Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_6300_winter.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6301_glow.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6303_grinding.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6304_North East.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6306_North Sea.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6310_sail.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_6312_windmill.jpg Whitburn Windmill in Whitburn between Sunderland and Newcastle, North East, UK.
 
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IMG_4017_heritage.jpg The Click Mill an ancient water mill for grinding grain on Orkney's Mainland, Scotland, UK.
 
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366W1915_glacier express.jpg Passengers on the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy
 
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366W1982_bend.jpg  the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy
 
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366W1986_viaduct.jpg the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy
 
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366W2021_train carriage.jpg the Bernina Express train crossing the Brusio viaduct in Switzerland
 
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366W2158_train travel.jpg the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy crossing the famous Landwasser viaduct
 
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366W2162_viaduct.jpg the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy crossing the famous Landwasser viaduct
 
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366W2204_glacier express.jpg the Bernina Express train in Switzerland from Chur to Tirano in Italy
 
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IMG_0694_Illulissat.jpg Traditional Inuit Kayaks in Illulisat on Greenland. Ilulissat is a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of the Jacobshavn Glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq which is the largest glacier outside Antarctica. The glacier drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and produces enough water from calving icebergs in one day to provide New York with water for 1 year. Climate change has meant the glacier has speeded up and is now one of the fastest glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day and is also receeding rapidly
 
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IMG_0696_kayak.jpg Traditional Inuit Kayaks in Illulisat on Greenland. Ilulissat is a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of the Jacobshavn Glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq which is the largest glacier outside Antarctica. The glacier drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and produces enough water from calving icebergs in one day to provide New York with water for 1 year. Climate change has meant the glacier has speeded up and is now one of the fastest glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day and is also receeding rapidly
 
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IMG_2377_double decker.jpg An open topped double decker bus travelling through the Cornish countryside and passing Bosigran tin mine, UK.
 
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366W1101.jpg The Mezquita in Cordoba, Andalucia, Spain floodlit at night
 
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IMG_3182_new lanark.jpg New Lanark, a world heritage site which was built by Robert Owen a philanthropist who developed this mill site and built houses for his workers and provided them with health care and education at a time when most workers were exploited. The whole complex was designed to be powered by water power
 
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IMG_3192_water power.jpg New Lanark, a world heritage site which was built by Robert Owen a philanthropist who developed this mill site and built houses for his workers and provided them with health care and education at a time when most workers were exploited. The whole complex was designed to be powered by water power
 
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366W0077_petrol.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
J J Weyiouanna in Shishmaref lagoon, fills his boat with deisel for a hunting trip to the mainland. The low lying nature of shishmaref can be seen in the background, leaving it vulnerable to coastal erosion
 
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366W6273_oil.jpg An oil fired power plant in Illulisat on Greenland. Ilulissat is a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of the Jacobshavn Glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq which is the largest glacier outside Antarctica. The glacier drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and produces enough water from calving icebergs in one day to provide New York with water for 1 year. Climate change has meant the glacier has speeded up and is now one of the fastest glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day and is also receeding rapidly
 
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366W6274_oil.jpg An oil fired power plant in Illulisat on Greenland. Ilulissat is a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of the Jacobshavn Glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq which is the largest glacier outside Antarctica. The glacier drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and produces enough water from calving icebergs in one day to provide New York with water for 1 year. Climate change has meant the glacier has speeded up and is now one of the fastest glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day and is also receeding rapidly
 
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366W8377_oil barrel.jpg waste oil barrels on the tundra outside Illulissat in Greenland with icebergs behind from the Sermeq Kujullaq or Illulissat Ice fjord. The Illulissat ice fjord is a Unesco world heritage site
 
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366W8595_oil barrel.jpg waste oil barrels on the tundra outside Illulissat in Greenland with icebergs behind from the Sermeq Kujullaq or Illulissat Ice fjord. The Illulissat ice fjord is a Unesco world heritage site
 
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366W6694_sea fish.jpg A cod fish caught off Ilulissat in Greenland
 
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366W9251_seal meat.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
Seal ribs drying on a drying rack in Shishmaref
 
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366W9353_drying.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
Pacific Salmon drying on racks on  Shishmaref
 
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366W9501_hunter gathering.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
An Inuit couple return from a hunter gathering trip to the mainland, shishmaref
 
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366W9547_salmon.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
Pacific Salmon drying on racks on  Shishmaref
 
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366W9559_salmon.jpg For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and siberia, global warming is a double whammy. Firstly sea ice that used to envelop the island around late September is now not forming until December. this leaves the island vulnerable to storms that have already washed 10 houses into the sea, leading to them being referred to as the worlds first refugees from global warming. Other houses have had to be moved back from the edge. Secondly the animals they rely on as part of their subsistance existance are becoming harder to find, as they migrate further north, away from the island.
Pacific Salmon drying on racks on  Shishmaref
 
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