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Keywords
Climate (campaign title)
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Day
Evening
Greenpeace crew
Helicopters
KWCI (GPI)
MY Arctic Sunrise
Outdoors
Sunsets
Three people
MY Arctic Sunrise and Helicopter in Greenland
Packing away after a long polar day, the crew of the Arctic Sunrise secure the last pieces of equipment, ready to go to a new location to conduct research work. The Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise, its crew and a team of independent scientists are at Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier (known as '79 Glacier') at 79 degrees north, in remote northeast Greenland, to study the effects of climate change in the Arctic, and its influence on sea level rise worldwide.
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Shoot:
Glaciology Research in Eastern Greenland
In summer 2009, the MY Arctic Sunrise sails to the Arctic to document the dire effects climate change has on one of the most fragile environments in the world. Independent scientists use the ship, helicopter, boats and assistance of the crew, to collect data and research the impacts of climate change. During this second section of the three-part tour, scientists conduct important glaciology research in Eastern Greenland, on Helheim and Kangerdlugsuaq glaciers and their fjords. The team then transits north to work on the Nioghalvfjerdsfjorde Glacier (known as '79 Glacier.')
Related Collections:
Best of Arctic Impacts Expedition
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier:
GP01U9B
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
08/09/2009
Locations:
Eastern Greenland
,
Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier
,
North America
Credit line:
© Nick Cobbing / Greenpeace
Size:
5616px × 3744px 8.19 MB
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)