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c0107091.jpg Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most northerly

glaciers. Two of the cracks in the glacier are visible at the top of the frame.

This is the view made that is being recorded by two remote cameras mounted on

the cliff top by Dr Jason Box. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet)

provide an ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the

time lapse cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice

Survey (EIS). It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of

the process by which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A

team of scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107092.jpg The two remote time-lapse cameras are trained across Petermann

Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most northerly glaciers. The images from

the two cameras, will be stitched together to make a panoramic image by Dr Jason

Box who visits the cameras every three days to maintain them and collect the

data they produce. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an ideal

vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse cameras

is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS). It is

hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by which

the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of scientists

assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the glacier's ongoing

disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse larger than New

York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann Glacier. © Nick

Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107091.jpg Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most northerly

glaciers. Two of the cracks in the glacier are visible at the top of the frame.

This is the view made that is being recorded by two remote cameras mounted on

the cliff top by Dr Jason Box. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet)

provide an ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the

time lapse cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice

Survey (EIS). It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of

the process by which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A

team of scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107093.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. Two of the cracks in the glacier are visible at the top

right of the frame. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107094.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107095.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c0107096.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. One of the cracks in the glacier is visible at the top of

the frame. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together to make a

panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an ideal

vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse cameras

is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS). It is

hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by which

the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of scientists

assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the glacier's ongoing

disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse larger than New

York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann Glacier. © Nick

Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c3006093.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c3006094.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.



c3006095.jpg Glaciologist Dr Jason Box adjusts his remote time-lapse cameras

which are trained across Petermann Glacier, one of Greenland's largest and most

northerly glaciers. The images from the two cameras, will be stitched together

to make a panoramic image. The cliffs at 980 metres high (3,000 feet) provide an

ideal vantage point to monitor the glacier. The installation of the time lapse

cameras is a joint initiative between Greenpeace and Extreme Ice Survey (EIS).

It is hoped that the remote cameras will give a clear picture of the process by

which the glacier breaks and how parts of it drift out to sea. A team of

scientists assisted by experts in ice logistics, intend to document the

glacier's ongoing disintegration. Recent satellite images show that an expanse

larger than New York's Manhattan island is ready to break off from Petermann

Glacier. © Nick Cobbing/ Greenpeace.


Shared by: xiaohuicaicai
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