Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_0850_ATV.jpg Cockling equipment used by cocklers exploiting the shell fish on the Ribble estuary near Southport, Lancashire, UK.
 
IMG_0850_ATV
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
IMG_0851_quad bike.jpg Cockling equipment used by cocklers exploiting the shell fish on the Ribble estuary near Southport, Lancashire, UK.
 
IMG_0851_quad bike
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
IMG_0853_rib.jpg Cockling equipment used by cocklers exploiting the shell fish on the Ribble estuary near Southport, Lancashire, UK.
 
IMG_0853_rib
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
IMG_0854_cocklers.jpg Cockling equipment used by cocklers exploiting the shell fish on the Ribble estuary near Southport, Lancashire, UK.
 
IMG_0854_cocklers
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
IMG_4074_caravan.jpg Old farmers caravans on the side of the Kirsktone Pass near Ambleside, Lake District, UK.
 
IMG_4074_caravan
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
366W2378.jpg Bentley near Doncaster South Yorkshire UK hit by unprecedented floods during June 2007
 
366W2378
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
366W2420.jpg residents escaping with limited possessions in Bentley near Doncaster South Yorkshire UK hit by unprecedented floods during June 2007
 
366W2420
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
366W0023shish.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.
Inuit family on a quad bike on Shishmaref
 
366W0023shish
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

 
366W0009shish.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.
The main street on Shishmaref
 
366W0009shish
Add to Lightbox - Lightbox

Media Per Page