984, a "golden spike" was hammered into place, connecting the eastern and western sections of the BAM. The Western media was not invited to attend this historic event as Soviet officials did not want any comments about the line's operational status. In reality, only one third of the BAM's track was fully operational for civilians, due to military reasons.[11]

    The BAM was again declared complete in 1991. By then, the total cost to build the line was US$14billion (RU106 trillion).

    Crisis

    edit

    Beginning in the mid-1980s, the BAM project attracted increasing criticism for having been poorly planned. Infrastructure and basic services like running water were often not in place when workers arrived. At least 60 boomtowns developed along the route, but today many of these places are deserted ghost towns and unemployment in the area is high. The building of the BAM has also been criticised for its complete lack of environmental protection.[12]

    When the Soviet Union was dissolved, numerous mining and industrial projects in the region were cancelled and the BAM was greatly underutilized until the late 1990s, running at a large operational deficit.[citation needed]

    In 1996, the BAM as a single operational body was dissolved, with the western section from TayshettoKhani becoming the East Siberian Railway, the rest transferred to the management of the Far Eastern Railway.[citation needed]

    During the Russo-Ukrainian War, on November 30 2023, an explosion occurred in the Severomuysky Tunnel. A second explosion happened soon thereafter, on the bypass used as backup for the tunnel. The Security Service of Ukraine claiming responsibility for the explosions.[13]

    Current situation and future prospects

    edit

    A major improvement was the opening of the 15.34-kilometre (9.53 mi) Severomuysky Tunnel on 5 December 2003. It is up to 1.5 kilometres (nearly 1 mile) deep. Construction took 27 years to complete. Prior to this, the corresponding route segment was 54 km (34 mi) long, with heavy slopes necessitating the use of auxiliary bank engine locomotives.

    With the resources boom of recent years and improving economic conditions in Russia, use of the line is increasing. Plans exist for the development of mining areas such as Udokanskoye and Chineyskoye near Novaya Chara, as well as one of Eurasia's largest coal deposits at Elginskoye (Elga) in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia). In connection with this, a number of branch lines have been built or are under construction.

    In January 2012 the Russian mining company Mechel completed the construction of the 320-kilometre-long branch line to Elginskoye, branching from the BAM station Ulak, west of the Zeya River crossing in northwestern Amur Oblast.[14][15] The branch line connects the Elginskoye coal mine to the Russian railroad network.

    Currently under discussion is the construction of a bridge or tunnel under the Strait of TartarytoSakhalin Island, with the possibility of the further construction of a bridge or tunnel from Sakhalin to Japan. A tunnel from the mainland to Sakhalin was previously begun under Joseph Stalin, but was abandoned after his death. A second attempt in 2003 was also postponed during construction. Current economic conditions make the short-term completion of the tunnel doubtful, although Russian president Dmitry Medvedev announced in November 2008 his support for a revival of this project.[16]

    The BAM now also attracts the interest of Western railway enthusiasts, with some tourist activity on the line.[4]

    Also, the BAM itself extension from Komsomolsk-on-Amur to Magadan (Okhotsk coastal route), full length electrification, full length track doubling, and double-stacking under the overhead wires on the Russian gauge tracks (with well cars to make 6.15m height) are proposed.

    Tayshet diversion line
    (Tayshet bypass)
    Severo-Sibirskaya Mainline Lena-Kamchatka Mainline

    Along the BAM

    edit
     
    Major stations of the BAM
     
    Tynda, the "capital" of BAM

    TayshettoLake Baikal 1,064 kilometres (661 mi):[4]

    0,000 Tayshet: about 300 kilometres (190 miles) east of Krasnoyarsk, Trans-Siberian Railway, M53 highway to Irkutsk
    0,129 Sosnovye Rodniki: timber port; Chuna River
    0,142 Chuna
    0,269 Vikhorevka: railway administration
    0,282 Anzebi: 20-kilometre (12 mi) spur line to Bratsk
    0,330 Railway runs across the top of the Bratsk Dam
    0,463 Vidim
    0,546 Sredneilimskaya on the Ust-Ilimsk reservoir
    0,554 Zheleznogorsk-Ilimsky: mining town
    0,575 Khrebetovaya: branch line north to Ust-Ilimsk (see branches below); enters Lena basin; Kuta River
    0,715 Ust-Kut: port on the Lena River where goods are loaded onto boats for transport north; end of the line until 1974
    0,736 Lena Vostochnaya: east of the Lena, start of the BAM proper from 1974; route turns east southeast
    0,786 Zvyozdnaya: first new town built on the BAM
    0,890 Kirenga: 12 kilometres (7.5 miles) east is the larger town of Magistralnyy; Kirenga River and bridge
    0,931 Ul'kan: on the Ulkan branch of the Kirenga
    1,005 Delbichenda: last stop before the 6.7-kilometre (4.2 mi) Baikal Mountain Tunnel (between 1979 and 1984 there was a 15-kilometre (9.3 mi) bypass over the mountain)
    1,014 Daben
    1,064 Lake Baikal

    Lake BaikaltoTynda 1,300 kilometres (810 mi):

    1,064 Severobaykalsk; four small tunnels along the lake
    1,104 Nizhneangarsk; leave Lake Baikal, northeast along the Upper Angara River

    valley

    1,257 Novy Uoyan: there is talk of building a railroad south from here to the Trans-Siberian; enters Severomuysk Mountains; much permafrost from here to Tynda
    1,385–1,400 Severomuysky Tunnel: 15.7 kilometres (9.8 mi) long, very difficult construction; leaves mountain; scenic section with mountains to north and south; much fog
    1,484 Taksimo: end of electrified section; Muya River
    1,548 Shivery: leaves Buryat Republic; Vitim River
    1,577 Kuanda: official 'completion' of the BAM was celebrated here in September 1984; valley into mountains
    1,664 Kodar: Kodar mountains, 1.9 kilometres (1.2 mi) tunnel
    1,734 Novaya Chara
    1,879 Khani: the only BAM town in the Sakha Republic; northernmost point on the line; route turns south-southeast along the Olyokma River; enters Amur basin

    TyndatoKomsomolsk 1,473 kilometres (915 mi):

    2,364 Tynda: Branch railway and highway M56 north to Yakutsk; little BAM south to the Trans-Siberian
    2,704 Bridge over Zeya Reservoir; route heads southeast
    3,205 Bureya River bridge
    3,315 Novy Urgal: Branch south to Trans-Siberian
    3,403 east to Dusse-Alin Tunnel; northeast up the Amgun River
    3,633 Postyshevo: east
    3,697 Evoron Lake; southeast to km 3,837: Komsomolsk-on-Amur

    KomsomolsktoSovetskaya Gavan 486 kilometres (302 mi):

    This section was completed by prisoners during World War II, except for the 19-kilometre (12 mi) section east of Komsomolsk which was completed in 1974.

    3,819 Komsomolsk; 1,734-metre (5,689 ft) Amur River Bridge
    000 Pivan (new zero point)
    051 Selikhin: Branch
    095–340 Sikhote Alin Mountains
    403 Mongokhto
    441 Vanino: port, train ferry to Sakhalin Island, practical end of passenger service
    467 Sovetskaya Gavan: naval base

    In April 2008 the state-owned Bamtonnelstroy corporation started work on the new 3.91-kilometre (2.43 mi) single-track Kuznetsovsky Tunnel to bypass an older tunnel built in 1943–1945.[17] It was opened in December 2012. The old tunnel had difficult gradients; building the new tunnel relieved a bottleneck on the BAM.[18] The 59.8 bn roubles (about $1.93 bn) project included 20 kilometres (12 mi) of new track. In 2010, Yakunin had said, the stretch between Komsomolsk and Sovetskaya Gavan was the weakest link on the BAM, which, he said, could be carrying 100 million tons of freight a year in 2050.[19]

    Branches

    edit

    The BAM road

    edit

    Running approximately alongside the railway track is the BAM road, a railway service track. It is said to be in a very poor state, with collapsed bridges, dangerous river crossings, severe potholes and "unrelenting energy-sapping bogs". The narrow, dilapidated Vitim River Bridge (aka Kuandinsky Bridge)[20] that crosses the Vitim river has attracted attention since its first appearance on social media in 2009.[21] The passage of the bridge is forbidden since 2016 but remains a common road for individuals to reach the town of Koanda.[22]

    The road is passable only by the most extreme off-road vehicles and adventure motorcycles. In 2009, a group of three experienced motorcycle riders took a whole month to travel from Komsomolsk (in the east) to Lake Baikal.[23][24]

    Honors

    edit

    Main belt asteroid 2031 BAM, discovered in 1969 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Chernykh, is named in honor of the builders of the BAM.[25]

    edit

    References

    edit
    1. ^ a b Brown, Dale M.; Mann, Martin, eds. (1985). Library of Nations: The Soviet Union. Alexandria, Virginia: Time Life Books. ISBN 0-8094-5327-4.
  • ^ "Slow-motion wrecks: how thawing permafrost is destroying Arctic cities". The Guardian. 14 October 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2019. Valery Grebenets of Moscow State University's department of cryolithology and glaciology teaches his students 13 'horror stories' about thawing permafrost, including buckling roads and railways [...]
  • ^ "Permafrost thaw threatens millions of Arctic residents and their infrastructure". Arctic Today. 14 December 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2019. The study found that in the long list of vulnerable manmade structures, railroads carry some of the highest risks for damage from permafrost thaw.
  • ^ a b c Yates, Athol; Zvegintzov, Nicholas (1995). Siberian BAM Guide: Rail, Rivers & Road (see excerpt) (2, 2001 ed.). England: Trailblazer Publications. ISBN 1-873756-18-6.
  • ^ "Siberia's amazing new railway - the 'Permafrost Express' - opens to passengers this month". The Siberian Times. 22 July 2019. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  • ^ a b c "Новости компании" [company's news] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-12-25. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  • ^ a b "Baikal-Amur Main Line | Russian Railways". Archived from the original on 2017-04-18. Retrieved 2020-05-01.[dead link]
  • ^ "BAM! How to get the most out of a journey on Siberia's other railroad". www.rbth.com. 15 January 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  • ^ a b c d Shabad, Theodore; Mote, Victor L (1977). Gateway to Siberian Resources (The BAM). New York: Halstead Press/John Wiley. pp. 71–73. ISBN 0-470-99040-6.
  • ^ Compare: Gaidar, Yegor (2010). Collapse of an Empire: Lessons for Modern Russia. Translated by Antonina W. Bouis. Brookings Institution Press. p. 100. ISBN 9780815731153. Retrieved 2015-12-05. The first oil well in Western Siberia was opened in September 1953.73 Large-scale geological discoveries came in the period 1961-65 [...].
  • ^ Ward, C.J. (2001). "Selling the "Project of the Century": Perceptions of the Baikal-Amur Mainline Railway (BAM) in the Soviet Press, 1974–1984". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 43: 75–95. doi:10.1080/00085006.2001.11092272. S2CID 129139539.
  • ^ Victor L. Mote (1990). "BAM after the fanfare: the unbearable ecumene". In John M. Steward (ed.). The Soviet environment: problems, policies and politics. Cambridge. pp. 40–54. ISBN 9780521414180.
  • ^ "Ukraine's Security Service blows up railway linking Russia and China". Ukrainska Pravda. 2023-12-01. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
  • ^ "Mechel Reports Finishing Laying Railway Tracks to Elga Coal Complex". www.mechel.com. Retrieved 16 August 2017.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ "Mechel Reports Obtaining Federal Railway Transport Agency's Approval for Operating Elga Deposit Railway". www.mechel.com. Retrieved 16 August 2017.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ PrimaMedia: Президент России хочет остров Сахалин соединить с материком (Russian)
  • ^ Construction of the new Kuznetsovsky tunnel, Bamtonnelstroy press service, undated Archived 2014-03-06 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 31 March 2011].
  • ^ "Kuznetsovsk tunnel shortens the BAM corridor". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  • ^ Freight volumes via BAM to reach 100m tons a year by 2050, Portnews.ru, St Petersburg, 24 March, 2010. Retrieved: 31 March 2011].
  • ^ Maronese, Nicholas (2018-01-25). "Watching an SUV cross this narrow, no-guardrail bridge is nerve-wracking". Driving.ca. Postmedia Network. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  • ^ Holderith, Peter (2021-07-16). "This Rotting Siberian Bridge Is One of the World's Sketchiest River Crossings". Thedrive.com. Brookline Media. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  • ^ Вода из реки, отопление дровами, самый опасный мост в России Archived 2024-02-13 at the Wayback Machine, novayagazeta.eu, 13 February 2024
  • ^ "MCN Adventure". August 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  • ^ "The BAM Road - ultimate test of man and machine - Adventure Rider". www.advrider.com. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  • ^ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names (5th ed.). New York: Springer Verlag. p. 164. ISBN 3-540-00238-3.
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