Nacreous Clouds at sunset
Errera Channel
Andvord Bay
On Top
Antarctic heatwave
Siesta
Hungry!
Neko Harbour
Lemaire Channel
Summer evening
Una's Tits
Neumayer Channel
Guardians of Port Lockroy
Dancing round the Union Jack
It's in the book
Broken (PiP)
Neko Harbour
Shall I jump back in?
Cuverville Island
Pygoscelis papua
Green Antarctica (PiP)
Heading away
Ghost of Christmas (long) past
Keeping afloat
QSL RI1AND
QSL LU3ZY (1978) (B)
QSL LU3ZY (1978) (F)
USA 1933 3¢
Anvers Island
Skua enjoying the view
Iceberg Alley (PiP)
Elephant seals and giant petrels (2xPiP)
Aurora over Mawson Station
QSL RI1ANC (2014)
Leaving Antarctica
Blown Away!
From the Bridge: Squeezing Through
White Christmas
Looking Back
Chocolate Ice?
Jade Ice
Adelie Penguins on a Bergy Bit
Visiting a Bergy Bit
Antarctic Petrel
Snow Petrel
Nesting Snow Petrel
Dumont d'Urville
Emperors and Adelies
Panorama at Dumont d'Urville
Skuas Again!
This is Our Patch!
Green Antarctica
Bath Time
Nesting Adelies
Antarctica Coastline
Midnight Sunset
Antarctic Tranquility
The Ice City
Plateau Helipad
Over the Glacier
Enjoying the Pack Ice
Relative Proportions
Commonwealth Bay Panorama
The bookshelves, Mawson's Hut
Beyond the Stove to the Darkroom
Location
Lat, Lng:
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 22 Mar 2015
-
720 visits
Nacreous Clouds
From an old 1966 slide and from a set moved from the 'other' site. We were knocked over by those clouds behind the meteorological office. They are Nacreous Clouds, also known as "Mother of Pearl" clouds because of their colours or, more currently, as "Polar Stratospheric Clouds". They are made of ice crystals (which give their colour) and are about 20,000 metres high with temperatures dropping to about -80 C. They had always been considered quite rare and I believe our sighting was one of the first confirmed in Antarctica: there have been numerous sightings since.. Ozone depletion caused by chlorofluorocarbon gases has caused the polar stratosphere to become colder in spring (ozone keeps it warmer, so less ozone ie "the ozone hole" means lower temperatures) - yes, this is relevant to climate change. View on black. And HFF!
Don Sutherland, Polyrus, , beverley have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
when we saw snow, ice and hail all at once with some sunlight ... I think it was perhaps
a similar thing ... rare to see here .... roll on spring ;-) or perhaps a spring roll .. they
are quiet tasty ;-) have a good week George ... oOo
tiabunna club has replied to beverleytiabunna club has replied to PolyrusADMIRED in 4U
tiabunna club has replied to Don Sutherland clubSign-in to write a comment.