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Photographer at the Bernina Pass during the spring thaw, St Moritz, canton of Graubünden, Upper Engadine, Switzerland, Europe
Photographer at the Bernina Pass during the spring thaw, St Moritz, Upper Engadine, Canton of Graubunden, Switzerland, Europe
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DUKAS_51438319_REX
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Warming Images/REX Shutterstock (3745376a)
A Bearded Seal (Erignathus barbatus) on rotten melting sea ice at 80 degrees 59 minutes North, off the coast of Northern Svalbard.
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(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ashley Cooper / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048266a )
Meltwater from the Russell Galcier that drains the Greenland Ice Sheet 26 km inland from Kangerlussuaq. Like most Greenland glaciers it is both receeding and speeding up as a result of global warming and the rivers that drain them are becoming more swollen by greater quantities of melt water
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(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ashley Cooper / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048515a )
Icebergs from the Jacobshavn glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and is the largest glacier outside of Antarctica. It calves enough ice in one day to supply New York with water for one year. It is one of the fastest moving glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day (19 metres per day before 2002) and has also receeded rapidly (40 km since 1850) due to human induced climate change as temperatures have risen in Greenland by 9 degrees fahrenheit in the last 60 years. An underwater moraine at the mouth of the fjord grounds the largest icebergs causing a backlog of ice completely blocking the entire length of the fjord with ice.
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(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ashley Cooper / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048338a )
The Jacobshavn glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and is the largest glacier outside of Antarctica. It calves enough ice in one day to supply New York with water for one year. It is one of the fastest moving glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day (19 metres per day before 2002) and has also receeded rapidly (40 km since 1850) due to human induced climate change as temperatures have risen in Greenland by 9 degrees fahrenheit in the last 60 years. An underwater moraine at the mouth of the fjord grounds the largest icebergs causing a backlog of ice completely blocking the entire length of the fjord with ice.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ashley Cooper / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1047811a )
Icebergs from the Jacobshavn glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and is the largest glacier outside of Antarctica. It calves enough ice in one day to supply New York with water for one year. It is one of the fastest moving glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day (19 metres per day before 2002) and has also receeded rapidly (40 km since 1850) due to human induced climate change as temperatures have risen in Greenland by 9 degrees fahrenheit in the last 60 years. An underwater moraine at the mouth of the fjord grounds the largest icebergs causing a backlog of ice completely blocking the entire length of the fjord with ice.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Meltwater from the Himalayas in Bhutan
Meltwater from the Himalayas, Thimpu District, Bhutan, Asia
Alex Treadway -
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Fast flowing melt water near Thangthanka in Bhutan
Fast flowing melt water near Thangthanka in Bhutan, Asia
Alex Treadway -
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NEPAL Changri Nup Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- In the danger-zone...morrain rubble on the Changri Nup Glacier. As the glacier melts, it spews out thousands of rocks, often destroying marker cairns and causing a hazard for travellers, like the photographer who almost died on a night crossing of this pass. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Mount Thamseku -- Dec 2005 -- Mount Thamserku usually under a blanket of snow and ice at this time of the year, now in mid-December 2005 showing very little of either, its glacier severely reduced in comparison to previous years. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Mount Thamseku -- Dec 2005 -- Mount Thamserku usually under a blanket of snow and ice at this time of the year, now in mid-December 2005 showing very little of either, its glacier severely reduced in comparison to previous years. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, a popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest (centre right) this glacier has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, with a glacier of Mount Nuptse in the background. A popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest, this glacier has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, a popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest (upper right), has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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Surface Tension: Greenland Ice Images.
Drips of meltwater refreeze as they trickle down the side of a piece of recently calved hard dense ice. It is possible that it is older than the other ice formations surrounding it or it may have been formed by water collecting and freezing rapidly.
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE