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Extreme Ice Cooling Gel - Fast Pain Relief for Muscle & Joint Pain - Perfect for Athletes, Gym Workouts & Post-Surgery Recovery
Extreme Ice Cooling Gel - Fast Pain Relief for Muscle & Joint Pain - Perfect for Athletes, Gym Workouts & Post-Surgery Recovery

Extreme Ice Cooling Gel - Fast Pain Relief for Muscle & Joint Pain - Perfect for Athletes, Gym Workouts & Post-Surgery Recovery

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Description

Current scientific models project a one-meter sea level rise over the next century, which could displace millions of people everywhere from Florida to Bangladesh and require trillions of dollars in new coastal infrastructure investments. But can this future be prevented? How do you figure out what's happening inside a gigantic wall of ice? A NOVA/National Geographic Television special, Extreme Ice follows the progress of acclaimed photojournalist James Balog's Extreme Ice Survey (EIS), the largest photographic study ever attempted of the cryosphere, the mantle of ice that covers large portions of the Earth and that plays a critical role in weather. The effort involves deploying 26 time-lapse cameras in risky, remote locations including Iceland, Alaska, and the Alpsprogramming them to shoot a frame every daylight hour for three years. Grappling with blizzards, fickle technology, and climbs up craggy precipices, Balog and a team of scientists, must anchor cameras capable of withstanding sub-zero temperatures and winds up to 170 mph. The perilous expedition creates a unique photo archive of melting glaciers that could provide a key to understanding their runaway behavior and their potential to drive rising sea levels.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
The summer ice melt in Greenland is causing lakes and moulins to form, and the ice sheet is moving faster than in recent times. This NOVA episode has unique footage of these dramatic conditions in the Arctic. Glaciers around the world are melting, mainly from high summer heat but also from "black soot" or particulate carbon from pollution and forest fires. There are few clearer examples of global warming than receding glaciers and large summertime lakes on the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. This raises an interesting question. What is the higher priority for governments: droughts and forest fires or a one meter rise in sea level?