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  • Eduardo Leon dresses for work at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008. Leon, who immigrated from Puebla state, Mexico to upstate New York to join his parents and siblings, works every day at the factory to support his wife who stays home while expecting a child.
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  • Photography agent Anh Stack works at her computer in the Novus Select office in New York City, New York. Portraits of people blowing a kiss are on the wall behind her.
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  • A man works in the tanning pits at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
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  • A woman works in her plot at the Salinas salt pans of Maras, Sacred Valley, Peru on September 22, 2005. Natives of Maras own and harvest the salt pans for sale to the cooperative which distributes it to the region's markets as industrial to table salt.
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  • A worker pushes a cart down the aisle between the duck pens carrying buckets of grain used for force-feeding the birds at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008. Migratory birds, including ducks, are capable of storing large amounts of fat in their liver. Forced overeating replicates the effect, producing the enlarged, fatty livers used for Foie Gras.
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  • A worker further cleans the duck carcasses of remnants of feathers as they pass by on a conveyor belt at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on Octoer 11, 2008. Mexican music booms from the stereo - most of the employees in the factory are Mexican immigrants.
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  • A worker uses a special machine to force-feed ducks at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York. Migratory birds, including ducks, are capable of storing large amounts of fat in their liver. Forced overeating replicates the effect, producing the enlarged, fatty livers used for Foie Gras.
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  • Eduardo Leon, a Mexican immigrant from Puebla now living in Swan Lake, stands in a passageway holding out the blade he uses to cut out the duck livers at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008.
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  • A worker places foie gras (enlarged duck livers) into a red pale at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008.
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  • Workers process the duck carcasses, removing the foie gras (enlarged duck liver) at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on Octoer 11, 2008. Mexican music booms from the stereo - most of the employees in the factory are Mexican immigrants.
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  • A metalsmith hammers out bent rebar and scraps for reuse at his street-side shop in Meknes, Morocco on November 1, 2007.
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  • Workers at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, carve and clean the edges of sheep skins on October 31, 2007.
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  • A young man lifts up sheep leather skins, coming from the tanneries, from the back of his  horse to set on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
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  • A worker at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, throws sheep skin leathers into a pile. They are coated in lime to make the hair easier to remove.
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  • A young man lays out leather sheep skins on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
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  • A young man unloads sheep leather skins, coming from the tanneries, from the back of his  horse to set on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
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  • A worker at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, pulls sheep wool off skins coated with lime on October 31, 2007. Chemical lime reacts with the wool, making it easier to remove. The wool is washed in the drainage canal behind the tannery.
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  • A worker holds the large blade which he uses to file down the rough side of yellow dyed sheep skins at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
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  • Workers file down the rough side of yellow dyed sheep skins at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
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  • Workers at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, carve and clean the edges of sheep skins and coat them with lime on October 31, 2007. Chemical lime helps separate the wool from the leather.
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  • An airport employee fixes an outdoor light fixture at Boise International Airport in Boise, Idaho as the sun sets on September 11, 2007.
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  • Two men pack dried dates into a sac at the open-air market in Tagounite, southern Morocco.
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  • A man cleans wool pulled from sheep skins in the tanning pits at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
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  • Local bike mechanic Dligui "Le Cycliste" Abdelkader chats with customer Dafali Aziz as he services a bike outside his shop in the dusty one-road town of Tagounite, Morocco on November 7, 2007.
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  • A Berber woman carries home dried wheat and corn stalks from the fields to feed the animals at her farm in Ichbbakene, M'Goun Massif, Central High Atlas, Morocco on November 6, 2007.
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  • Workers rub yellow dye onto a sheep skin at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
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  • Robert Hahn (center) chats with Vietnamese workers, while drinking a Vietnamese beer, on a mechanical gold dredge floating on the Nam Ou River, Laos. Six men live on the vessel for months, rotating throughout the day and working in pairs to keep the machine in constant operation.
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  • Franciszek Krzeminski and Wladyslaw Gora work on the plumbing of a new wet lab at the Polish Polar Station, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Acoustics specialist Krysztof Herman dressed in a survival suit and ready to help out with glacier field work at Samarinbreen, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Coworkers at SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development, socialize during their break on the expansive roof garden of the government building in Mexico City on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
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  • Rafal Flieger works on his laptop in his dark dorm room at the Polish Polar Station, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Gas Works Park in Seattle, Washington.
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  • View of the downtown skyline and Lake Union from Gas Works Park in Seattle, Washington. A man looks out as a sailboat floats by and a sea plane flies towards the city.
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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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  • Adam Nawrot (right) and Franciszek Krzeminski take pictures during a scenic storm break at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • A man carries a stone slab on his shoulder into Landruk, Annapurna Himalaya, Nepal as part of an initiative by the local committee to renovate the trail through the village.
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  • A man carries a stone slab on his shoulder into Landruk, Annapurna Himalaya, Nepal as part of an initiative by the local committee to renovate the trail through the village.
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  • A man carries a stone slab on his shoulder to Landruk, Annapurna Himalaya, Nepal as part of an initiative by the local committee to renovate the trail through the village.
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  • Scientists (Jaroslaw Halat) return late from the field to the ice-choked shore of the Polish Polar Station in Svalbard.
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  • Jaroslaw Halat (right) and Marcin Tukalski, students from the University of Silesia, scarf down ramen noodles after an afternoon in the field at the Polish research station of Baranowka, Svalbard.
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  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • A Chinese worker with a SinoHydro helmet flashes the peace (V) sign for a photo at the construction site for Dam #5 on the Nam Ou River, Laos.
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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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  • Russian, Polish, and Norwegian oceanographers arrive by inflatable boat to the MS Stalbas during a science diplomacy mission around Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania leads boats up fjord on a field expedition to Samarinbreen glacier, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Lukasz Gryglicki stands proudly as gasoline is pumped into storage tanks at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
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  • Grzegorz Karasinski (l-r), Robert Zmuda, Krysztof Herman, and Lukasz Gryglicki pump gasoline delivered by amphibious vehicle to storage tanks at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
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  • Soviet-era amphibious vehicles are used to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
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  • A Soviet-era amphibious vehicle is used to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania skillfully navigates a motorboat through the ice-choked forebay of Paierlbreen, an actively calving tidewater glacier, in Hornsund, Svalbard to install time-lapse cameras.
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  • Oceanographer Waldemar Walczowski navigates a fjord choked with ice calved by Paierlbreen in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • A row of snowmobiles outside the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Snowmobiles are the primary mode of long-distance transportation during the winter, when the ground is covered in snow and the fjords covered in sea ice. Hansbreen is visible in the distance.
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  • Polish meteorologist Tomasz Wawrzyniak mingles with the huskies on guard (against polar bears) at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • Women collect rock river weed (Cladophora sp.) on the shore of the Nam Ou River in Ban Phu Muang, Laos. The green algae is commonly eaten as a delicacy, either boiled or dried in sheets.
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  • Women and children stay warm by a fire and process reeds used to manufacture brooms in Ban Had Dan, Laos. The clusters, wrapped with bamboo and made into brooms, are sold to neighboring Vietnam and fetch 3,000 kip ($0.37) - a cottage industry in this village. The village would only be partially inundated by proposed Dam #3 (whose construction has not yet commenced).
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  • Glaciologist Nick Hulton and UNIS students take pictures on Rabotbreen, Svalbard on a class field trip by snowmobile to Tunabreen.
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  • Glaciologist Poul Christoffersen waits seated on a snowmobile sled in Sassendalen, Svalbard on a UNIS class field trip to Tunabreen.
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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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  • UNIS professor Doug Benn (right) and his student Kiya Riverman relax after digging snow study pits in Bolterdalen, Svalbard.
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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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  • 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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  • Dariusz Ignatiuk fires a flare gun in celebration and goodbye as he and colleagues pull away from the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard at the end of their field season.
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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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  • Agnieszka Piechota rinses salt off Dariusz Ignatiuk's survival suit in the shower of the Polish Polar Station, Hornsund, Svalbard before it is placed in storage until the next field season.
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  • Glaciologists Agnieszka Piechota (l-r), Jacek Jania, and Dariusz Ignatiuk take pictures of the terminus of Paierlbreen glacier in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Agnieszka Piechota in the field at Paierlbreen glacier, 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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  • Scientists return from the field, crossing Hornsund by motorboat on the way to the Polish Polar Station in 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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  • A man climbs out of a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle in use at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Krysztof Herman (l-r), Lukasz Gryglicki, and Robert Zmuda pump gasoline delivered by amphibious vehicle to storage tanks at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4147.JPG
  • Lukasz Gryglicki, Krysztof Herman, and Robert Zmuda operate a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4117.JPG
  • Glaciologist Dariusz Ignatiuk stands with a rifle (against polar bears) below the terminus of Hansbreen glacier, Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania in the field during a rainstorm in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania skillfully navigates a motorboat through the ice-choked forebay of Paierlbreen, an actively calving tidewater glacier, in Hornsund, Svalbard to install time-lapse cameras.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania in the field during a rainstorm in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • Glaciologist Jacek Jania starts the outboard motor as Jaroslaw Halat and Ethan Welty stabilize the boat on the ice choked beach at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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  • A row of snowmobiles outside the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. Snowmobiles are the primary mode of long-distance transportation during the winter, when the ground is covered in snow and the fjords covered in sea ice. Hansbreen is visible in the distance.
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  • Zbigniew Sobierajski drives a motorboat transporting new arrivals to the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
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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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  • 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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  • A man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • Workers stack stockfish pulled from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • Workers stack stockfish pulled from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • A man carries out stockfish pulled from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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  • Workers pull stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
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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, looks out over the Chugach Mountains and the main branch of the Columbia Glacier, 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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  • 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.
    100517_6744.JPG
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