The Midnight Sun is a natural phenomenon that occurs in the summer months near the Arctic and Antarctic Circles, where the sun remains visible at the local midnight. This short, time lapse film was shot in June 2011 over 17 days and incorporates 38,000 images. The photographer/videographer traveled over 2,900 miles throughout Iceland.
Midnight Sun (SL-vimeo, via) [more inside]
posted by zarq
on Oct 18, 2011 -
24 comments
Beneath the Antarctica lies a hidden mountain range known as the
Gamburtsevs. The mountains are at least 4km beneath the ice and present a puzzle for scientists who are unable to explain what the mountains are doing there.
[more inside]
posted by panboi
on Oct 14, 2008 -
59 comments
The winning design for the British Antarctic Survey's
Halley VI station looks very futuristic. It's built on legs with skis (a runner up -
walked) so that it can be moved around and avoid being buried like some
1,
2 in the
past.
posted by tellurian
on Aug 29, 2005 -
13 comments
"The story of
Scott's last expedition to the south pole will, I feel sure, be already known to many of you ... it is one which for courage, endeavour, endurance and unselfishness even in the face of death, will, I feel, never be surpassed.... I feel you will understand the difficulties met with when I tell you that the negatives from which
these slides were made and the
slides themselves were developed and washed with the aid of melted ice."
posted by rory
on Aug 17, 2004 -
11 comments
The Antarctic Ozone Hole Predicted to Close by 2050
Australian scientists at
CSIRO have confirmed their earlier predictions that the ozone depletion in the Antarctic is slowing, and ozone will steadily increase from 2005 on. The "hole" will close by 2050. "[Paul Fraser, chief of CSIRO, said] 'I think this shows global protocols can work,' ... while acknowledging that 'the economics' of greenhouse gases were far more complex than the CFC issue." (
1). An interview with Fraser by ABC is here (
2) Some past stories (
3,
4).
posted by rschram
on Sep 17, 2002 -
6 comments
This week marks the 90th anniversary of the death of
Robert Falcon Scott and four companions on their return trip from the South Pole. Most of the blame for the failure of the polar expedition has been placed on
critical blunders Scott made in his trek to the pole but Antarctic meterologist Susan Sontag says that although Scott cut his safety margins too close,
unusually cold weather provided the killing blow. On a related subject, next month A&E premires a movie starring Kenneth Branagh as
Shackleton (flash site) who
saved his crew after their ship shattered in Antartic pack ice.
posted by KirkJobSluder
on Mar 22, 2002 -
4 comments