Tunoshna
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tunoshna Аэропорт Туношна |
|||
---|---|---|---|
IATA: IAR - ICAO: UUDL | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | public | ||
Serves | Yaroslavl | ||
Elevation AMSL | 285 ft (87 m) | ||
Coordinates | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
ft | m | ||
05/23 | 9,843 | 3,000 | Asphalt |
Tunoshna (also Tunoshnoye, or Tunoschna) (Russian: Аэропорт Туношна) (IATA: IAR, ICAO: UUDL) is an airport in Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia located 18 km southeast of Yaroslavl. It services medium-sized airliners.
During the Cold War it was a key interceptor aircraft base. It was home to 415 IAP (415th Interceptor Aviation Regiment) flying MiG-23P aircraft during the 1980s and 1990s[1]. This unit was decommissioned in 1992 and the planes were sent to Rzhev.
Mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov grew up in Tunosha.
[edit] References
- ^ Aviatsiya PVO. Aviabaza KPOI.
Adler/Sochi • Aldan • Amderma • Anadyr • Anapa • Arkhangelsk • Astrakhan • Barnaul • Baykit • Belgorod • Biysk • Blagoveschensk • Bratsk • Bugulma • Cheboksary • Chelyabinsk • Chita • Chokurdakh • Chulman • Dikson • Elista • Igarka • Irkutsk • Kaliningrad • Kazan • Kazan-2 • Kemerovo • Khabarovsk • Khanty-Mansiysk • Kirov • Kogalym • Kotlas • Krasnodar • Krasnoyarsk • Kurgan • Kyzyl • Magadan • Magdagachi • Magnitogorsk • Makhachkala • Mineralnye Vody • Mirny • Moscow-Bykovo • Moscow-Domodedovo • Moscow-Ostafievo • Moscow-Sheremetyevo • Moscow-Vnukovo • Murmansk • Nadym • Nalchik • Naryan-Mar • Nizhnevartovsk • Nizhny Novgorod • Norilsk • Novokuznetsk • Novosibirsk • Novy Urengoy • Noyabrsk • Nyagan • Okhotsk • Omsk • Orenburg • Orsk • Penza • Perm • Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky • Petrozavodsk • Pevek • Podkamennaya Tunguska • Polyarny • Provideniya • Pskov • Rostov-na-Donu • Saint Petersburg • Salekhard • Samara • Saratov • Sovetsky • Solovki • Stavropol • Surgut • Syktyvkar • Tiksi • Tomsk • Tura • Turukhansk • Tyumen • Ufa • Ukhta • Ulan-Ude • Ulyanovsk • Uray • Usinsk • Velikiy Novgorod • Vladikavkaz • Vladivostok • Volgograd • Vorkuta • Voronezh • Yakutsk • Yaroslavl • Yekaterinburg • Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
This Russian military article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |