The two remote time-lapse cameras which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most northerly glaciers.
Alan Hubbard, a glaciologist from the University ff Wales, Aberystwyth, traveling with the crew of the Greenpeace ship MY Arctic Sunrise, is working on the Petermann glacier at 81 degrees north, a glacier that flows onto the northern Greenlandic...
An ice penetrating radar is deployed from a string of kayaks to survey a section of the Petermann glacier.
Polar explorer and expert in glacier travel Eric Philips looks down into one of the 'cracks' in the Petermann glacier where it is crossed by a ravine.
The 'whirlpool' at 80 57'28" N and 061 20'10" W on the Petermann glacier. Geophysicist Dr Richard Bates, of the Scottish Oceans Institute at the University of St. Andrews, takes 'casts' of temperature pressure current and salinity
Radio operator Texas Constantine from Canada paddles a kayak in front of a tributary glacier next to the Petermann glacier.
Polar explorer and expert in glacier travel Eric Philips volunteers to rig mooring lines around a solid bollard of ice on the front of the Petermann glacier.
US-Installation artist Spencer Tunick and Greenpeace present a living sculpture: hundreds naked volunteers symbolise the vulnerability of the glaciers under climate change.
Large crevasses in Kangerdlugssuaq glacier photographed from the air. This hazardous terrain makes the work of obtaining scientific data, by installing GPS units, very challenging for glacologists. The glaciers display alarming signs of increased...
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