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Old Antarctic photos help University of Copenhagen scientists trace ice shelf collapse and predict future sea level rise.
Long-lost 1960s aerial photos let Copenhagen researchers watch Antarctica’s Wordie Ice Shelf crumble in slow motion. By fusing film with satellites, they discovered warm ocean water, not surface ponds ...
The paper presents a unique dataset based on the vast archives of old aerial images combined with modern satellite ...
A long-lost photo snapped from a Navy plane in 1966 has become the unlikely key to understanding how Antarcticas ...
Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have gained unique insight into the mechanisms behind the collapse of Antarctic ...
A forgotten set of photos taken by a U.S. Navy plane in 1966 has recently become the key to unlocking some crucial insights into Antarctica’s ice shelf dynamics. Scientists at the University of ...
Drilling down Next winter, this international team is travelling to Scott Base, a New Zealand research station at the edge of the Ross ice shelf in west Antarctica.
Here, the new satellite reveals stunning variety within the tropical forest landscape. Green hues indicate forested areas; ...
New images from the European Space Agency’s Biomass mission show how the satellite uses advanced radar to map flows of carbon ...
Analysis - When visiting Godrevy beach on the north Cornish coast, most people look out to sea at the lighthouse, surfers and seals rather than the cliffs behind. But these cliffs hold a history of ...
It's been covered in ice for 34 million years. But scientists are finally uncovering what Antarctica's landscape really looks ...
In recent weeks, Western reports revealed a jarring contradiction in the US polar strategy. The US "big and beautiful" bill ...