Goodbye Rachel: Macquarie Island 1968
Macquarie Island 1968: Past Auroral Hill and down…
Macquarie Island 1968: Elephant seal pups
Macquarie Island 1968: Snowfall at Bauer Bay
Macquarie Island 1968: The Biologist and the Weka
Macquarie Island 1968: Magical Sunrise
Macquarie Island 1968: Toward the station from the…
Macquarie Island 1968: Plateau
Macquarie Island 1968: Plateau Lakes
Macquarie Island 1968: Plateau seastacks
Macquarie Island 1968: Light-mantled Sooty Albatro…
Macquarie Island 1968: Hurd Point
Macquarie Island 1968: Taking a break on the plat…
Macquarie Island 1968: King Penguins and Chicks
Macquarie Island 1968: Lusitania Bay hut
Macquarie Island 1968: Royal Penguins
Macquarie Island 1968: An odd couple
Macquarie Island 1968: Southern Giant Petrel
Macquarie Island 1968: Macquarie Shags
Macquarie Island 1968: Rockhopper penguins
Macquarie Island 1968: Rockhoppers and chicks
Macquarie Island 1968: Beach scene
Macquarie Island 1968: Gentoo with eggs
Macquarie Island 1968: Fur Seal
Macquarie Island 1968: Roar at the snow
Macquarie Island 1968: From the old days
Macquarie Island 1968: Immature elephant seal
Macquarie Island 1968: The Gratitude ...
Macquarie Island 1968: A new industry arrives...
Macquarie Island 1968: Visiting Leopard Seal
Macquarie Island 1968: Balloon launch on a windy d…
Macquarie Island 1968: Away she goes!
Macquarie Island 1968: Met Office area
Macquarie Island 1968: The main station area
Macquarie Island 1968: The Isthmus after a Snowfal…
Macquarie Island 1968: Prince Charming meets Cind…
Macquarie Island 1968: Cinders has the Slipper
The crew
The crew regroups
Macquarie Island reunion
Fog Bow, Macquarie Island
Macquarie Island station from North Head
Around Macquarie Island station, December 1967
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Macquarie Island 1968: WF2 radar dish
Scanned from an old slide taken inside the fibreglass dome, hence the red cast. The old WW2-vintage radar we removed had automatic target tracking: this new one was fully manual. That's progress! But the WF2 could follow the weather balloons for about two hundred kilometers. On a windy day at Macquarie Island, the balloons often did not rise more than ten degrees above the horizon before disappearing in the distance, even though they climbed at about 300 metres/minute ...
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