my wife went to Antartica for a month or so January 2016 which is summer there. She said it was the single most amazing experience of her life in world wide traveling. I didn't go with her because I didn't want to be seasick like 40% to 60% of the passengers and crew were between the tip of South America and Antarctica for about a week when the seas were more than 30 feet high and their ship was rocking. She and her friend from childhood were sometimes the only ones in the only restaurant serving food because they both have cast iron stomachs and never get seasick no matter what.
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The beautiful parts of Earth few people get to see
Flying above the Arctic with NASA
A photographer goes to Earth's extremes and captures the majesty of ice Photographs by Mario Tama/Getty ImagesStory by Amanda Barnett, CNN
Photographer Mario Tama
didn’t think he would see much in the way of great scenery when he flew
with NASA scientists over Greenland and Canada as part of Operation IceBridge, a project to monitor Earth’s polar ice.
“I wasn’t expecting much … a bunch of ice, a bunch of snow,” Tama told CNN.
But he was blown away by the beauty. “There are
these incredible shapes, landscapes. It was completely unexpected. It
was incredible.”
Tama flew through valleys of immense, massive glaciers.
“It’s a part of our Earth that no one gets to
witness,” he said. He felt privileged to see it and “wished every human
could be on board that flight and seeing that fragile landscape.”
“I have been so many places and have seen so many
things, but I had never seen anything like that … almost like viewing
another planet.”
“It was mind-blowing,” Tama said. He just prayed his images turned out so he could share the beauty with the world.
“You can hear your footsteps crunching and you realize this is an iceberg.”Photographer Mario Tama
On down days — when the plane couldn’t fly — Tama
said the scientists are super curious, so they walk on the sea ice and
explore the glaciers near their base at Thule Air Base, about 750 miles
north of the Arctic Circle and about 950 miles south of the North Pole.
After piling on several layers of clothes — six on top and three on the bottom, Tama tagged along.
“It was unbelievable. … You can hear your
footsteps crunching and you realize this is an iceberg,” he said. “It
cracked — and I was quite scared. These things are alive … melting or
forming so beautifully.”
NASA says Operation IceBridge is the “largest
airborne survey of Earth's polar ice ever flown.” Scientists make
flights over Greenland in March through May and over Antarctica in
October through November. Scientists say Greenland's ice sheet is
retreating due to warming temperatures.
The goal of the mission is to monitor changes in
sea ice, glaciers and ice sheets and to collect data to “predict the
response of Earth’s polar ice to climate change and resulting sea-level
rise.”
The data gathered during the flights is paired
with observations from a NASA satellite called ICESat — that’s short for
Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite. The satellite was launched in
January 12, 2003, from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. It was
decommissioned in August 2010 and burned up as it reentered Earth’s
atmosphere.
Another satellite is planned for launch in 2018.
ICESat-2 will use a laser to measure the height of Earth’s surfaces and
the ice and snow.
Sea ice is seen from the window of a NASA airplane
flying over Ellesmere Island, Canada, in March. NASA has been flying
over Canada, Greenland and Antarctica for the past nine years, in a
mission known as Operation IceBridge, to study the impact of climate
change on polar ice.
NASA avionics technician Lauren Prinski, right,
sits in the cockpit of NASA's Operation IceBridge research aircraft as
it flies over Baffin Bay along the coast of Greenland.
Snow blows near Thule Air Base in Pituffik,
Greenland. It’s the US military’s northernmost base and is located about
750 miles above the Arctic Circle. NASA's Operation IceBridge flies
research missions out of the base.
Part of a glacier is seen along the coast of
Greenland near Baffin Bay. NASA scientists use a modified 1966 Lockheed
P-3 Orion to study how polar ice has evolved over the past nine years.
Operation IceBridge scientists Nathan Kurtz and Jeremy Harbeck walk to survey an iceberg locked in ice near Thule Air Base.
Sea ice in Baffin Bay off the coast of Greenland.
NASA scientists and visitors explore ice near
Thule Air Base. Photographer Mario Tama told CNN he packed on several
layers before heading outside: six on top and three on the bottom.
Sea ice is seen out the window while flying over Ellesmere Island, Canada.
Scientists say the ice fields of Ellesmere Island are retreating due to climate change.
NASA scientist Nathan Kurtz surveys an iceberg locked in sea ice near Thule Air Base.
What appears to be a mountain sticking above the
clouds is actually an island frozen in sea ice, says photographer Mario
Tama. The photo was taken while flying over Baffin Bay along the coast
of Greenland.
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