[…] in Greenland, the Himalayas in Nepal, Alaska and the Rocky Mountains, the Extreme Ice Survey has set up 34 cameras at 16 glaciers to track changes in the ...
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People also ask
What did the Extreme Ice Survey team use to monitor the change in glaciers?
We have 27 Nikon cameras watching over glaciers in Antarctica, Greenland, Iceland, Alaska, Austria, and the Rocky Mountains. Our cameras record changes in the glaciers every hour, year-round during daylight, and yield approximately 8,000 frames per camera per year.
What is the Extreme Ice Survey and why did James Balog start it?
Balog founded the EIS to provide visual evidence of the dramatic effects of global warming. The project ultimately evolved into an intensive team effort, bringing together journalists and scientists, artists and engineers.
What was the goal of the Extreme Ice Survey?
The Extreme Ice Survey provides scientists with basic and vitally important information on the mechanics of glacial melting and educates the public with firsthand evidence of how rapidly the Earth's climate is changing. EIS is a voice for landscapes that would have no voice unless we gave them one.
What is the name of the project that James Balog created?
James Balog To reveal the impact of climate change, he founded the Extreme Ice Survey in 2007, the most wide-ranging ground-based photographic study of glaciers ever conducted.
Integrating Art+Science. Founded in 2007 by James Balog, the Extreme Ice Survey (EIS) is an innovative, long-term photography program that integrates art ...
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