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Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice | Season 3 Episode 8 | Full Episode Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice | Season 3 Episode 8 | Full Episode Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice | Season 3 Episode 8 | Full Episode Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice | Season 3 Episode 8 | Full Episode
We spent a day ice crabbing on the Bering Sea with a couple of fishermen from Nome. Tony Shelp narrates a day on the ice shelf near Nome, Alaska, as he and h...
Don't miss an ALL NEW episode of Deadliest Catch, Tuesday at 9PM e/p, only on Discovery. Catch MORE Deadliest Catch at http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/deadli...
Bering Sea Gold Under The Ice - S03E06 - Let The Gold Games Begin - Full Episode The tides are turning. As competition continues to build throughout the fleet, a turf war has started on the tomcod claim. With the season coming to a close friendships have crumbled and relationships are near collapse, and it’s all for the lure of gold. In the frontier town of Nome, Alaska, there's a gold rush on. But you've never seen gold mining like this before — here, the precious metal isn't found in the ground. It's sitting in the most unlikely of places: the bottom of the frigid, unpredictable Bering Sea. And there are a handful of people willing to risk it all to bring it to the surface. For two million years, glaciers have been melting into the Bering Sea and depositing sediments rich with gold into its waters. As Nome's ice pack melts during the summer, the isolated, ramshackle town of eccentrics and outcasts booms with excitement as pioneer gold seekers rush to get out onto the water. Miners dive and dredge to scour the bottom of the sea from custom built, barely seaworthy rigs — in a race to haul in as much gold as possible before the waters become too frigid to dive. Bering Sea Gold illustrates a world like none seen before — one where the danger is palpable and the stakes are high. Success in the waters will give the dredgers the hope and means to continue — and maybe even make them rich. Failure could yield a vast array of consequences — from possible jail time to injury and even death.
I'm on a boat!
We hit this huge wave while underway in the Bering. Hope you enjoy!
We are in the Bering Sea, up just north of St Paul Island.. This storm had winds gusting to 70 knots, pushing 30"-40" seas This 90' boat had nowhere to hide ...
Riding out 70+ knot storm in the Bering Sea 1 knot =1.151 mph. Generating waves up to 40 -50 ft.
Dive into the depths of unspeakable terror as Sharknado's Cassie Scerbo comes face to fin with a swarm of bloodsucking sea monsters in this suspense-drenched...
Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 6: 10 Lbs. of Gold Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 6: 10 Lbs. of Gold Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 6: 10 Lbs. of Gold Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 6: 10 Lbs. of Gold Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 6: 10 Lbs. of Gold
Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 1 Episode 1 - The Gold Don't Care Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 1 Episode 1 - The Gold Don't Care
Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 8: Money Money Money Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 8: Money Money Money Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 8: Money Money Money Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 8: Money Money Money Bering Sea Gold Season 3 Episode 8: Money Money Money
Last night's Discovery Channel episode of "Bering Sea Gold" was titled " Under the Ice: No Fuel to Burn." These episodes were made during the winter as the b...
Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 2 Episode 5 - The Thaw Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 2 Episode 5 - The Thaw
Bering Sea crab fishing.
Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 1 Episode 4 - Fractures on the Mend Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 1 Episode 4 - Fractures on the Mend
Pelagic (mid-water) trawling for pollock fish. This is a compilation of still shot and video edited to show a typical fishing experience on this type of comm...
Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 2 Episode 3 - No Fuel To Burn Bering Sea Gold Under the Ice Season 2 Episode 3 - No Fuel To Burn
www.diveled.com taken with intova waterproof digital camera!!! Fishing in 20+ foot seas on a pollock trawler in the Bering Sea! Music by Tool.
California travel expert Veronica Hill of http://www.CaliforniaTravelExpert.com visits the Aquarium of the Pacific in this episode of "California Travel Tips...
This video provides impressions from an NSF/NPRB funded expedition onboard the USCGC Healy in March 2009. Cruise started in Kodiak and ended in Dutch Harbor....
Venture onto the Bering Sea with Gaelin Rosenwaks as she explores the sea ice. For more on this expedition and others, check out www.globaloceanexploration.c...
Check Our Website : http://www.travels1001nights.com Alaska is a U.S. state situated in the northwest extremity of the North American continent. Bordering th...
CALL: (954) 868-0955 For Deep Sea Fishing in Fort Lauderdale, Best Charter Fishing Boats The warm currents of Gulf Stream also provide secure habitat for the...
The Final Track (9) From The Canadian Black Metal Masters 2009 Album: Silence Of The Boreal Para mis amigos Nelson y Luna! Lyrics: The sea subsides at last a...
Okay so we started again this crabbing adventure once more ... Lets 'Showcase' Deadliest Catch Alaskan Storm with me Stockoglaws !! Deadliest Catch: Alaskan ...
CALL: (954) 868-0955 For Deep Sea Fishing in Pompano Beach, Best Charter Fishing Boats The warm currents of Gulf Stream also provide secure habitat for these...
Sea Documentaries | Alaska Destinations - Commercial Salmon Fishing (With Licence) Alaska supports one of the most productive commercial fishing economies in the world. Fishermen typically receive well over $1 billion for their catch; while. Documentary about commercial. Painting a visceral portrait of the life of commercial fishermen in the remote Eskimo village of Egekik, Alaska, this intense memoir depicts the author's fou. Once a year, one of Nature's great spectacles takes place on the northernmost coast of the Gulf of Alaska. It is a predestined collision of two massive migra.
Top 10 Deepest Oceans in the World Pacific Ocean,Atlantic Ocean,Indian Ocean,Southern Ocean,Caribbean Sea,Arctic Ocean,South China Sea,Bering Sea,Mediterranean sea,Gulf Of Mexico We are 10alltime and we aim to bring you the most informative, fascinating and engaging top 10 Alltime Best videos on YouTube. Don't be a stranger, drop us a line in the comments and let us know which videos you'd like us to make next or if we missed out any amazing facts. We really do enjoying reading everything you have to say. A massive thanks to all of you for the support and love that you've shown us over the past couple of years.
A look at our June 2012 land and sea cruise tour to Alaska on Holland America's ms Statendam. Highlights include the Riverboat Discovery in Fairbanks, the Wi...
Show 1: Alaska West - In the first of three Alaska shows, Frank travels to the Kanektok River where he leaves all ideas of small fish behind. Here he encount...
San Diego is celebrating the migration of thousands of California gray whales during its second annual Big Bay Whale Days, throughout the month of January. J...
Synopsis According to the recent single origin hypothesis, human ancestors originated in Africa, and eventually made their way out to the rest of the world. ...
on board the professor Kromov Russian ship, we follow the Bering expedition discovery trip from Anadyr in Chutkoka and Petropavlosk Kamchatsky on the Kamchatka peninsula, dramatic shore scenery, rich Fauna, whales, otters, sea lions, bears, foxes, eagles ….a very isolated place…..enjoy….
Each winter, the California grey whales make the 8,000 mile trek from the Bering Sea in Alaska to the warm lagoons of southern Baja California. From late January through March, these gentle giants occupy the coves and inlets of the region. Many of them can be found about 400 miles northwest of Cabo, and many others will continue their journey south to the cape, where they will birth their calves and feast on the abundant plankton of the nutrient-rich Sea of Cortez.
YUKON RIVER, Yukon It is the fourth longest river in North America, 3200 kilometres from its headwaters in Northern BC to its outlet in the Bering Sea. We wi...
The umbrella jelly is a small transparent jelly that doesn’t grow much larger than the size of a quarter. It is characterized by possessing a long mouth that extends four frilly lips past the margin of its bell. Four distinctive tubes called “radial canals” connect its stomach to the outer edge of its bell. These jellies form dense surface aggregations in the spring and summer months from central California to the Bering Sea.
After long, dark winters, sunlight returns to the Bering Sea in spring, relaunching a bountiful food chain that fills the Arctic with life. Research cruises into the remote region aim to learn how this complex ecosystem works and how climate change might disrupt it.
Welcome to SEASON THREE my web-series, "The Travelogue," which takes you to all of the places in America that you never knew you needed to see! In this episo...
Lonely Planet founder Tony Wheeler goes wild in Alaska. In the rugged Wrangell St Elias National Park, he rides a mountain bike down a glacier, catches salmon with a wheel and slips 40 metres into a giant ice crevasse before realising he'll have to climb back out. On the edge of the Bering Sea, Tony encounters King Island Eskimos who are partial to a bit of walrus, vacuums the bottom of the ocean to find nuggets of gold and follows the trail of the first people to settle North America. Heading south to Kodiak Island Tony gets up close and personal with the world's biggest bears.
From The Alaska Experience Travel Guide : http://www.Videosource.com for stock footage and complete travel program availability Transcript: Just above the arctic circle lies the town of Kotzebue. land of the eskimo, land of the midnight sun. This is a harsh wild place at the end of the earth , Pressed against the cold arctic sea. Kotzebue is a town of a little over 2000 people , 80% of them Eskimo, and still basically a subsistence culture. Hunting and fishing are primary sources of livelihood. For a short season in the summer, blueberries grow Here and are dried for the winter. This is not A new town. kotzebue sits on a peninsula near The location of the ancient bering land bridge which Was the route of those earliest americans on their trek From asia to this new land. There is archaeological Evidence here of settlements going back for millenia, It is this historical perspective that gives the native People of this region the strength to resist the Pressures of an imported culture and to preserve Their own ways. interview: (susan erlick saying " we value our elders....... Keep us alive.) Because of this realization; that the particular Ecology of the tundra demands a particular way Of life, the native people here have a true resource In their own proven traditions. Modern cultural Innovations are accepted when they serve a Purpose, but there is an increasing awareness That for a hunting and gathering people the old Proven ways work best. Here in this living Museum of the artic, the elders of the village Preserve knowlege of this endangered culture To share with visitors who get an unusual Opportunity to observe the native culture. More important, in the museum the elders Have created a vital ongoing school to pass Their wisdom about their own world to the Youth of the culture. The interest of the young People show that there is a broad based support for keeping this culture alive. (susan erlick talking about food) ever since admiral perry, the people of the lower 48 have been learning that the eskimo approach is Uniquely suited to a unique environment. These Hand made parkas trap body heat and provide Ventilation. And the blanket toss , which is now a Lively game , served a real survival need in a Predominantly flat land with no hills or trees For vantage points. Hunters were tossed up as Many as thirty feet into the air , allowing them To survey the terrain and spot game in the distance. This eskimo version of the ladder served a purpose and worked. The imported technology doesn't always work as well as the time tested ways in this Environmentally sensitive land. Here we see a house, Which must be fitted with an active refrigeration System to keep it from melting the permafrost beneath it and sinking into the ground. Like the tundra around it,the culture of these hardy People is a fragile and sensitive thing. Tundra , Once scarred, remains scarred forever. These people Know that they are trying to reverse an historical Trend by refusing to change the basic elements of Their culture , but they feel that it is worth the effort. they know that they are survivors but they don't Just want to survive, they want to survive with dignity and joy. (susan erlick saying " we've lived here for thousands of years in harmony with nature. Our values will help us continue to live in harmony And as it is with the eskimo, struggling to maintain Their culture while integrating into the modern world, so it is with all of alaska. Alaska is a rare and fragile window into the natural world..... A world where every living thing lives in harmony with the Powerful forces of nature. A world where the forces of nature prevail And man must be in tune....... Or perish. If you are fortunate enough to come to experience this Wonderful place, try to experience it on its own terms. Try to avoid imposing your day to day values on this Unique and precious experience. Although the modern Traveller can bring many creature comforts along When he comes to today's alaska, everyone who visits This raw and wild land finds himself "roughing it" Just a little bit......... for some that may mean sleepless frostbitten nights be on an icefield at the foot of mt. Mckinley. for others it may mean a lukewarm shower, a dirt road, or an evening without television.......... Part of the magic of alaska is that her most profound Experiences may come when least expected. the beaten path may offer many wonders, but the moments that last forever , may sneak up on you like the chinook winds And linger like an alaskan sunset........ Michael Heumannand crew credits
Tonight's Discovery Channel episode of “Bering Sea Gold,” was titled “Escape Goat.” As ......
The Examiner 2015-03-21Arctic sea ice hit its annual peak early this year, and climate scientists say the region's below-average ice conditions made this year's maximum extent the lowest on record ... Ice growth this winter lagged behind last year's progress, partly due to unusual patterns in the jet stream in February that created warm pockets over the Bering Sea and the Sea of Okhotsk, in the western Pacific Ocean, according to the NSIDC....
Yahoo Daily News 2015-03-21The number of seabirds, including gulls, puffins and auklets, has dropped significantly in the Gulf of Alaska and northeast Bering Sea, a possible consequence of warmer waters, according to a ......
Palm Beach Post 2015-03-20The Arctic Ocean had less sea ice this winter than any year since records began ... Arctic sea ice extent for 25 February 2015 ... This winter, an unusual path taken by the jet stream – a high altitude wind that affects weather at ground level- strongly warmed the Pacific side of the Arctic, reducing ice in the Bering Sea in particular....
New Scientist 2015-03-20(Source. Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development) URpressrelease_0215.indd. March 20, 2015 No. 15-09 Unemployment rate at 6.3 percent in February. Alaska's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 6.3 percent in February, unchanged from January. The national rate was 5.5 percent ... The. 12%. 10%. 8%. 6% Unemployment Rates, Alaska and U.S. January 2005 to February 2015 ... ing facilities support the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska winter....
noodls 2015-03-2025 flattened out for a time, due in part to ice growth in the Bering Sea near Alaska, which helped balance ice losses in the Barents and Kara Seas off the north coasts of Scandinavia and Russia ... The winter of 2014-15 featured a persistent and unusually shaped jet stream, which allowed mild air to sneak into the Arctic from the Pacific Ocean, depressing ice cover in the Bering Sea and the Sea of Okhotsk....
Mashable 2015-03-19Published March 19, 2015Associated Press. Facebook0 Twitter0 Email Print. ANCHORAGE, Alaska – U.S. Geological Survey researchers analyzing nearly 40 years of at-sea bird surveys in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea say seabird density has dropped about 2 percent annually since 1975 ... ADVERTISEMENT. ADVERTISEMENT. He calls the preliminary results a significant decline. Surveys were conducted in hundreds of ship transits ... U.S ... 5 Va ... ....
Fox News 2015-03-19Lindsey Vonn added another crystal globe to her collection by claiming the season-long downhill title on Wednesday, winning the last race in the discipline at the World Cup finals at Meribel, France. Her seven downhill titles and her 18th World Cup title overall, each coming with a crystal globe trophy, are both records for women ... 0 ... The Alaska musher crossed the finish line in the Bering Sea coastal town of Nome at 4.13 a.m ... ....
The Los Angeles Times 2015-03-19He crossed the finish line in the Bering Sea coastal town of Nome at 4.13 a.m. Read more on Colorado Springs Gazette. ....
Colorado Springs Gazette 2015-03-18SEATTLE (AP) — Kenny Down grew up in Ballard, and went to sea while still a teenager. Working for years aboard Bering Sea longliners, he never thought much about the stress that fish might go through as they were unhooked and then - while still conscious — cut open and bled ... Those vessels set thousands of baited hooks along the sea bottom, and this year are expected to catch more than 41 million pounds of cod ... ___. Information from....
Seattle Post 2015-03-18Click photo to enlarge. Dallas Seavey poses with his lead dogs Reef, left, and Hero in Nome, Alaska on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 during the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race ... «12345». NOME, Alaska (AP) — Dallas Seavey has won his third Iditarod in the past four years, beating his father and more than 60 other mushers to the Bering Sea coastal town of Nome early Wednesday after racing 1,000 miles across Alaska ... ....
Denver Post 2015-03-18Salt is made by drawing sea water into ponds and then allowing wind and sunshine to evaporate the excess water ... Every year, an estimated 20,000 gray whales make one of the longest migrations of any mammal, from the Bering Sea to the warmer waters of Baja's lagoons ... Every year, an estimated 20,000 gray whales make one of the longest migrations of any mammal, from the Bering Sea to the warmer waters of Baja's lagoons....
U~T San Diego 2015-03-18Click photo to enlarge ... (AP Photo/Alaska Dispatch News, Loren Holmes ). «12345» ... The city on Alaska's western coast had been preparing for the first musher to come off the frozen Bering Sea ice and mush the last few blocks of the thousand-mile race down Front Street ... Four checkpoints remain for the mushers as they brave the hard-packed trail and chilling North Pacific winds of the Bering Sea coast ... ....
Denver Post 2015-03-17Coordinates: 58°0′N 178°0′W / 58°N 178°W / 58; -178
The Bering Sea is a marginal sea of the Pacific Ocean. It comprises a deep water basin, which then rises through a narrow slope into the shallower water above the continental shelves.
The Bering Sea is separated from the Gulf of Alaska by the Alaska Peninsula. It covers over two million square kilometers, bordered on the east and northeast by Alaska, on the west by Russia's Siberia and Kamchatka Peninsula, on the south by the Alaska Peninsula and the Aleutian Islands and on the far north by the Bering Strait, which connects the Bering Sea to the Arctic Ocean's Chukchi Sea. Bristol Bay is the portion of the Bering Sea which separates the Alaska Peninsula from mainland Alaska. The Bering Sea is named for Vitus Bering, a Danish navigator in Russian service, who in 1728 was the first European to systematically explore it, sailing from the Pacific Ocean northward to the Arctic Ocean.[citation needed]
The Bering Sea ecosystem includes resources within the jurisdiction of the United States and Russia, as well as international waters in the middle of the sea (known as the "Donut Hole"). The interaction between currents, sea ice, and weather make for a vigorous and productive ecosystem.
Life on display
Get out of my face
You want to know my every step
Where I've been
It's not your place
Where I rest my head
Who's my foe, who's my friend
If you see me keeping distance
It's because you don't mind your business
If you see me keeping distance
It's because you don't mind your business
I can't escape
The prying eyes
Of the bored who I hate
You can't relate
Don't bother asking
And just be on your way
You can't relate
Don't bother asking
Just be on your fucking way