Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Arctic-Sunrise-and-Tabular-Iceberg-in-the-Antarctic-27MZIFJXPJX3Q.htmlConceptually similarArctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0GCompleted★★★★★★Arctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0HCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0ICompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0KCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0LCompleted★★★★★A Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRH0FCompleted★★★★★★Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRGXBCompleted★★★★Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRGXCCompleted★★★★★★Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGP0STRGXDCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STRH0JArctic Sunrise and Tabular Iceberg in the AntarcticGreenpeace ship the Arctic Sunrise in front of a tabular iceberg in Hope Bay on Trinity Peninsula, which is the northernmost part of the Antarctic Peninsula. Just outside Hope Bay, the Antarctic Sound connect the Bransfield Strait to the Weddell Sea. In this area, Greenpeace is about to conduct submarine-based scientific research to strengthen the proposal to create the largest protected area on the planet, an Antarctic Ocean Sanctuary.Locations:Antarctic-Hope Bay-Trinity PeninsulaDate:18 Jan, 2018Credit:© Christian Åslund / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4467px X 2978pxKeywords:Aerial view from UAV-Day-Greenpeace ships-Ice-Icebergs-Icescapes-KWCI (GPI)-MY Arctic Sunrise-Oceans (topography)-Outdoors-Protect the Antarctic (campaign title)-SeascapesShoot:Antarctic Ship Tour - Leg One - Photos by Christian ÅslundGreenpeace is on a three-month expedition to the Antarctic to carry out scientific research, including seafloor submarine dives and sampling for plastic pollution, to highlight the urgent need for the creation of a 1.8 million square kilometre Antarctic Ocean Sanctuary to safeguard species like whales and penguins.Related Collections:Antarctic Ship Tour BEST OF