We compare distances to a very young stellar aggregate, IC 2944, using three methods: direct parallaxes of Gaia, spectrophotometric parallax and our method based on intensities of interstellar CaII lines. The discrepancies between spectrophotometric distances and those, based on CaII K and H lines, were already reported. The interstellar CaII H and K lines allow one to determine both distances and radial velocities of the intervening clouds. Thus, these data allow us to check the aggregate membership. It is also possible to check the spectral classification of considered targets which is necessary for spectrophotometric parallaxes. Using three methods, we determined distances to IC 2944 stars. We demonstrate that CaII based distances agree very well with the kinematic ones but are generally much smaller than the spectrophotometric ones. We conclude that the majority of IC 2944 objects is obscured by clouds producing neutral ("gray") extinction which diminishes their brightness exactly like extended distances. This influences spectrophotometric parallaxes while those, based on the CaII lines, do not depend on extinction and this method seems to be the most reliable one inside the thin disk of our Galaxy. The Gaia trigonometric parallaxes lead to distances similar to those obtained using the CaII method if their errors are reasonably small.
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