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What's Under The Ice In Antarctica?

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MASSIVE ice wall at the End of the World

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Scientists Discover Unsettling Creatures Living Under Antarctic Ice | TRACKS #Shorts

Join a team of marine scientists as they embark on an unprecedented journey across the Great Southern Ocean and beyond to Antarctica.

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TRACKS publishes unique, unexpected and untold stories from across the world every week.

From Expedition Antarctica
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#Shorts #Documentary #Travel
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Antarctica under the ice - Episode 2

As part of my 5 week expedition in Antarctica to film extremophiles, I joined Antarctic divers in going deep under the sea ice to explore the weird wonders of the Southern Ocean.

Watch all the episodes of my Antarctic expedition:
Ep. 1 - How to get to Antarctica:
Ep. 2 - Antarctica under the ice:
Ep. 3 - Camping in Antarctica:
Ep. 4 - Extremophiles of Antarctica:
Ep. 5 - Antarctica robot road trip:

Join me + my adventures on:
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Thanks to all my patrons, the NSF Antarctic Artists & Writers program, the San Francisco Microscopical Society, National Geographic, and the many Antarctic researchers (and divers!), colleagues, and friends who helped make my Antarctic expedition happen.

And a special shoutout to:
Alex Rokholm, Alyson Hutchison, Andrea Connell, Brooke Schreier Ganz, Carl Nielsen, Christopher Milton, Colin Richardson, Daniel Catt, Doug Sinclair, Dr. Scarlett, Dr. Shane Tilton, Eric the Baker, Francois Varas, Houra Rais, Indi Rapsey, Jason Coyle, Jason Shupe, Jason VanNimwegen, John, Karen Lopez, Katie Summers, Khalil Sehnaoui, limor fried, Lisa Ballard, Lisa Crotty, Loretta Whitesides, Martin Bogomolni, Matt Biddulph, Matthew Cashmore, Matthew Reyes, Mike Youens, Nathan Bergey, Nick Pinkston, Octavian Voicu, Quinn Emmett, Richard Gipson, Robertson S. O., Sam Richardson, Suzanne Leibrick (@inannamute), Terence Mitchell, Ting-Ju Chen, Trevor Flowers, victor osaka, victor osaka, Wesley Swingley, and William Waldman.

Music by Geographer.

Disclosure: This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number 1745408. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
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Antarctica: The Secret Life Below the Ice #antarctica #travelvlog

Get ready for an extraordinary wildlife adventure as we dive deep into the world of whales in Antarctica. Prepare to be captivated by this immersive wildlife documentary, offering a unique perspective on the incredible world of whales in Antarctica. Embark on an extraordinary travel trip with us as we venture deep into the heart of Antarctica, capturing the remarkable work of dedicated scientists who are conducting crucial research for the future of our planet. We explore the diverse and breathtaking world of Earth's smallest phytoplankton to the awe-inspiring presence of the mighty whales. And of course, prepare to be awe-struck by the stunning landscapes, immerse yourself in the captivating scientific discoveries, and bear witness to the incredible biodiversity that thrives in this remote corner of our Earth.

Thanks to Hurtigruten for a great opportunity to come to Antarctica! Thanks to Verena Meraldi, Lauren Fritz, Blake Marin and Allison Cusick for sharing your time and stories with us!

Thank you:
Cruise Company- @hurtigruten
Blake and Lauren-
Allison-

Created By Will and Olya
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Night time in the Antarctica!

This is the Edge of the World — (1,000ft high ice wall)

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Way out in the forests of Siberia, I found it. The Edge of the World. At least, it looks like that. A massive 1,000 foot high wall of ice and rock that soars out of the plains. Welcome to the Lena Pillars!

@NomadShubham, Nastaya, and I drove a few hundred kilometers into the forest, went on the frozen river, then took a snowmobile to reach this amazing place!

#IceWall #Edge #SuperCold
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WHO AM I?
My name is Brayden Drevlow, and I am a concert pianist / traveler from the United States (Minnesota). Whenever I’m not performing for Parliaments or Presidents, I travel full-time. I love seeking out crazy adventures and living on the edge of the comfort zone. I make videos about my wild adventures, confronting new cultures, and anything else I think is worth sharing. Come with me to experience the world!

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ANTARCTICA - The Frozen Continent - 4k DRONE Video

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Antarctica is the coldest, windiest and driest continent on the planet. Despite this, it's teeming with life. It's truly the most beautiful place I have ever been. To see a place so preserved and untouched by humans was incredible. Taken on an incredible 8 Day Trip with EYOS Expeditions:

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#antarctica #drone #cinematic

28 Men Lost In Antarctica But What They Did to Survive Is Amazing

Sir Ernest Shackleton, a legend among British seamen and explorers, decided to build a crew for his famous Antarctic expedition. His new daring idea for a ‘hazardous journey’ gained so much attention from newspapers, that soon Sir Shackleton had a crowd of volunteers knocking at his door. He carefully selected only 27 of them. They were men of steel knowing what a huge goal they set for themselves.

With those men, Ernest Shackleton intended to reach Antarctica and cross the whole continent via the South Pole. In 1914, they left the shores of South Georgia in a ship called Endurance. This journey became one of the greatest survival stories of all time.

Other videos you might like:
13 Tips on How to Survive Wild Animal Attacks
The Truth About the Titanic Has Been Revealed
Scientists Finally Discovered the Truth About Easter Island

TIMESTAMPS:
Hazardous journey idea 0:59
The crucial weakness of the ship 1:32
Bad year for crossing the icy waters 2:18
What Shackleton wrote in his diary 4:17
Drifting on ice 5:15
Finding help 6:22
What a miracle! 8:45

#antarctica #seamen #danger

Music by Epidemic Sound

SUMMARY:
- Sir Ernest Shackleton didn’t really need any advertisement at all. He was already a legend among British seamen and explorers alike. In 1908, he led the British Antarctic expedition and claimed a Victoria Land plateau region of Antarctica for the crown.
- On December 5th, 1914, they left the shores of South Georgia in a ship called Endurance. Endurance was one of the best ships of its time to deal with ice.
- But still she had one crucial weakness – she was designed to crush the ice, but not to sustain being trapped in it.
- The initial hope of Sir Shackleton and his crew was that the ice wouldn’t build up around the ship too much, but by the 24th of January, it was obvious that the pressure on the ship’s hull would only get worse.
- Despite all the effort of shoveling new ice and snow building around the ship, the pressure on the ship only rose. Spring didn’t bring the much-needed relief for the Endurance. From time to time the crew would hear unpleasant crackles and shock sounds.
- On October 27th, Shackleton ordered his men to abandon ship, which was already heavily damaged. He promised the crew that he would bring them home.
- Stepping on solid ground felt like euphoria for 28 tired seamen. Their first days on land were spent refilling food supplies with wildlife; it was their first warm meal in months!
- But Sir Shackleton wasn’t one to surrender and leave his men to certain demise. Instead, he took one lifeboat and only 5 men, and went off to find help.
- On May 10th, they finally reached the shores of South Georgia. Not welcoming shores with warm beds and a good meal, be assured. It was rocky cliffs, with absolutely no place to land.
- When they reached the last ridge, they were at their limit, but suddenly, a familiar sound brought back their energy – a whistle, that’s used to wake up whalers in the morning.
- The whalers knew Shackleton, but at this point, it was pretty hard to recognize him. His bad condition alarmed the whalers, and in no time they were helping to rescue their friends on Elephant Island and they were all alive and well!

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Arrests, ice wall and abandoned Russian town

After some trouble with the law, we sail dangerously close to a glacier and visit an abandoned soviet town.

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What’s Under The Sea Ice In Antarctica?

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Join me for a rarely seen look under the sea ice in Antarctica. About as many people have been into space as have scuba dived in Antarctica. I wasn’t diving however but I put a Go Pro down two dive holes to see what is on the bottom of the ocean under the sea ice.

The footage I got blew me away.

20m down on the bottom of the sea there is fish and starfish everywhere! In some spots there is huge sponges and Weddell Seals

This was one of my favourite videos to make and I hope you enjoy it too!

Lots more Antarctic vlogs to come so stand by!

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What's Under The Ice In Antarctica?

Antarctica is the most deserted continent and the most continents that we do not know much about on our planet, but we may have lived deceived to this day about what they told us about the white continent
#antarctica #travel #penguins #penguin #nature #antarcticadventure #wildlife #antarctic #wildlifephotography #southpole #iceberg #ice #photography #climatechange #flatearth #expedition #naturephotography #nasa #penguinsofinstagram #travelphotography #polar #emperorpenguin #antarcticpeninsula #penguinlove #antarcticexpedition #antartida #cerveja #antarcticaoriginal #brahma #nasalies

What Antarctica’s Name Really Means

Watch my new video on why Antarctica is the most well-mapped part of the world:

Get access to behind-the-scenes vlogs, my scripts, and extended interviews over at

I made a poster about maps - check it out:

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About:
Johnny Harris is an Emmy-winning independent journalist and contributor to the New York Times. Based in Washington, DC, Harris reports on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe, publishing to his audience of over 3.5 million on Youtube. Harris produced and hosted the twice Emmy-nominated series Borders for Vox Media. His visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways.

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WHAT’S THAT SMELL? | #travel #antarctica #traveling #travelling #cruise #penguins #wildlife

Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica 4K

The Ross Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica (as of 2013, an area of roughly 500,809 square kilometres (193,363 sq mi) and about 800 kilometres (500 mi) across: about the size of France). It is several hundred metres thick. The nearly vertical ice front to the open sea is more than 600 kilometres (370 mi) long, and between 15 and 50 metres (50 and 160 ft) high above the water surface. Ninety percent of the floating ice, however, is below the water surface.

Most of Ross Ice Shelf is in the Ross Dependency claimed by New Zealand. It floats in, and covers, a large southern portion of the Ross Sea and the entire Roosevelt Island located in the east of the Ross Sea.

The ice shelf is named after Sir James Clark Ross, who discovered it on 28 January 1841. It was originally called The Barrier, with various adjectives including Great Ice Barrier, as it prevented sailing further south. Ross mapped the ice front eastward to 160° W. In 1947, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names applied the name Ross Shelf Ice to this feature and published it in the original U.S. Antarctic Gazetteer. In January 1953, the name was changed to Ross Ice Shelf; that name was published in 1956.

On 5 January 1841, the British Admiralty's Ross expedition in the Erebus and the Terror, three-masted ships with specially strengthened wooden hulls, was going through the pack ice of the Pacific near Antarctica in an attempt to determine the position of the South Magnetic Pole. Four days later, they found their way into open water and were hoping that they would have a clear passage to their destination. But on 11 January, the men were faced with an enormous mass of ice.

Sir James Clark Ross, the expedition's commander, remarked: Well, there's no more chance of sailing through that than through the cliffs of Dover. Ross, who in 1831 had located the North Magnetic Pole, spent the next two years vainly searching for a sea passage to the South Pole; later, his name was given to the ice shelf and the sea surrounding it. Two volcanoes in the region were named by Ross for his vessels.

For later Antarctic explorers seeking to reach the South Pole, the Ross Ice Shelf became a starting area. In a first exploration of the area by the Discovery Expedition in 1901–1904, Robert Falcon Scott made a significant study of the shelf and its surroundings from his expedition's base on Ross Island. By measurement of calved ice bergs and their buoyancy, he estimated the ice sheet to be on average 274 meters thick; the undisturbed morphology of the ice sheet and its inverted temperature profile led him to conclude it was floating on water; and measurements in 1902–1903 showed it had advanced 555 meters northwards in 13.5 months. The findings were presented at a lecture entitled Universitas Antarctica! given 7 June 1911 and were published in the account of Scott's second expedition (the Terra Nova Expedition of 1910–1913).

Ernest Shackleton's southern party (Shackleton, Adams, Marshal, Wild) of the 1908 Nimrod expedition were the first humans to cross the Ice Shelf during its failed attempt to reach the South Pole. Both Roald Amundsen and Scott crossed the shelf to reach the Pole in 1911. Amundsen wrote: Along its outer edge the Barrier shows an even, flat surface; but here, inside the bay, the conditions were entirely different. Even from the deck of the Fram we were able to observe great disturbances of the surface in every direction; huge ridges with hollows between them extended on all sides. The greatest elevation lay to the south in the form of a lofty, arched ridge, which we took to be about 500 feet [150 m] high on the horizon. But it might be assumed that this ridge continued to rise beyond the range of vision.

The next day, the party made its first steps on the Barrier. After half an hour's march we were already at the first important point—the connection between the sea-ice and the Barrier. This connection had always haunted our brains. What would it be like? A high, perpendicular face of ice, up which we should have to haul our things laboriously with the help of tackles? Or a great and dangerous fissure, which we should not be able to cross without going a long way round? We naturally expected something of the sort. This mighty and terrible monster would, of course, offer resistance in some form or other, he wrote.

The mystic Barrier! All accounts without exception, from the days of Ross to the present time, had spoken of this remarkable natural formation with apprehensive awe. It was as though one could always read between the lines the same sentence: 'Hush, be quiet! the mystic Barrier!'

One, two, three, and a little jump, and the Barrier was surmounted!

The minke whale (/ˈmɪnki/), or lesser rorqual, is a species complex of baleen whale. The two species of minke whale are the common (or northern) minke whale and the Antarctic (or southern) minke whale.

Why Travel to Antarctica with Quark Expeditions

Antarctica: the magical 7th continent and one of the last true wilderness areas on Earth – largely unchanged since the early explorers. It’s home to the world’s greatest concentration of wildlife, where penguins, seals and whales are the only permanent residents. Learn more about Quark Expeditions’ Antarctic voyages.

Learn more about our Antarctic expeditions ⇨
Check out current Antarctic offers ⇨
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Antarctica in 1 minute - The seventh continent

Sheltered bays and channels sparkle with ice and reflect towering mountain peaks coated in permanent snow. Icebergs of every size and description complete an image of incomparable beauty. This is the vast wilderness of the last-discovered continent: raw, pristine, fragile and uncompromisingly polar. But this part of the world has many faces, and the Southern and South Atlantic Oceans hosts several other destinations worth visiting besides the ethereal continent itself.

Modern-day expedition cruising offers intimate wildlife encounters, epic nature viewing and adventure options for any age and preferred activity level. The best vessels to discover the remote destinations of Antarctica and the Subantarctic region are small expedition ships, like our very own 114-passenger Sea Spirit. In Antarctica, Poseidon Expeditions’ itineraries include the Antarctic Peninsula, the Falkland Islands, South Shetland Islands and South Georgia.

Watch this recap to get a sense of Antarctica in a minute. Or join our expedition cruises to see it all for yourself:


Watch our other videos:
Cute Polar Bear Cub Playing and Having Fun
Voyage to the North Pole, June 2017
The World of Poseidon Expeditions
Cruise to the North Pole with Poseidon Expeditions

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The Pulse of Antarctica

Endless shards of scattered sea ice. Jagged black peaks gusting with snow. Billowy waves of blazing white powder. It’s impossible to visit Antarctica without finding the heart enlarged and pulse quickened.

In this beautifully shot video, you can get a taste of that experience. While it’s no substitute for the real thing, it may very well inspire you to make one of the best travel decisions of your life.

These shots were captured by two of our guests, Priska and Ruedi Abbühl, during our Antarctica Discovery and Learning Voyage. Emphasizing maximum firsthand contact with the polar terrain and its exotic wildlife, this adventurous expedition is also distinguished by its focus on key activities that will fully immerse you in the surreal Antarctic environment.

These optional activities include extended hikes, kayaking excursions, and even overnight camping trips, steeping you in extraordinary surroundings few people ever get to experience. Some trips also feature in-field learning activities delivered by polar experts on a variety of scientific subjects.

Whether it’s gazing over glowing icebergs, marveling at lounging leopard seals, spotting humpbacks spouting over the polar sea, or listening to Adélies crying out among their colossal penguin colonies, there’s simply no way to experience Antarctica and escape utter amazement.

For this reason and many others, our Discovery and Learning Voyage gives you the deepest and most thorough experience of the mysterious polar world that is Antarctica. See the evidence in this video, check out our variety of trip options below, and let’s go exploring!

WHAT IS ANTARCTICA?

WHAT IS ANTARCTICA?

Antarctica is the land at South Pole. The 5th largest of the seven continents and the coldest place on earth.

Unlike the Arctic, which is a huge mass of ice with no land beneath it, Antarctica is vast ice-covered continent. Its presence was confirmed in 1820.The first people to reach th South Pole were members of a Norwegian team led by Roald Amundsen on December 14, 1911.

I hope this trivia gives you some information about Antarctica.
Many of us cannot visit Antarctica personally but this short video will definitely transport your excitement to see this amazing place on earth.

Enjoy watching!
Have a wonderful day to all.

More travel trivia and virtual tour...

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HOW LONG IS THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA


TALLEST WATERFALL | ANGEL FALLS


MYSTERY OF EASTER ISLAND


LOST CITY OF THE ANDES


WHAT IS A PYRAMID?


MOUNT RUSHMORE


PARTHENON IN ATHENS GREECE


CITY OF POMPEII


LARGEST AMPHITHEATER OF ROME


SMALLEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD


SYMBOL OF PARIS


AYERS ROCK AUSTRALIA


WHY WAS TAJ MAHAL BUILT?


WHY DOES THE TOWER OF PISA LEAN?


FORBIDDEN CITY BEIJING CHINA


HOW DO PEOPLE TRAVEL AROUND VENICE?


TEMPLE OF EMERALD BUDDHA


HOW WAS THE GRAND CANYON FORMED?


BUCKINGHAM PALACE


STONEHENGE MYSTERY


BEIRUT LEBANON


RIO DE JANEIRO BRAZIL


WHAT IS KREMLIN?


#southpole
#auroraaustralis
#antarctica

Inside The World Of Antarctic Blue Ice Runways

As the coronavirus continues to make headlines around the world, we thought we would take a look at the last continent on earth that does not have a single case of COVID-19, and its unique blue-ice runways. We are of course referring to Antarctica and the scientists and support staff that live and work on the white continent’s scientific bases. Due to the harsh weather conditions, very few people ever get the opportunity to visit this vast frozen wonderland.

Article Link:

Video source list:
Arriving in ANTARCTICA
Antarctica Archival footage
Antarctica Timelapse
Antarctica Timelapse
Antarctica Timelapse
Union Glacier Blue Ice Runway
Ice Runway McMurdo Station
McMurdo Station
Drone footage of A319 in Antarctica: sky traders.com.au



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How to travel to ANTARCTICA (what NO ONE told you about)

Are you thinking of booking an Antarctica cruise? This video is on how you can go to the Antarctic Peninsula on expedition cruises and covers information on both cruising through the drake passage and flying to Antarctica.

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This footage is filmed while I was working on the expedition cruises to help guests like you to get to Antarctica. Questions, please comment below ⬇️⬇️⬇️

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