Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_1237_melt water lake.jpg Melt water on the Greenland ice sheet near camp Victor north of Ilulissat. The Greenland ice sheet is the largest ice sheet outside of Antarctica. Temperatues have risen by nine degrees fahrenheit in Greenland in the last 60 years due to human induced climate change. This is causing the ice sheet to melt at unprecedented rates which is deeply worrying as the ice sheet contains enough water to raise global sea levels by nine metres.
 
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IMG_2287_ice sheet melt.jpg Melt water lakes on the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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366W9234_melt water lake.jpg Melt water lakes on the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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IMG_1226_melt water lake.jpg Melt water on the Greenland ice sheet near camp Victor north of Ilulissat. The Greenland ice sheet is the largest ice sheet outside of Antarctica. Temperatues have risen by nine degrees fahrenheit in Greenland in the last 60 years due to human induced climate change. This is causing the ice sheet to melt at unprecedented rates which is deeply worrying as the ice sheet contains enough water to raise global sea levels by nine metres.
 
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IMG_1245_melt water lake.jpg Melt water on the Greenland ice sheet near camp Victor north of Ilulissat. The Greenland ice sheet is the largest ice sheet outside of Antarctica. Temperatues have risen by nine degrees fahrenheit in Greenland in the last 60 years due to human induced climate change. This is causing the ice sheet to melt at unprecedented rates which is deeply worrying as the ice sheet contains enough water to raise global sea levels by nine metres.
 
IMG_1245_melt water lake
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IMG_1337_melt water lake.jpg Melt water on the Greenland ice sheet near camp Victor north of Ilulissat. The Greenland ice sheet is the largest ice sheet outside of Antarctica. Temperatues have risen by nine degrees fahrenheit in Greenland in the last 60 years due to human induced climate change. This is causing the ice sheet to melt at unprecedented rates which is deeply worrying as the ice sheet contains enough water to raise global sea levels by nine metres.
 
IMG_1337_melt water lake
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IMG_2283_melt water lake.jpg Melt water lakes on the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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IMG_2284_melting.jpg Melt water lakes on the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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IMG_2285_ice sheet melt.jpg Melt water lakes on the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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IMG_9926_cie sheet.jpg The western edge of the Greenland ice sheet in West Greenland from the air. The icesheet is up to 250 000 years old and up to 3200 metres thick. Global warming is currently leading to rapid melt of the ice sheet which if it were to melt entirely would raise global sea levels by 9 metres swamping most major cities of the world and displacing hundreds of millions of people.
 
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