4:29
Exploring Oceans: Arctic
The coldest, windiest place on Earth holds 60 percent of the fresh water on the planet. Re...
published: 16 Mar 2009
Author: NationalGeographic
Exploring Oceans: Arctic
The coldest, windiest place on Earth holds 60 percent of the fresh water on the planet. Recent expeditions to the Weddell Sea produced more than 700 new species, including giant carnivorous sponges.
8:07
Alaska - Part 6: The Arctic Ocean
The Arctic Ocean...
published: 06 Aug 2010
Author: roberticomusic
Alaska - Part 6: The Arctic Ocean
The Arctic Ocean
2:31
NASA: Arctic Ocean Could be Mostly Ice Free in 2013
2008.01.09. "The sea ice is decreasing faster than all the models predicted," sa...
published: 05 Apr 2008
Author: starrdreams
NASA: Arctic Ocean Could be Mostly Ice Free in 2013
2008.01.09. "The sea ice is decreasing faster than all the models predicted," says Jay Zwally, the ice satellite project scientist at NASA Goddard, "We not only have the warming of the atmosphere, we have a warming of the ocean that is affecting this. It has been surprising to everybody, this decrease in area. This is a marked departure, and this is suggesting to us that maybe we are getting at this tipping point." Source: www.voanews.com More: About Dr. H. Jay Zwally: eospso.gsfc.nasa.gov 2007.12.12. BBC News Arctic summers ice-free 'by 2013' news.bbc.co.uk
4:26
Welcome to the Arctic Ocean
Crowning the top of the world, the frozen Arctic Ocean provides an unlikely home for a spe...
published: 11 Sep 2008
Author: oceancontent
Welcome to the Arctic Ocean
Crowning the top of the world, the frozen Arctic Ocean provides an unlikely home for a spectrum of enchanting creatures. Above the ice and below, beluga whales, narwals, bowhead whales, walruses and murres prosper.
2:56
Pollution endangering Arctic oceans
Though there are few places colder on Earth than the Canadian Arctic, scientists have warn...
published: 17 Apr 2010
Author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Pollution endangering Arctic oceans
Though there are few places colder on Earth than the Canadian Arctic, scientists have warned that increasing levels of pollution are not only threatening the polar icecaps, but the world's oceans. They say that could mean everything from the smallest fish to the largest sharks are in danger. In the second of a three-part series on the Arctic, Al Jazeera's Steve Chao reports on how he spent two weeks with scientists as they investigated what as known as climate change's "evil twin".
3:40
Welcome to the Antarctic Ocean
The coldest, windiest place on Earth, holds 60 percent of the fresh water on the planet. I...
published: 11 Sep 2008
Author: oceancontent
Welcome to the Antarctic Ocean
The coldest, windiest place on Earth, holds 60 percent of the fresh water on the planet. It is home to the enormous elephant seal and the ferocious leopard seal. New expeditions to the Weddell Sea produced more than 700 new species, including giant carnivorous sponges.
1:00
11. The North Pole • The Arctic Ocean
Wehave selected 100 unique places on Earth that are projected to undergo profound changes ...
published: 20 May 2009
Author: 100PlacesToRemember
11. The North Pole • The Arctic Ocean
Wehave selected 100 unique places on Earth that are projected to undergo profound changes within the next few generations. We based our selection of the 100 places on the 4th Assessment Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Simply by drawing attention to the beauty of these places, 100 Places to Remember Before they Disappear creates an argument to preserve them. The 100 Places we have chosen to highlight, and the people who live in them, are in serious danger because of rising sea levels, rising temperatures and extreme weather events triggered by climate change. Among ambassadors are Joss Stone, Desmund Tutu for more info visit www.100places.com. Greetings from the Top of the World Until relatively recently, the Arctic Ocean remained unexplored. The lack of knowledge about what lay north of the shifting barriers of ice led to conjecture and speculation, nourishing persistent myths about an open polar sea. However, as explorers inched further and further towards the pole, it became obvious that the ice cover was in fact massive and permanent all year round. Occupying an almost circular basin of about 14056000 square kilometres at the top of the world, the Arctic Ocean is surrounded by the land masses of Euroasia, North America and Greenland, as well as several smaller islands. The Norwegian explorer and scientist Fridtjof Nansen was the first person to cross the Arctic Ocean. He spent more than three years there from 1893 to 1896 but never <b>...</b>
1:46
Ocean Sounds in the Arctic
Sounds of the Ocean in the Arctic: Bearded Seals, Beluga Whales, Bowhead Whales, Humpback ...
published: 09 Dec 2010
Author: NOAAPMEL
Ocean Sounds in the Arctic
Sounds of the Ocean in the Arctic: Bearded Seals, Beluga Whales, Bowhead Whales, Humpback recorded during the Russian-American Long-term Census of the Arctic (RUSALCA) cruise to the Bering Strait July 31 -- August 11, 2010, by Kate Stafford. www.arctic.noaa.gov
9:33
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.6-B
Part.6-B Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in...
published: 13 Dec 2009
Author: DesertdudeFilms
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.6-B
Part.6-B Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in Winter. Camera, Editing, Music, Directed, Produced - Pasquale Benedetto Captured on location using Canon XLH1 edited with Final Cut Studio. Riding along in a Tacoma I followed the Expeditions West Team from Arizona to Tuk. I shot 28 hrs of footage and over 3000 photos. In sub zero temps. From Prescott Arizona to Tuktoyaktuk in the Northwest Territories, and the Arctic Ocean: 24 Days and 8481 Miles in a specially prepared Toyota Tacoma. Two drivers and a videographer will pilot their Toyota and Adventure Trailer up the frozen Mackenzie River Delta and out on to the Arctic Ocean and lands end.
7:53
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.4-A
Part.4-A Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in...
published: 13 Dec 2009
Author: DesertdudeFilms
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.4-A
Part.4-A Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in Winter. Camera, Editing, Music, Directed, Produced - Pasquale Benedetto Captured on location using Canon XLH1 edited with Final Cut Studio. Riding along in a Tacoma I followed the Expeditions West Team from Arizona to Tuk. I shot 28 hrs of footage and over 3000 photos. In sub zero temps. From Prescott Arizona to Tuktoyaktuk in the Northwest Territories, and the Arctic Ocean: 24 Days and 8481 Miles in a specially prepared Toyota Tacoma. Two drivers and a videographer will pilot their Toyota and Adventure Trailer up the frozen Mackenzie River Delta and out on to the Arctic Ocean and lands end.
2:08
Explorers attempt to conquer Arctic Ocean
A team of American adventurers is set to begin a dangerous and unprecedented journey acros...
published: 15 Jul 2012
Author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Explorers attempt to conquer Arctic Ocean
A team of American adventurers is set to begin a dangerous and unprecedented journey across the Arctic that will see them rowing from Canada to Russia over the next 30 days. The gruelling trek has billed as one of the world's last great firsts across a landscape that was covered in year-round ice just years ago. The rowers will also be collecting data on whale feeding habits and collecting samples of plankton to help researchers better understand the ecosystem in the far north. Al Jazeera's Gerald Tan has the story.
0:30
Arctic Ocean Currents Changed Due To Global Warming NASA
NASA Finds Russian Runoff Freshening Canadian Arct The transpolar drift (purple arrows) is...
published: 05 Jan 2012
Author: GlobalClimateNews
Arctic Ocean Currents Changed Due To Global Warming NASA
NASA Finds Russian Runoff Freshening Canadian Arct The transpolar drift (purple arrows) is a dominant circulation feature in the Arctic Ocean that carries freshwater runoff (red arrows) from rivers in Russia across the North Pole and south towards Greenland. Under changing atmospheric conditions, emergent circulation patterns (blue arrows) drive freshwater runoff east towards Canada, resulting in freshening of Arctic water in the Canada Basin. Retrieved from: www.nasa.gov PASADENA, Calif. - A new NASA and University of Washington study allays concerns that melting Arctic sea ice could be increasing the amount of freshwater in the Arctic enough to have an impact on the global "ocean conveyor belt" that redistributes heat around our planet. Lead author and oceanographer Jamie Morison of the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory in Seattle, and his team, detected a previously unknown redistribution of freshwater during the past decade from the Eurasian half of the Arctic Ocean to the Canadian half. Yet despite the redistribution, they found no change in the net amount of freshwater in the Arctic that might signal a change in the conveyor belt. The team attributes the redistribution to an eastward shift in the path of Russian runoff through the Arctic Ocean, which is tied to an increase in the strength of the Northern Hemisphere's west-to-east atmospheric circulation, known as the Arctic Oscillation. The resulting counterclockwise winds changed the direction <b>...</b>
1:20
Flying Low Over Arctic Ocean Icebergs
Flying low at about 40 feet in a Piper Navajo aircraft over the Arctic Ocean, near Baffin ...
published: 04 Dec 2009
Author: stp83
Flying Low Over Arctic Ocean Icebergs
Flying low at about 40 feet in a Piper Navajo aircraft over the Arctic Ocean, near Baffin Island in northern Canada, July 2008.
0:53
Expedition ARCTIC OCEAN PREDATOR - Trailer (HD)
Expedition "ARCTIC OCEAN PREDATOR" In 2011 the Expedition Corps of the Global Of...
published: 17 Mar 2011
Author: joweonsea
Expedition ARCTIC OCEAN PREDATOR - Trailer (HD)
Expedition "ARCTIC OCEAN PREDATOR" In 2011 the Expedition Corps of the Global Offshore Sailing Team will leave after nine months of intense preperation Tromsö on 69°N. This harbour was also the departure point for most of the Weather Units which were sent during WWII on their strategically important and highly dangerous missions to the Arctic Ocean and its islands. The goal of Expedition "ARCTIC OCEAN PREDATOR" is -- beside the theoretical analysis -- to receive a practical impression about the conditions in the ARCTIC OCEAN and their physical and psychological influence on men operating in small units with nearly no privatsphere. Therefore the team will sail on a 47ft sailing yacht 1.000 miles offshore through the stormy Barents Sea into the Arctic Ocean to reach Spitzbergen - the home of 3000 polar bears -- to head on further up to 80° North. High Definition Trailer Expedition "Arctic Ocean Predator"
Vimeo results:
5:48
Arctic Ocean peregrination (time lapse)
Rolling on a top of a globe)))
Murmansk - Barents Sea - White Sea - Pechora Sea -The Kara ...
published: 31 Mar 2010
Author: Timelapser
Arctic Ocean peregrination (time lapse)
Rolling on a top of a globe)))
Murmansk - Barents Sea - White Sea - Pechora Sea -The Kara Strait - Kara Sea - Yenisei Gulf - Yenisei River - Dudinka Port. All timelapses were photographed at temperatures from -30C to -50C, you can notice "boiling" water when icebreaker unseals ice armor.
Снято по заказу installtechno.ru
Music -"Circle" from "Contact Note" by Jon Hopkins, 2004
0:08
Time Waits for Ricky
Oh fine, plants die, ocean life inexorably affected, earth plunges into arctic prison, but...
published: 17 Jun 2009
Author: 5-Second Films
Time Waits for Ricky
Oh fine, plants die, ocean life inexorably affected, earth plunges into arctic prison, but no - you make sure your hair does that thing you like, Ricky.
3:11
Polar Bear Photography with Florian Schulz
Wildlife photographer Florian Schulz goes to great lengths to capture the stunning photos ...
published: 15 Jun 2012
Author: One World One Ocean
Polar Bear Photography with Florian Schulz
Wildlife photographer Florian Schulz goes to great lengths to capture the stunning photos seen in the companion book for our film, To The Arctic 3D. --
http://www.oneworldoneocean.org/initiatives/entry/to-the-arctic-the-movie for more info on the movie, more photos from the book, and facts about why the Arctic Ocean and its inhabitants are worth protecting.
Watch what it took to capture the amazing image we used for the cover of our To The Arctic companion book!
For more information on Arctic wildlife, see the new IMAX® film "To The Arctic 3D" opening in select IMAX Theatres starting April 20, 2012. "To The Arctic 3D" is a MacGillivray Freeman Film from Warner Bros. Pictures and IMAX Corporation. Presented by One World One Ocean Foundation.
21:12
The Incomparable Ponoi
BEST VIEWED IN HD AND FULLSCREEN (with scaling off)
The Incomparable Ponoi :
This short...
published: 02 Apr 2012
Author: Gin Clear Media
The Incomparable Ponoi
BEST VIEWED IN HD AND FULLSCREEN (with scaling off)
The Incomparable Ponoi :
This short film was shot during the 2011 fishing season.
The Ryabaga Camp on the Ponoi River epitomizes all that we love about a remote fishing experience: the excitement of a true wilderness location yet an oasis of comfort; hospitality and fine cuisine; a totally wild Atlantic salmon population that is thriving – where the efforts to care for the stocks really do show positive results; and a team of people whose attitudes to service, work ethic and team spirit are second to none.
Well into its third decade of operation in one of the most logistically complex parts of the world, under the stewardship of the Ponoi River Co and Frontiers, the Ryabaga and Brevyeni Camps on the Ponoi River have achieved extraordinary recognition.
The Ryabaga Camp has a well-deserved reputation for phenomenal Atlantic salmon fishing. It offers remarkable numbers of fish, placing it statistically as the most productive river in the world, with balanced catches from grilse all the way to plenty of good-sized fish up to the 30lb mark. It encompasses all the methods of fly fishing, from long casts with double-handed rods to more delicate single-handed rod fishing with skated flies, the occasional upstream dry, endless wading or fishing intimate spots from boats. Our water is fly fishing only, and we adhere to strict catch-and-release policies. Over 50 miles (80 kms) of double-bank water offers guests unprecedented fishing. Generous beats are accessed using 17-ft jet boats and by hovercraft for the most distant beats.
For the well-seasoned salmon fisher or for the beginner, there is no better choice than the lower reaches of the Ponoi. Not only do the repeat guest profile and quality of service attest to this fact, but the catch statistics do too. These take into account guests from six to 91 years old, from first-timers to the most experienced. They reflect those with unlimited enthusiasm and those who take their time and enjoy the river. While there is no doubt that the Ponoi will challenge and reward the experienced and aggressive Atlantic salmon fisherman, we must also emphasize that there is simply no better place to learn to fish for these great game fish, and to build confidence and develop long-term skills from real-life encounters.
The Ryabaga Camp is pioneering in its dedication to the conservation of the river. In conjunction with the Polar Research Institute of Murmansk, the Ponoi River Co, and the Atlantic Salmon Federation, the largest tagging project of its kind for Atlantic salmon has been in operation for many years. An eighth of all Atlantic salmon tagged globally in a given year are done so on the Ryabaga water and the information gathered has not only benefited this river but the international effort to conserve Atlantic salmon. About 1500 salmon are tagged by the guides each season and all are recorded by the resident scientist who carefully monitors influential ocean temperatures, and assesses the results of the recaptures so that the guests can hear the history of the tagged fish they have caught. A succinct scientific presentation is given each week to the guests.
The camp itself enjoys almost as much recognition as the fishing. The Ponoi River Co has created a luxury wilderness operation in what must be one of the most remote locations. Its crew of 30, includes five mechanics, three chefs, four housekeeping staff, a massage therapist and doctor; each is highly trained and dedicated to offering the best possible service to our guests. Every effort has been made to make sure the camp and its staff have the best possible equipment with which to operate and ensure the finest food and amenities are available. Without the support of this camp team, we recognize that, no matter how good the fishing or the guide crew is, what has been achieved at Ryabaga Camp would not be possible. We are proud of them for their hard work and ingenuity in managing to keep the camp running perfectly with fantastic food that would be the envy of any first class city restaurant.
Relax in spacious American-made tents with carpeted wooden floors. Each tent features two extra-wide, hand-crafted beds with comfortable mattresses, premium arctic sleeping bags with flannel sheets and over-sized Finnish down pillows. Each tent also has a wood-burning stove that is lit for guests before they rise in the morning and in the evening before they return from fishing.
The camp has a luxurious shower building and Russian sauna that our guests always enjoy after a long day on the river. There are many facilities including a drying room and a fully-stocked tackle shop that is often the hive of fishing tales in the camp. The Big Tent, as we call it, is the social centre of the camp. It plays host to the dining room, bar and evening activities, such as the fly-tying bench and music if a staff member or guest can be persuaded to play.
Ponoi…for memories that wil
Youtube results:
0:51
Sea Height/Fresh Water Increasing In Arctic Ocean (1995-2010)
ESA satellites show that a large dome of fresh water has been building up in the Arctic Oc...
published: 23 Jan 2012
Author: djxatlanta
Sea Height/Fresh Water Increasing In Arctic Ocean (1995-2010)
ESA satellites show that a large dome of fresh water has been building up in the Arctic Ocean over the last 15 years. A change in wind direction could cause the water to spill into the north Atlantic, cooling Europe. The results are remarkable: since 2002, the sea surface in the studied area has risen by about 15 cm, and the volume of fresh water has increased by some 8000 cubic km -- around 10% of all the fresh water in the Arctic Ocean. Researchers from the center for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM) at University College London and the UK's National Oceanography center used data from ESA's ERS-2 and Envisat satellites to measure sea-surface height over the western Arctic from 1995 to 2010. The results were published January 22, 2012 in the online version of the scientific journal, Nature Geoscience. The scientists conclude that the dome could be a result of strong Arctic winds accelerating a large ocean circulation known as the Beaufort Gyre, causing the sea surface to bulge. A change in the direction of the wind would cause the fresh water to spill into the rest of the Arctic Ocean and even reach the north Atlantic. This could slow a key ocean current, stemming from the Gulf Stream, and subsequently cool Europe. ESA will continue to monitor the Arctic with the upcoming Sentinel series of Earth-observing satellites for Europe's Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) programme. Later this year, the first results of seasonal changes in sea-ice <b>...</b>
6:56
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.3-B
Part.3-B Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in...
published: 13 Dec 2009
Author: DesertdudeFilms
Arctic Ocean Expedition Part.3-B
Part.3-B Team Expeditions West leaves for a solo vehicle expedition to the Arctic Ocean in Winter. Camera, Editing, Music, Directed, Produced - Pasquale Benedetto Captured on location using Canon XLH1 edited with Final Cut Studio. Riding along in a Tacoma I followed the Expeditions West Team from Arizona to Tuk. I shot 28 hrs of footage and over 3000 photos. In sub zero temps. From Prescott Arizona to Tuktoyaktuk in the Northwest Territories, and the Arctic Ocean: 24 Days and 8481 Miles in a specially prepared Toyota Tacoma. Two drivers and a videographer will pilot their Toyota and Adventure Trailer up the frozen Mackenzie River Delta and out on to the Arctic Ocean and lands end.
4:59
Protecting the Arctic Ocean, with Ted Danson & Oceana
In this tour, Ted Danson and Oceana guide you through the problems that the Arctic Ocean i...
published: 06 Dec 2009
Author: EarthOutreach
Protecting the Arctic Ocean, with Ted Danson & Oceana
In this tour, Ted Danson and Oceana guide you through the problems that the Arctic Ocean is facing due to climate change, and introduce you to the positive changes that have been made due to policies protecting certain parts of the Arctic from commercial fishing and other activities.
4:31
US Navy Submarine surfaces in the Arctic ocean
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (www.youtube.com...
published: 16 Jan 2012
Author: 82ndairborne100
US Navy Submarine surfaces in the Arctic ocean
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (www.youtube.com