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Borisoglebsky, Murmansk Oblast

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Borisoglebsky ( Russian : Борисоглебский ; Finnish : Kolttaköngäs ; Norwegian : Skoltfossen ) is a rural locality (a Posyolok ) in Pechengsky District of Murmansk Oblast , Russia . The village is located beyond the Arctic Circle , at a height of 95 meters above sea level on the Paatsjoki River .

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4-654: There is a border crossing to Storskog in Norway , the only border crossing between the two countries. In June 1968, Boris Gleb was the venue for the largest Soviet display of aggression against Norway since the Second World War. Early in the morning on 7 June 1968, 60-70 T-54 tanks rolled towards the Norwegian border. The garrison stationed at southern Varanger was placed at the highest alert. The soldiers were given live ammunition and prepared for an armed conflict. According to

8-857: The European route E105 highway. The crossing is located in Sør-Varanger Municipality in Finnmark county on the Norway side of the border. The Russian side is in Boris Gleb in Pechengsky District in Murmansk Oblast . There is a border crossing station on the Russian side also, and both have to be passed to enter the opposite country. There is a duty-free shop in Russia between the stations. Storskog

12-455: The instructions they were given , any violation of the border should be fired upon. The Soviet army stopped 30 meters away, aiming their tanks at Norwegian military installations. The confrontation lasted until 10 June, when Soviet forces retired from the border area. Built between 1960 and 1964, the Boris Gleb (Borisoglebskaya) hydroelectric station ( Russian : Борисоглебская ГЭС (ГЭС-8) ) on

16-527: The Paatsjoki River is a hydroelectric station built under a water derivation system. The power station is owned and operated by TGC-1 power company. This Murmansk Oblast location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Storskog Storskog ( lit.   ' Big Forest ' ) is a border crossing station on the Norwegian side of the Norway-Russia border , along

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