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  • Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Established in 1957, the station has operated year-round since 1978, and is run by the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academic of Sciences.
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  • Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Established in 1957, the station has operated year-round since 1978, and is run by the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academic of Sciences.
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  • Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Established in 1957, the station has operated year-round since 1978, and is run by the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academic of Sciences.
    110907_4888.JPG
  • Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Established in 1957, the station has operated year-round since 1978, and is run by the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academic of Sciences.
    110907_4830.JPG
  • Polish geologists Lukasz Franczak (left) and Grzegorz Gajek, wearing survival suits, emerge from the water at the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard after helping to launch a boat into rough water.
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  • NASA Chief Scientist Waleed Abdalati projects satellite imagery of the Earth onto a sphere for students at the Fiske Planetarium at the University of Colorado campus in Boulder, Colorado.
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  • A quadcopter is tested at the tidewater terminus of Tunabreen, Svalbard.
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  • Antenna arrays and parabolic radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Svalbard. The technique is used to study the physics of the atmosphere and ionosphere.
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  • Radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Svalbard.
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  • Radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Svalbard. The technique is used to study the physics of the atmosphere and ionosphere.
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  • UNIS students explore the broken surface of Rabotbreen, Svalbard on a class field trip.
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  • Kiya Riverman logs survey readings on her expedition to map an ice cave in Larsbreen, Svalbard.
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  • U. S. Geological Survey glaciologist Shad O'Neel measures the length of an exposed mass balance stake at Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • Scientists gather outside the Polish research station of Baranowka, Svalbard. Founded in 1971, the station is operated by the Geographical Institute of the University of Wroclaw in Poland. Tonefjellet rises in the distance.
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  • Marcin Tukalski, student at the University of Silesia (right) sits down with geologist Grzegorz Gajek outside the main barracks building in Calypsobyen, Svalbard. Site of a coal mining operation erected by the British Northern Exploration Company in the early 1900s, the structures are now used as a summer field station by Polish researchers.
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  • Polish geologists Lukasz Franczak (left) and Grzegorz Gajek, wearing survival suits, emerge from the water at the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard after helping to launch a boat into rough water.
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  • Ian Howat, glaciologist with Ohio State University, looks out over the Chugach Mountains and the main branch of the Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • A student observes satellite data of the Earth (mean sea surface temperature) projected onto a sphere at the Fiske Planetarium at the University of Colorado campus in Boulder, Colorado.
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  • Dr. Tad Pfeffer, a glaciologist at the University of Colorado (INSTAAR), at camp during a storm at the Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Dr. Tad Pfeffer, a glaciologist with the University of Colorado, and photographer James Balog, of the Extreme Ice Survey, photograph a calving event from camp at Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Geomorphology professor Robert Anderson (University of Colorado) discusses the geology of Factory Butte (visible in the background) to his students on a field trip to Utah.
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  • Jack Ross, Aeronautical Laboratory business manager, stands below one of the two mahogany fans that power the Kirsten Wind Tunnel at the University of Washington campus in Seattle, Washington on February 7, 2007.
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  • Raphael Perea, a high school biology intern at the Valles Caldera National Preserve, New Mexico, celebrates a developing storm by jump-roping his survey quadrat on July 18, 2006. The preserve's field crew, responsible for rangeland monitoring, is often forced to leave work early during monsoon season, chased out by the second highest incidence of lightning strikes in the country.
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  • Mylène Jacquemart (left) and Michelle Blade pass radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Spitsbergen, Svalbard.
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  • Radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Svalbard.
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  • Mylène Jacquemart (right) and Michelle Blade pass under guy wires supporting radar antennas at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) facility on Breinosa, Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Nick Hulton tests out a quadcopter drone on Rabotbreen, Svalbard during a UNIS class field trip.
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  • Nate Stevens takes a reading with a compass and clinometer on an expedition to map an ice cave in Larsbreen, Svalbard.
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  • Nate Stevens takes a reading with a compass and clinometer on an expedition to map an ice cave in Larsbreen, Svalbard.
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  • Heïdi Sevestre (left) helps UNIS students interpret the results of a practice snowmobile depth-sounding radar survey on Tellbreen, Svalbard.
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  • University of Colorado geology graduate student Francis Rengers installs a LiDAR laser scanning target for his research studying stream erosion at the Plains Conservation Center boundary near Strasburg, Colorado.
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  • U. S. Geological Survey glaciologist Shad O'Neel climbs up an instrument tower to service a time-lapse camera installed at Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • U. S. Geological Survey glaciologist Shad O'Neel services a time-lapse camera installed at Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • U. S. Geological Survey glaciologist drills a hole into the snow layer with a steam drill to install a mass balance wire on the surface of Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • Polish scientists departing the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard hike to a beach where they can be picked up by boat.
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  • A green laser beam is projected into the sky to measure the chemical composition of the upper atmosphere at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • The appearance of a rainbow startles men working outside the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Lukasz Gryglicki rolls a fuel drum, pushed inland by high winds during a violent storm, back towards the shore at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Lukasz Gryglicki rolls a fuel drum, pushed inland by high winds during a violent storm, back towards the shore at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • A small boat carrying out oceanographic surveys is dwarfed by the massive calving front of tidewater glacier Samarinbreen, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Researchers, dressed in survival suits, navigate an inflatable boat through rough water and back onto shore at the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard.
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  • Polish geologist Lukasz Franczak wears a survival suit on the beach at the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard.
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  • Researchers, dressed in survival suits, launch an inflatable boat into the water to transport heavy equipment up the coast at the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard.
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  • Polish glaciologist Jacek Jania waits restlessly for high winds to subside in the comfort of the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard. A geological map and pinup girl Playboy calendars adorn the wall behind him.
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  • Zbigniew Nawrot stretches while restless scientists Grzegorz Gajek (center) and Piotr Zagorski wait out high winds in the comfort of the Polish field station in Calypsobyen, Svalbard.
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  • Ian Howat, glaciologist with Ohio State University, resurveys, with modern GPS, an old ground control point established by the USGS in an early study of the Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska. Resurveying will allow old and new data to be linked to precisely quantify, from the late 1970s to present, the dramatic retreat of the glacier.
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  • Ian Howat, glaciologist with Ohio State University, protects his head as a helicopter comes in for landing at the Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Shad O'Neel, glaciologist with the USGS, looks out towards the Columbia Glacier from camp in the Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Ian Howat, glaciologist with Ohio State University, and his graduate student Julie Markus, set up a large tent at their field camp at Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • A student observes satellite data of the Earth (mean sea surface temperature) projected onto a sphere at the Fiske Planetarium at the University of Colorado campus in Boulder, Colorado.
    091130_7193_alt.JPG
  • Dr.Tad Pfeffer, a glaciologist with the University of Colorado, stands with his camera at the Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Tad Pfeffer (University of Colorado) checks the aviation radio, in communication with the support helicopter, while Ian Howat and graduate student Julie Markus (Ohio State University) prepare roving GPS units to be deployed on the glacier surface to record the dynamic motion of the Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • Ian Howat, glaciologist with Ohio State University, hikes out in the Chugach Mountains above the main branch of the Columbia Glacier, Alaska.
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  • Dr. Tad Pfeffer, a glaciologist at the University of Colorado (INSTAAR), at camp during a storm at the Columbia Glacier, Chugach Mountains, Alaska.
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  • Russian, Polish, and Norwegian oceanographers arrive by inflatable boat to the MS Stalbas during a science diplomacy mission around Svalbard.
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  • Norwegian, Russian, and Polish oceanographers participating in a science diplomacy meeting regain the MS Stalbas on an inflatable boat in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Pedro, a drop-in fourth grade student, plays the strategy game Dots with tutors Eden and Melissa Anne Povey at 826 Seattle in Seattle, Washington on September 27, 2007. The nonprofit writing center also offers free tutoring help in math, science and computing, depending on the particular needs of the child.
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  • Old Saint Mary's Church, built in 1903, is the oldest church in Tempe, Arizona, and a National Historic Landmark. Behind rises the Arizona State University's Fulton Center, built in 2005, which houses the ASU Foundation, university administration and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences administration.
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