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3 days ago · A photo taken by German forces in 1943 shows a weather station complete with instruments to measure temperature, wind speed, air pressure, humidity and more. (Source. CC0 1.0)
This largely unknown WWII weather station in Newfoundland was one of the only known Nazi operations that took place on North American soil. The Weather Network's Connor O'Donovan reports.
3 days ago · During WWII, the Germans constructed a secret weather station in Canada. The Weather Network - Video. November 10, 2024 at 5:22 p.m. Link Copied.
Apr 3, 2016 · The rafts were used to take pieces of Weather Station Kurt ashore to the Hutton Peninsula. By Bundesarchiv – CC BY-SA 3.0 de. The WFL Kurt was marked with a logo and a name of a non-existing company – Canadian Meteor Service. Empty American cigarette packs were disposed around the station to make it more believable.
May 27, 2023 · From a southern perspective, Douglas discovered the Kurt weather station in the summer of 1981. However, a former resident of Killiniq Island says the area was a popular Inuit fishing spot for generations. Douglas wrote about his trip for the December 1981/January 1982 issue of Canadian Geographic. “Someone had been there before us,” he wrote.
Weather Station Kurt (Wetter-Funkgerät Land-26) was an automatic weather station, erected by a German U-boat crew of the Kriegsmarine in northern Labrador, Dominion of Newfoundland, in October 1943. Installing the equipment for the station was the only known armed German military operation on land in North America (outside of Greenland) during the Second World War .
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Nov 3, 2023 · Weather Station Kurt was an automated weather outpost secretly established by Nazi Germany on the Labrador coast in Newfoundland in 1943, designed to provide critical meteorological data for military operations in the North Atlantic. Despite its brief operational life, Kurt showcased advanced technology with its autonomous functioning and ...