Global Warming Images
 

 
20120330_IMG_3680.jpg A welcome to Scotland sign on the side of the M74 at Gretna Green, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK.
 
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20120330_IMG_7399.jpg A welcome to Scotland sign on the side of the M74 at Gretna Green, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK.
 
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20120330_IMG_7402.jpg A welcome to Scotland sign on the side of the M74 at Gretna Green, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK.
 
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20120226_IMG_1406.jpg England's tallest tree, a Grand Fir (Abies grandis), which was confirmed as the champion by the Tree Register last week. It is a towering 57.8 metres or 190 feet. It was planted around 1860 as part of an arboretum at the Wansfell Holme Country Estate (which can bee seen in the background), now known as Skelghyll woods in Ambleside, in the Lake District. This record breaking English tree is higher than Nelsons Column and taller than a dozen double decker buses stacked on top of each other.
 
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20120226_IMG_1407.jpg England's tallest tree, a Grand Fir (Abies grandis), which was confirmed as the champion by the Tree Register last week. It is a towering 57.8 metres or 190 feet. It was planted around 1860 as part of an arboretum at the Wansfell Holme Country Estate (which can bee seen in the background), now known as Skelghyll woods in Ambleside, in the Lake District. This record breaking English tree is higher than Nelsons Column and taller than a dozen double decker buses stacked on top of each other.
 
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20120226_IMG_1422.jpg England's tallest tree, a Grand Fir (Abies grandis), which was confirmed as the champion by the Tree Register last week. It is a towering 57.8 metres or 190 feet. It was planted around 1860 as part of an arboretum at the Wansfell Holme Country Estate (which can bee seen in the background), now known as Skelghyll woods in Ambleside, in the Lake District. This record breaking English tree is higher than Nelsons Column and taller than a dozen double decker buses stacked on top of each other.
 
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20120226_IMG_1436.jpg England's tallest tree, a Grand Fir (Abies grandis), which was confirmed as the champion by the Tree Register last week. It is a towering 57.8 metres or 190 feet. It was planted around 1860 as part of an arboretum at the Wansfell Holme Country Estate (which can bee seen in the background), now known as Skelghyll woods in Ambleside, in the Lake District. This record breaking English tree is higher than Nelsons Column and taller than a dozen double decker buses stacked on top of each other.
 
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20120226_IMG_1437.jpg England's tallest tree, a Grand Fir (Abies grandis), which was confirmed as the champion by the Tree Register last week. It is a towering 57.8 metres or 190 feet. It was planted around 1860 as part of an arboretum at the Wansfell Holme Country Estate (which can bee seen in the background), now known as Skelghyll woods in Ambleside, in the Lake District. This record breaking English tree is higher than Nelsons Column and taller than a dozen double decker buses stacked on top of each other.
 
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IMG_1797_remote wind.jpg A wind farm in the Flow country of Sutherland, south of Thurso in northern Scotland, UK.
 
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IMG_1800_sutherland.jpg A wind farm in the Flow country of Sutherland, south of Thurso in northern Scotland, UK.
 
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IMG_1803_peat supplies.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1807_exploitation.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1808_gate.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1812_tractor.jpg Peat extraction near Thurso in northern Scotland.
 
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IMG_1818_caithness.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1821_escalator.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1830_wind turbine.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1831_sutherland.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1836_digger.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1837_peat extraction.jpg Climate change heaven and hell near Thurso in northern Scotland. A wind farm generating renewable energy and peat extraction, which destroys the carbon sink and releases the carbon.
 
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IMG_1818_speed.jpg Bikers on a country road near Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria, UK with a police slow down sign.
 
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366W6261_balloon.jpg Funafuti atol Tuvalu on the front line of the battle against global warming Only 15 feet above sea level at the highest point with many parts of the island lying at or barely above current sea levels rising sea levels are increasingly putting the island population of 10 000 Tuvaluans at risk It seems likely that this island nation will be the first country to disapear completely as a result of climate change global warming Sea levels in the Pacific have risen slowly over the last 20 years and the rate of rise seems likely to increase as ice sheets and glaciers melt more rapidly with ever warming temperatures Tuvalu is the smallest country in the world only 26 Km2 and most vulnerable to sea level rise It lies close to the equator and virtually on the international date line Ever rising seas threaten to make the island uninhabitable Already during the highest tides sea water is forced up through the porous coral atol and floods many low lying areas of the island during the highest tides This salt water incursion poisons the thin soils and makes growing crops increasingly difficult leaving the Tuvaluans increasingly dependant on expensive imports As well as sea level rise the weather patterns are altering with a shift in the cyclone period by a month and an increase in stormy weather The stormy weather is creating greater wave erosion and many parts of the island are suffering land loss as palm trees are washed into the sea as the island is undercut by wave action
 
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366W6261_tern.jpg Funafuti atol Tuvalu on the front line of the battle against global warming Only 15 feet above sea level at the highest point with many parts of the island lying at or barely above current sea levels rising sea levels are increasingly putting the island population of 10 000 Tuvaluans at risk It seems likely that this island nation will be the first country to disapear completely as a result of climate change global warming Sea levels in the Pacific have risen slowly over the last 20 years and the rate of rise seems likely to increase as ice sheets and glaciers melt more rapidly with ever warming temperatures Tuvalu is the smallest country in the world only 26 Km2 and most vulnerable to sea level rise It lies close to the equator and virtually on the international date line Ever rising seas threaten to make the island uninhabitable Already during the highest tides sea water is forced up through the porous coral atol and floods many low lying areas of the island during the highest tides This salt water incursion poisons the thin soils and makes growing crops increasingly difficult leaving the Tuvaluans increasingly dependant on expensive imports As well as sea level rise the weather patterns are altering with a shift in the cyclone period by a month and an increase in stormy weather The stormy weather is creating greater wave erosion and many parts of the island are suffering land loss as palm trees are washed into the sea as the island is undercut by wave action
 
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366W6429_tern.jpg Funafuti atol Tuvalu on the front line of the battle against global warming Only 15 feet above sea level at the highest point with many parts of the island lying at or barely above current sea levels rising sea levels are increasingly putting the island population of 10 000 Tuvaluans at risk It seems likely that this island nation will be the first country to disapear completely as a result of climate change global warming Sea levels in the Pacific have risen slowly over the last 20 years and the rate of rise seems likely to increase as ice sheets and glaciers melt more rapidly with ever warming temperatures Tuvalu is the smallest country in the world only 26 Km2 and most vulnerable to sea level rise It lies close to the equator and virtually on the international date line Ever rising seas threaten to make the island uninhabitable Already during the highest tides sea water is forced up through the porous coral atol and floods many low lying areas of the island during the highest tides This salt water incursion poisons the thin soils and makes growing crops increasingly difficult leaving the Tuvaluans increasingly dependant on expensive imports As well as sea level rise the weather patterns are altering with a shift in the cyclone period by a month and an increase in stormy weather The stormy weather is creating greater wave erosion and many parts of the island are suffering land loss as palm trees are washed into the sea as the island is undercut by wave action
 
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IMG_1086_lane.jpg Valley mist on a country lane near Ambleside in the Lake District National Park, UK.
 
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IMG_1087_country lane.jpg Valley mist on a country lane near Ambleside in the Lake District National Park, UK.
 
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IMG_4355_Lake District.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to decend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_4360_snow pack.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to ascend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_4362_mountain.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to decend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_4365_snow.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to ascend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_4369_cross country skis.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to decend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_4374_ski mountaineering.jpg Mike Withers using cross country skis to decend the Peak of Great Dodd, at 2800 feet, on the end of the Helvellyn range in the Lake District, UK.
 
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