Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_5951_p.jpg Two Spanish ladies relaxing at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5955_p.jpg Four friends relax at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5958_p.jpg Four friends relax at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_0012_steel works.jpg A party of young people having a barbeque on the beach at Teesmouth near Hartlepool, with the Redcar steel works in the background.
 
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IMG_2033_indoor pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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IMG_2036_swimming pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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IMG_2042_pool.jpg An indoor swimming pool at the HPB property of Bell End Farm in Rosedale, North York Moors.
 
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AAA061_open topped bus.jpg A family on an open topped bus in the Lake district, UK
 
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IMG_5947_close.jpg Two Spanish ladies relaxing at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5951_women.jpg Two Spanish ladies relaxing at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5956_couples.jpg Four friends relax at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5958_friends.jpg Four friends relax at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5965_hydrothermal.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6168_misty.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6172_thermal.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6175_swimming pool.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6179_iceland.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6188_geothermal pool.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_6193_geothermal energy.jpg The Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5954_spanish.jpg Two Spanish ladies relaxing at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5955_geothermal.jpg Four friends relax at the Blue Lagoon near at Keflavik in Iceland.
 
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IMG_5555_urban wildlife.jpg Australian White Ibis (Threskiornis molucca) in Sydney Botanical garden, Sydney, Australia. The breeding success of these wading birds has been negatively imacted by low water flows, as a result of climate change induced drought.
 
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IMG_5302_swimming pool.jpg A pool at a holiday complex in Teos, Western Turkey.
 
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IMG_5303_water resource.jpg A pool at a holiday complex in Teos, Western Turkey.
 
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366W6526_fish.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_8908)muslim.jpg A Muslim arab family on a public beach in Dubai, UAE
 
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366W9758_father christmas.jpg Father Christmas in a window display in a department store on Oxford Street in London
 
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366W4107_shadow.jpg The shadow of a man by a waterfall in Stanah Gill above Thirlmere Lake District UK. Water is becoming an increasingly scarce resource in many parts of the world as climate change causes weather patterns to alter.
 
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366W4108_shadow.jpg The shadow of a man by a waterfall in Stanah Gill above Thirlmere Lake District UK. Water is becoming an increasingly scarce resource in many parts of the world as climate change causes weather patterns to alter.
 
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366W8013.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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366W9170_climate change_solar energy.jpg A walker on Swirl howe at sunset Lake District UK. The sun is the ultimate source of all our energy. We just need to stop burning fossil stored energy.
 
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366W9171_climate change_solar energy.jpg A walker on Swirl howe at sunset Lake District UK. The sun is the ultimate source of all our energy. We just need to stop burning fossil stored energy.
 
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