Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_4236_wildlife.jpg Salthome RSPB bird reserve in Billingham, Teeside, UK. Nature surviving in a heavily industrialised landscape.
 
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IMG_5844_snake.jpg A large spider in the Daintree rainforest in Northern Queensland, Australia with a hunting snake.
 
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IMG_6400_snake.jpg A hunting snake in a tropical palm tree in the Daintree Rainforest, Queensland, Australia.
 
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IMG_8799_swim.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_8845_shaking.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) shaking water off its head, on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_8884_diving.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_8935_boat.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK, swimming through the reflections of a boat.
 
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IMG_8995_otter cub.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9029_shelter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9229_emerge.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK, popping up through flotsam.
 
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IMG_9247_otter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9318_spray.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK, shaking water off its head after a dive.
 
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IMG_9321_hunter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9333_curious.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9401_blind.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) which is blind in one eye, on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9434_European Otter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) which is blind in one eye, on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9447_shaking.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK, shaking water off its head after a dive.
 
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IMG_9496_jetty.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9541_otter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK.
 
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IMG_9660_ice.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) diving under ice on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK .
 
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IMG_9679_shake.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) shaking water off its head after a dive on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK .
 
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IMG_9686_otter.jpg A European Otter (Lutra lutra) diving under ice on Lake Windermere, Lake District, UK .
 
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366W5919_melting.jpg An Inuit fishing boat sails through 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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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_7086_hunting.jpg A Reindeer shot by a hunter in the Karahnjkar area of Vatnajokull, near Egilsstadir, Iceland. The hunter entered a lottery of 4000 hopefulls to win the chance to shoot the animal.
 
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IMG_7088_hunting.jpg A Reindeer shot by a hunter in the Karahnjkar area of Vatnajokull, near Egilsstadir, Iceland. The hunter entered a lottery of 4000 hopefulls to win the chance to shoot the animal.
 
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IMG_7094 (1)_reindeer.jpg A Reindeer shot by a hunter in the Karahnjkar area of Vatnajokull, near Egilsstadir, Iceland. The hunter entered a lottery of 4000 hopefulls to win the chance to shoot the animal.
 
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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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366W0493_hunter.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 hunting Caribou on the tundra back on the mainland in the Serpentine river delta
 
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366W0503_gather.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.
 Berta Tokeinna and son Jeffrey pick berries on the tundra back on the mainland in the Serpentine river delta
 
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366W0507_forage.jpg Berta Tokeinna and son picking berries on the tundra
 
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