A brief glimpse into the past

Petrolul 95 ACSM Oltenita 1 4rezumat baraj liga 3
Petrolul 95 ACSM Oltenita 1 4rezumat baraj liga 3

Pe arena Conpet, lângă aerodromul ,,Gheorghe Banciulescu", din Strejnicu, s-a petrecut cea mai tare întoarcere de scor a barajului de menținere / promovare ...



SUD Steaua, la Steaua București 2-0 Mostistea Ulmu | 15.05.2021
SUD Steaua, la Steaua București 2-0 Mostistea Ulmu | 15.05.2021

Echipa de fotbal Steaua Bucuresti a disputat pe 15.04.2021 al doilea meci de baraj, in compania celor de la ACS Mostistea Ulmu. Copyright ©2021, B.R. All ...



REZUMAT | Steaua - Mostistea Ulmu 2-0. ”Militarii” joaca finala pentru promovarea in Liga 2
REZUMAT | Steaua - Mostistea Ulmu 2-0. ”Militarii” joaca finala pentru promovarea in Liga 2

Aboneaza-te la canalul nostru: https://goo.gl/YkyMbU Steaua Bucureşti a eliminat-o pe Mostiştea Umu cu 4-0 la general, în primul baraj pentru Liga 2. În returul ...



REZUMAT: Scandal la Steaua - Ulmu 2-0. Oaspeţii au vrut să iasă de pe teren
REZUMAT: Scandal la Steaua - Ulmu 2-0. Oaspeţii au vrut să iasă de pe teren

Steaua s-a calificat în barajul pentru promovarea în liga secundă după ce a câştigat şi returul cu Mostiştea Ulmu. Pacionel a înscris din penalty în minutul 66, ...



LIVE | Steaua - Mostistea Ulmu, a doua repriza
LIVE | Steaua - Mostistea Ulmu, a doua repriza

Echipele de start: STEAUA: Bălbărău, George Călinţaru, Walace da Silva, Dean Beţa, Alexandru Zaharia, Rareş Enceanu, Adrian Ilie, Valentin Bărbulescu, ...



Team, Place & City Details

CSM Oltenița

Club Sportiv Municipal Oltenița, commonly known as CSM Oltenița, or simply Oltenița , is a professional Romanian football club based in Oltenița, Călărași County. The team was founded as Șantierul Naval Oltenița in 1948 and played between 1965 and 1992 in the Liga II and Liga III. After 1992 the team had only sporadic appearances in the third league, before being declared bankrupt at the end of the 2004–05 season.

Oltenia
Oltenia

Oltenia is a historical province and geographical region of Romania in western Wallachia. It is situated between the Danube, the Southern Carpathians and the Olt river.

Oltenița
Oltenița

Oltenița is a city in Muntenia, Romania in the Călărași County on the left bank of the river Argeș (river) where its waters flows into the Danube. Oltenița stands across the Danube from the Bulgarian city of Tutrakan.

Desertification in Oltenia

Desertification in Oltenia affects parts of the Walachian Plain, in the Romanian region of Oltenia covering the area between the city of Calafat and the town of Dăbuleni, spanning an area of about 80,000 hectares , or 6% of Dolj County.Labelled by the press as the Oltenian Sahara (Romanian: Sahara Olteniei), the sandy areas in the region have extended because of the deforestation that occurred in the 1960s. Consequently, due to the sudden desertification in the area, the name "Oltenian Sahara" has quickly caught on among the locals.

Olteniței
Olteniței

Olteniței is a quarter in Bucharest's Sector 4, in the southern part of the city. A subdivision of Berceni, it gained its current form in the 1980s, when apartment buildings were constructed over old houses that were demolished.

Olten railway station
Olten railway station

Olten is a major hub railway station in the canton of Solothurn, Switzerland, at the junction of lines to Zürich, Bern, Basel, Lucerne and Biel. As a result, Olten is a railway town and was also the site of the main workshop of the Swiss Central Railway , which became a major workshop for the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS).

Ulmu

Ulmu may refer to several places:

Ulmus americana
Ulmus americana

Ulmus americana, generally known as the American elm or, less commonly, as the white elm or water elm, is a species native to eastern North America, naturally occurring from Nova Scotia west to Alberta and Montana, and south to Florida and central Texas. The American elm is an extremely hardy tree that can withstand winter temperatures as low as −42 °C .

Ulmus rubra
Ulmus rubra

Ulmus rubra, the slippery elm, is a species of elm native to eastern North America, ranging from southeast North Dakota, east to Maine and southern Quebec, south to northernmost Florida, and west to eastern Texas, where it thrives in moist uplands, although it will also grow in dry, intermediate soils. Other common names include red elm, gray elm, soft elm, moose elm, and Indian elm.

Ulmus glabra
Ulmus glabra

Ulmus glabra, the wych elm, Scotch elm or Scots elm, has the widest range of the European elm species, from Ireland eastwards to the Urals, and from the Arctic Circle south to the mountains of the Peloponnese in Greece; it is also found in Iran. A large, deciduous tree, it is essentially a montane species, growing at elevations up to 1500 m, preferring sites with moist soils and high humidity.

Ulmus minor 'Atinia'
Ulmus minor 'Atinia'

The field elm cultivar 'Atinia' , commonly known as the English elm, formerly common elm and horse may, and more lately the Atinian elm was, before the spread of Dutch elm disease, the most common field elm in central southern England, though not native there, and one of the largest and fastest-growing deciduous trees in Europe. R. H. Richens noted that elm populations exist in north-west Spain and northern Portugal, and on the Mediterranean coast of France that "closely resemble the English elm" and appear to be "trees of long standing" in those regions rather than recent introductions.

Ulmus laevis
Ulmus laevis

Ulmus laevis Pall., variously known as the European white elm, fluttering elm, spreading elm, stately elm and, in the United States, the Russian elm, is a large deciduous tree native to Europe, from France northeast to southern Finland, east beyond the Urals into Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, and southeast to Bulgaria and the Crimea; there are also disjunct populations in the Caucasus and Spain, the latter now considered a relict population rather than an introduction by man, and possibly the origin of the European population. U. laevis is rare in the UK, however its random distribution, together with the absence of any record of its introduction, has led at least one British authority to consider it native.

Ulmus pumila
Ulmus pumila

Ulmus pumila, the Siberian elm, is a tree native to Central Asia, eastern Siberia, the Russian Far East, Mongolia, Tibet, northern China, India and Korea. It is also known as the Asiatic elm and dwarf elm, but sometimes miscalled the 'Chinese Elm' (Ulmus parvifolia).