The sea has an approximate area of 595,000 km² (230,000 mi²) and is only navigable about four months of the year. The main geological feature of the Chukchi Sea bottom is the 700 km (435 mi)-long Hope Basin, which is bound to the northeast by the Herald Arch. Depths less than 50 m (164 ft) occupy 56% of the total area.
The Chukchi Sea has very few islands compared to other seas of the Arctic. Wrangel Island lies at the northwestern limit of the sea, Herald Island is located near its northern limit, and a few small islands lie along the Siberian and Alaskan coasts.
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
http://gallery.usgs.gov/videos/600 Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific W...
55:36
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influence on Arctic climate and on the supply of fresh water and nutrient...
52:13
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Associates and Fairweather, Inc. This program details cultural informat...
3:13
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Saturday. Has the oil industry learned from past disasters?
Follow Cliff Judy: http://www.twitter.com/cliffjudy
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
If you're not familiar with the term "kayaktivists" — well, get ready.
Around 1,000 of them are expected to paddle through the Puget Sound Saturday to protest the Royal Dutch Shell ships and oil drilling rig currently docked in Seattle. The ships are headed north this summer. (Video via KING)
Earlier this week, Shell won conditional approval from the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to explore
6:47
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Join USFWS Wildlife Biologist Eric Regeher as he darts, captures and releases a polar bear; providing a glimpse into the world of arctic research.
5:05
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
This video is about Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
2:30
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
2:31
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
"Shell readies the drill bit for first spud!" This weekend crews aboard the Noble Discoverer began drilling at Shell's "Burger" prospect in the Chukchi Sea, ...
4:34
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
A month of arctic trekking with an 18 month old.
3:17
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Wells, like houses, begin with a foundation. In the Arctic, the foundational well -- also called a top hole - starts with a 20-by-40 foot area excavated into...
3:03
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska. American photographer Stev...
5:50
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
We wanted to get a video to see if we could see the algal layer at the bottom of Chukchi Sea ice in May 2015.
10:21
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska program has gone to great lengths to make sure a worst-case scenario, such as an oil spill, never takes place. But in the unlikely event that one did, Shell’s onsite oil spill response assets would be deployed within one hour. Shell Alaska maintains a highly capable emergency response planning and management program.
0:32
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
steve-o jumping ice flows on the fourth of july 2008 in Barrow, AK.
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
http://gallery.usgs.gov/videos/600 Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific W...
55:36
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influence on Arctic climate and on the supply of fresh water and nutrient...
52:13
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Associates and Fairweather, Inc. This program details cultural informat...
3:13
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Saturday. Has the oil industry learned from past disasters?
Follow Cliff Judy: http://www.twitter.com/cliffjudy
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
If you're not familiar with the term "kayaktivists" — well, get ready.
Around 1,000 of them are expected to paddle through the Puget Sound Saturday to protest the Royal Dutch Shell ships and oil drilling rig currently docked in Seattle. The ships are headed north this summer. (Video via KING)
Earlier this week, Shell won conditional approval from the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to explore
6:47
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Join USFWS Wildlife Biologist Eric Regeher as he darts, captures and releases a polar bear; providing a glimpse into the world of arctic research.
5:05
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
This video is about Sam and Kim diving into the Chukchi Sea at Barrow Alaska
2:30
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
The Future of Oil and Gas: Drilling in the Chukchi Sea
2:31
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
Chukchi Sea Drilling Operations
"Shell readies the drill bit for first spud!" This weekend crews aboard the Noble Discoverer began drilling at Shell's "Burger" prospect in the Chukchi Sea, ...
4:34
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
A month of arctic trekking with an 18 month old.
3:17
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Top Holes - Learn more about drilling the top portion of a Chukchi Sea exploration
Wells, like houses, begin with a foundation. In the Arctic, the foundational well -- also called a top hole - starts with a 20-by-40 foot area excavated into...
3:03
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska. American photographer Stev...
5:50
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
We wanted to get a video to see if we could see the algal layer at the bottom of Chukchi Sea ice in May 2015.
10:21
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska program has gone to great lengths to make sure a worst-case scenario, such as an oil spill, never takes place. But in the unlikely event that one did, Shell’s onsite oil spill response assets would be deployed within one hour. Shell Alaska maintains a highly capable emergency response planning and management program.
0:32
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
steve-o jumping ice flows on the fourth of july 2008 in Barrow, AK.
1:09
Shell gets Chukchi Sea drilling permits
Shell gets Chukchi Sea drilling permits
Shell gets Chukchi Sea drilling permits
0:30
IceLander 02 (Chukchi Sea) Hourly Webcam Movie
IceLander 02 (Chukchi Sea) Hourly Webcam Movie
IceLander 02 (Chukchi Sea) Hourly Webcam Movie
This movie shows the motion of the IceLander 2 system from the time it was deployed West of Barrow, Alaska through its breakoff from the landfast ice.
7:02
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 2
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 2
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 2
part two
9:54
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 3
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 3
Strait Science : Chukchi Sea Life - Part 3
Part three
10:04
Strait Science: Chukchi Sea Life - Part 4
Strait Science: Chukchi Sea Life - Part 4
Strait Science: Chukchi Sea Life - Part 4
part four
0:27
Chukchi Sea Meaning
Chukchi Sea Meaning
Chukchi Sea Meaning
Video shows what Chukchi Sea means. A marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean, between Chukotka and Alaska.. Chukchi Sea Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say Chukchi Sea. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
0:57
Chukchi Sea oil & gas leases ruled illegal
Chukchi Sea oil & gas leases ruled illegal
Chukchi Sea oil & gas leases ruled illegal
2:36
Chukchi Sea ruling a tactical win for antioil activists
Chukchi Sea ruling a tactical win for antioil activists
Chukchi Sea ruling a tactical win for antioil activists
A court decision jeopardizing oil and gas leases in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska represents a triumph of environmental obstructionism—but not of management of ...
1:57
goowey in the Chukchi sea
goowey in the Chukchi sea
goowey in the Chukchi sea
Jully 11 2009, this video is a fly over of an unknown substance spotted in the ocean between Barrow and Wainwright Alaska. Early reports have it approximatel...
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
http://gallery.usgs.gov/videos/600 Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific W...
http://gallery.usgs.gov/videos/600 Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific W...
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influence on Arctic climate and on the supply of fresh water and nutrient...
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influence on Arctic climate and on the supply of fresh water and nutrient...
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Associates and Fairweather, Inc. This program details cultural informat...
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Associates and Fairweather, Inc. This program details cultural informat...
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Saturday. Has the oil industry learned from past disasters?
Follow Cliff Judy: http://www.twitter.com/cliffjudy
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
If you're not familiar with the term "kayaktivists" — well, get ready.
Around 1,000 of them are expected to paddle through the Puget Sound Saturday to protest the Royal Dutch Shell ships and oil drilling rig currently docked in Seattle. The ships are headed north this summer. (Video via KING)
Earlier this week, Shell won conditional approval from the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to explore for oil in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska's coast. The move infuriated environmentalists who point to the infamous Deepwater Horizon explosion and environmental disaster as a worst-case scenario. (Video via Shell and RT)
But given an incredibly cautious public sentiment in wake of past tragedies and the enormous backlash if Shell did produce another disaster, has the oil industry learned from past mistakes?
The concern is certainly fair. The Chukchi Sea has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is far more remote than drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, making disaster response more difficult if something went wrong. (Video via U.S. Geological Survey)
Shell is pushing hard to present a message of safety. Ahead of its approval to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, it released several videos explaining its response plans if something went wrong. It also pointed out features on its rigs meant to prevent a massive BP-like oil leak into the sea.
It also has a 12-point explainer on its website on how it would deal with a leak in the nearby Beaufort Sea. But part of that plan includes "using detailed ice and weather forecasting to warn of extreme conditions" — something it's seemingly already failed to do.
The rig mentioned in that Shell video we featured earlier was the Kulluk. When Shell tried to move the rig in late 2012 to avoid taxes, a Coast Guard report shows the tow master warned the rig it was a bad idea because the frozen conditions "guarantees an ass kicking."
Sure enough, the tow lines broke and Kulluk ran aground, forcing a Coast Guard rescue and eventually leading the Department of the Interior to rescind Shell's Arctic drilling approval. (Video via ODN)
And then there's a February report from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management predicting a 75 percent chance there will be a large oil spill in the Chukchi Sea if drilling begins there.
That figure understandably inspired a flurry of foreboding headlines. But the bureau has since released a larger explanation saying the 75 percent figure is over the course of 77 years if the Chukchi Sea had hundreds of wells in production, not one company exploring the area.
A "large" oil spill is defined as anything leaking 1,000 barrels or more, which pales in comparison to the Exxon Valdez oil spill that dumped an estimated 257,000 barrels or the 4.9 million barrels spilled by Deepwater Horizon.
Ultimately, this is a crystal ball issue. The government has tried to make sure Shell is fully prepared for any situation in the name of a potentially huge economic impact.
But in doing so, it's also accepting the risk a largely untouched ecosystem suffers some kind of significant setback. (Video via Greenpeace)
A risk management consultant who used to work for Shell in the Arctic told The Atlantic, "Have we really worried enough about the potential of a catastrophic blowout? Have we learned enough about the prevention and mitigation of spills? At this point it’s an unanswered question.”
This video includes images from Edward Boatman / CC BY 3.0, Thibault Geffroy / CC BY 3.0, Getty Images, and music by @nop / CC by NC 3.0.
Sources: Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/environmental-activists-in-a-kayak-flotilla-protest-the-news-photo/473372406
KING http://www.king5.com/story/news/local/shell-oil-rig/2015/05/14/shell-oil-rig-seattle-thursday/27292545/
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKwN4xoq25U
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Shell http://www.shell.com/global/future-energy/arctic/oil-spill-prevention-reponse/ready-for-the-unexpected.html
U.S. Coast Guard http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
ODN http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/BOEM-Newsroom/Risk-and-Benefits-in-the-Chukchi-Sea.aspx
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/05/getting-approval-for-arctic-drilling-mightve-been-the-least-of-shells-problems/393056/
Image via: Getty Images / Karen Ducey
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Saturday. Has the oil industry learned from past disasters?
Follow Cliff Judy: http://www.twitter.com/cliffjudy
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
If you're not familiar with the term "kayaktivists" — well, get ready.
Around 1,000 of them are expected to paddle through the Puget Sound Saturday to protest the Royal Dutch Shell ships and oil drilling rig currently docked in Seattle. The ships are headed north this summer. (Video via KING)
Earlier this week, Shell won conditional approval from the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to explore for oil in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska's coast. The move infuriated environmentalists who point to the infamous Deepwater Horizon explosion and environmental disaster as a worst-case scenario. (Video via Shell and RT)
But given an incredibly cautious public sentiment in wake of past tragedies and the enormous backlash if Shell did produce another disaster, has the oil industry learned from past mistakes?
The concern is certainly fair. The Chukchi Sea has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is far more remote than drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, making disaster response more difficult if something went wrong. (Video via U.S. Geological Survey)
Shell is pushing hard to present a message of safety. Ahead of its approval to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, it released several videos explaining its response plans if something went wrong. It also pointed out features on its rigs meant to prevent a massive BP-like oil leak into the sea.
It also has a 12-point explainer on its website on how it would deal with a leak in the nearby Beaufort Sea. But part of that plan includes "using detailed ice and weather forecasting to warn of extreme conditions" — something it's seemingly already failed to do.
The rig mentioned in that Shell video we featured earlier was the Kulluk. When Shell tried to move the rig in late 2012 to avoid taxes, a Coast Guard report shows the tow master warned the rig it was a bad idea because the frozen conditions "guarantees an ass kicking."
Sure enough, the tow lines broke and Kulluk ran aground, forcing a Coast Guard rescue and eventually leading the Department of the Interior to rescind Shell's Arctic drilling approval. (Video via ODN)
And then there's a February report from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management predicting a 75 percent chance there will be a large oil spill in the Chukchi Sea if drilling begins there.
That figure understandably inspired a flurry of foreboding headlines. But the bureau has since released a larger explanation saying the 75 percent figure is over the course of 77 years if the Chukchi Sea had hundreds of wells in production, not one company exploring the area.
A "large" oil spill is defined as anything leaking 1,000 barrels or more, which pales in comparison to the Exxon Valdez oil spill that dumped an estimated 257,000 barrels or the 4.9 million barrels spilled by Deepwater Horizon.
Ultimately, this is a crystal ball issue. The government has tried to make sure Shell is fully prepared for any situation in the name of a potentially huge economic impact.
But in doing so, it's also accepting the risk a largely untouched ecosystem suffers some kind of significant setback. (Video via Greenpeace)
A risk management consultant who used to work for Shell in the Arctic told The Atlantic, "Have we really worried enough about the potential of a catastrophic blowout? Have we learned enough about the prevention and mitigation of spills? At this point it’s an unanswered question.”
This video includes images from Edward Boatman / CC BY 3.0, Thibault Geffroy / CC BY 3.0, Getty Images, and music by @nop / CC by NC 3.0.
Sources: Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/environmental-activists-in-a-kayak-flotilla-protest-the-news-photo/473372406
KING http://www.king5.com/story/news/local/shell-oil-rig/2015/05/14/shell-oil-rig-seattle-thursday/27292545/
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKwN4xoq25U
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Shell http://www.shell.com/global/future-energy/arctic/oil-spill-prevention-reponse/ready-for-the-unexpected.html
U.S. Coast Guard http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
ODN http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/BOEM-Newsroom/Risk-and-Benefits-in-the-Chukchi-Sea.aspx
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/05/getting-approval-for-arctic-drilling-mightve-been-the-least-of-shells-problems/393056/
Image via: Getty Images / Karen Ducey
"Shell readies the drill bit for first spud!" This weekend crews aboard the Noble Discoverer began drilling at Shell's "Burger" prospect in the Chukchi Sea, ...
"Shell readies the drill bit for first spud!" This weekend crews aboard the Noble Discoverer began drilling at Shell's "Burger" prospect in the Chukchi Sea, ...
Wells, like houses, begin with a foundation. In the Arctic, the foundational well -- also called a top hole - starts with a 20-by-40 foot area excavated into...
Wells, like houses, begin with a foundation. In the Arctic, the foundational well -- also called a top hole - starts with a 20-by-40 foot area excavated into...
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska. American photographer Stev...
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska. American photographer Stev...
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska program has gone to great lengths to make sure a worst-case scenario, such as an oil spill, never takes place. But in the unlikely event that one did, Shell’s onsite oil spill response assets would be deployed within one hour. Shell Alaska maintains a highly capable emergency response planning and management program.
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska program has gone to great lengths to make sure a worst-case scenario, such as an oil spill, never takes place. But in the unlikely event that one did, Shell’s onsite oil spill response assets would be deployed within one hour. Shell Alaska maintains a highly capable emergency response planning and management program.
Video shows what Chukchi Sea means. A marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean, between Chukotka and Alaska.. Chukchi Sea Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say Chukchi Sea. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
Video shows what Chukchi Sea means. A marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean, between Chukotka and Alaska.. Chukchi Sea Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say Chukchi Sea. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
A court decision jeopardizing oil and gas leases in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska represents a triumph of environmental obstructionism—but not of management of ...
A court decision jeopardizing oil and gas leases in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska represents a triumph of environmental obstructionism—but not of management of ...
Jully 11 2009, this video is a fly over of an unknown substance spotted in the ocean between Barrow and Wainwright Alaska. Early reports have it approximatel...
Jully 11 2009, this video is a fly over of an unknown substance spotted in the ocean between Barrow and Wainwright Alaska. Early reports have it approximatel...
Every year, locals and tourists enjoy whale-watching excursions with Hornblower Cruises & Events. Aboard every Hornblower Whale and Dolphin-watching cruise a...
31:57
America's Wildest Places - Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
America's Wildest Places - Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
America's Wildest Places - Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is the most remote and far flung unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System. A place of great distances and gre...
0:31
Shell oil rig
Shell oil rig
Shell oil rig
I cant believe how many Kayaktavists there are in the water there can you see them all , you cant even see the water ... oh wait sorry but never took place in port angeles , we have a protected harbor so the protesters could not do a thing . maybe seattle should think about protecting there harbor as well .
Kayaktavists Take Over Seattle's Port to Protest Shell Oil's Arctic Drilling Rig
Seattleites took a dramatic stand, er paddle, against Arctic oil drilling on Saturday afternoon. Against the backdrop of the Pacific Northwest city's skyline, around 200 activists, local Native Americans, and concerned citizens took to kayak and canoe and
10:28
Alaska Travelogue: "The Iceless Arctic" circa 1940 Educational Pictures 10min
Alaska Travelogue: "The Iceless Arctic" circa 1940 Educational Pictures 10min
Alaska Travelogue: "The Iceless Arctic" circa 1940 Educational Pictures 10min
more at http://travel.quickfound.net/ Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the as...
0:33
Cute Pacific Walruses
Cute Pacific Walruses
Cute Pacific Walruses
A cute Pacific Walruses that we all thought it was a sea lion or seal at Ocean Park Hong Kong, trying to make friends.
4:22
Extremely Long Lifespans and Genesis
Extremely Long Lifespans and Genesis
Extremely Long Lifespans and Genesis
My blog post: http://thisholysword.blogspot.com/2013/07/on-extremely-long-life-spans-in-genesis.html On the Extremely long life spans in Genesis For a while ...
3:41
Bering Sea Expedition 2009
Bering Sea Expedition 2009
Bering Sea Expedition 2009
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....
5:30
White and Barents Sea
White and Barents Sea
White and Barents Sea
At the White sea in northern Russia, orthodox monks have for centuries kept meticulous records. Today, these records provide us with an understanding of how the White Sea looked hundreds of...
43:07
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
The Trans-Siberian Railway is a network of trains connecting Moscow with the Russian Far East as well as the Sea of Japan.
It was built from 1891 to 1916 under the supervision of Russian government ministers that were personally assigned by Tsar Alexander III as well as by his kid, Tsar Nicholas II. Also before it had actually been completed, it brought in travelers which composed of their journeys.
WILD LIFE DOCUMENTARIES - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHII0dQDT30T4lN6qGy8f3Ndm
RELIGION DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHI
1:11
Healy 1201 Gravity Core and Trawl
Healy 1201 Gravity Core and Trawl
Healy 1201 Gravity Core and Trawl
PolarTREC Teacher Deanna Wheeler record science work, gravity core and trawling, on Healy 1201, Ecosystem Study of the Chukchi Shoal.
113:34
Shejire DNA presents - Journey Of Man; A Genetic Odyssey!
Shejire DNA presents - Journey Of Man; A Genetic Odyssey!
Shejire DNA presents - Journey Of Man; A Genetic Odyssey!
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. ...
1:13
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
Source: https://www.youtube.com/user/itnnews
October 01, 2014 - A huge gathering of 35,000 walruses pack onto an Alaskan beach after sea ice melts early "due to climate change". Report by Claire Lomas.
PigmineNews.com: http://www.pigminenews.com
PigmineNews on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PigMineNews
PigmineNews on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PigmineNews
PigMine6 on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/PigMine6/videos
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. s
19:32
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
This is a 19-minute video introduction to Alaska, produced by Deborah Mercy, filmmaker with the Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program. The video was made to greet participants to the 2012 Sea Grant Week, a biennial meeting of the nation's Sea Grant programs and institutions around the nation.
4:27
Alaska, USA 8 Collage Video - youtube.com/tanvideo11
Alaska, USA 8 Collage Video - youtube.com/tanvideo11
Alaska, USA 8 Collage Video - youtube.com/tanvideo11
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Alaska Colonization - Some researchers believe that the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th ...
7:51
True North: Heading Off To Barrow, Alaska - Part Three
True North: Heading Off To Barrow, Alaska - Part Three
True North: Heading Off To Barrow, Alaska - Part Three
Upon arriving in America's northernmost city, DJ Chris Wilcox and I are greeted by councilman (and crazyman) Mike Shults. Mike will serve as our guide throug...
4:29
The Shaman's Journey: Nine Worlds
The Shaman's Journey: Nine Worlds
The Shaman's Journey: Nine Worlds
"Nine Worlds," a film from the multimedia installation "The Shaman's Journey" by Thomas Ross Miller, in the exhibition Siberian Shamans, Linden State Museum ...
137:49
All About - Russia (Extended)
All About - Russia (Extended)
All About - Russia (Extended)
What is Russia?
A report all about Russia for homework/assignment
Russia or (), also officially known as the Russian Federation (), is a country in northern Eurasia. It is a federal semi-presidential republic. From northwest to southeast, Russia shares land borders with Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland (both with Kaliningrad Oblast), Belarus, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, and North Korea. It shares maritime borders with Japan by the Sea of Okhotsk, the US state of Alaska across the Bering Strait and Canada's Arctic islands. At, Russia is the largest country in the world, covering more tha
2:28
Reindeer Herding in Samiland (Alternate Version)
Reindeer Herding in Samiland (Alternate Version)
Reindeer Herding in Samiland (Alternate Version)
Reindeer herding in Samiland/Nuorgam, Finland (Alternate Version)
Read more: www.blonde-gypsy.com
3:01
Day at Venice Beach: Shark Tooth Capital of the World
Day at Venice Beach: Shark Tooth Capital of the World
Day at Venice Beach: Shark Tooth Capital of the World
VISIT FLORIDA's Larry Elliston spent the day on the beaches around Venice where he discovered that this is the place to find shark teeth big and small.
0:27
Wild seal swimming in San Francisco Bay
Wild seal swimming in San Francisco Bay
Wild seal swimming in San Francisco Bay
1:23
Alaska Haul Road, Caribou Hunting - Video Log - Day 6: no caribou
Alaska Haul Road, Caribou Hunting - Video Log - Day 6: no caribou
Alaska Haul Road, Caribou Hunting - Video Log - Day 6: no caribou
via YouTube Capture.
9:09
Winter in Alaska 2010
Winter in Alaska 2010
Winter in Alaska 2010
Trip to Alaska from February 26 to March 07, 2010.
8:55
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Peter Hambro on Petropavlovsk’s future after crucial refinancing
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Peter Hambro on Petropavlovsk’s future after crucial refinancing
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Peter Hambro on Petropavlovsk’s future after crucial refinancing
Peter Hambro, the founder and chairman of Petropavlovsk (LON:POG), is quizzed by Proactive Investors on the road ahead now the Russian gold miner has secured its future following the recent refinancing. Hambro discusses activist shareholder Sapinda’s attempts to hijack the rescue plan and highlights the return of chief executive Pavel Maslovskiy as crucial to the fortunes of the company. He also warns investors against investing in gold companies purely for a rise in the share price. ‘They [investors] should be there for the long-term in order to get the cash flow,’ Hambro says.
Every year, locals and tourists enjoy whale-watching excursions with Hornblower Cruises & Events. Aboard every Hornblower Whale and Dolphin-watching cruise a...
Every year, locals and tourists enjoy whale-watching excursions with Hornblower Cruises & Events. Aboard every Hornblower Whale and Dolphin-watching cruise a...
The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is the most remote and far flung unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System. A place of great distances and gre...
The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is the most remote and far flung unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System. A place of great distances and gre...
I cant believe how many Kayaktavists there are in the water there can you see them all , you cant even see the water ... oh wait sorry but never took place in port angeles , we have a protected harbor so the protesters could not do a thing . maybe seattle should think about protecting there harbor as well .
Kayaktavists Take Over Seattle's Port to Protest Shell Oil's Arctic Drilling Rig
Seattleites took a dramatic stand, er paddle, against Arctic oil drilling on Saturday afternoon. Against the backdrop of the Pacific Northwest city's skyline, around 200 activists, local Native Americans, and concerned citizens took to kayak and canoe and surrounded a giant, Arctic-bound Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig currently making a layover in the Port of Seattle.
Despite the oil giant's rocky history in the Arctic region, last Monday the Obama administration conditionally approved Shell's summer plans to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, north of Alaska. Environmentalists are not happy, and neither are many in Seattle, whose port has become a home base for the two Shell oil rigs' operations. The Port of Seattle's commissioners took heat for their controversial decision to lease one of its piers to Shell, tying the progressive city to fossil fuel extraction and the potential for environmental catastrophe in the Arctic.
As the first of the towering oil rigs arrived in Elliott Bay late last week, a group of "activists, artists, and noisemakers" calling themselves ShellNo organized a series of protests to welcome the oil company. The "Paddle in Seattle" yesterday drew an impressive flotilla of kayaks, canoes, and boats into the Duwamish River, which feeds into the Elliott Bay, to surround the Coast-Guard-protected rig
I cant believe how many Kayaktavists there are in the water there can you see them all , you cant even see the water ... oh wait sorry but never took place in port angeles , we have a protected harbor so the protesters could not do a thing . maybe seattle should think about protecting there harbor as well .
Kayaktavists Take Over Seattle's Port to Protest Shell Oil's Arctic Drilling Rig
Seattleites took a dramatic stand, er paddle, against Arctic oil drilling on Saturday afternoon. Against the backdrop of the Pacific Northwest city's skyline, around 200 activists, local Native Americans, and concerned citizens took to kayak and canoe and surrounded a giant, Arctic-bound Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig currently making a layover in the Port of Seattle.
Despite the oil giant's rocky history in the Arctic region, last Monday the Obama administration conditionally approved Shell's summer plans to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, north of Alaska. Environmentalists are not happy, and neither are many in Seattle, whose port has become a home base for the two Shell oil rigs' operations. The Port of Seattle's commissioners took heat for their controversial decision to lease one of its piers to Shell, tying the progressive city to fossil fuel extraction and the potential for environmental catastrophe in the Arctic.
As the first of the towering oil rigs arrived in Elliott Bay late last week, a group of "activists, artists, and noisemakers" calling themselves ShellNo organized a series of protests to welcome the oil company. The "Paddle in Seattle" yesterday drew an impressive flotilla of kayaks, canoes, and boats into the Duwamish River, which feeds into the Elliott Bay, to surround the Coast-Guard-protected rig
published:20 May 2015
views:5
Alaska Travelogue: "The Iceless Arctic" circa 1940 Educational Pictures 10min
more at http://travel.quickfound.net/ Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the as...
more at http://travel.quickfound.net/ Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the as...
My blog post: http://thisholysword.blogspot.com/2013/07/on-extremely-long-life-spans-in-genesis.html On the Extremely long life spans in Genesis For a while ...
My blog post: http://thisholysword.blogspot.com/2013/07/on-extremely-long-life-spans-in-genesis.html On the Extremely long life spans in Genesis For a while ...
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....
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....
At the White sea in northern Russia, orthodox monks have for centuries kept meticulous records. Today, these records provide us with an understanding of how the White Sea looked hundreds of...
At the White sea in northern Russia, orthodox monks have for centuries kept meticulous records. Today, these records provide us with an understanding of how the White Sea looked hundreds of...
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
The Trans-Siberian Railway is a network of trains connecting Moscow with the Russian Far East as well as the Sea of Japan.
It was built from 1891 to 1916 under the supervision of Russian government ministers that were personally assigned by Tsar Alexander III as well as by his kid, Tsar Nicholas II. Also before it had actually been completed, it brought in travelers which composed of their journeys.
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https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W7SkcT__0yto2kg7MAf9K13
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Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
The Trans-Siberian Railway is a network of trains connecting Moscow with the Russian Far East as well as the Sea of Japan.
It was built from 1891 to 1916 under the supervision of Russian government ministers that were personally assigned by Tsar Alexander III as well as by his kid, Tsar Nicholas II. Also before it had actually been completed, it brought in travelers which composed of their journeys.
WILD LIFE DOCUMENTARIES - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHII0dQDT30T4lN6qGy8f3Ndm
RELIGION DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHIIApKOXifEvgHoQxXeoewaR
HISTORY DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHIIFtbbgSotwgkwCduxG1YlK
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W71IcH4TpwnpGO8jeTaLCOw
ADVENTURE DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHIJ_fsqbIakXabFf44jPBm-E
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W65FNlksFDmEiNBJyrejGK0
HEALTH AND MEDICINE DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHILBMJN0wvBfAsDVXzz0GEIH
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W6rvtEsw4BEPE9_2Gpmg_zG
PEOPLE DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHILcEazOCor7wbrXTIn3gNkX
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W6ZpUXR0A80FgmqfNSXCJ58
TECHNOLOGY DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHIK8tVs-9jdosdco5hbQQl6n
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLihdKCcJi6W7SkcT__0yto2kg7MAf9K13
SUPERNATURAL DOCUMENTARY - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89NZer-bHIIraIeCulhClPA004pED-Vg
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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. ...
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. ...
Source: https://www.youtube.com/user/itnnews
October 01, 2014 - A huge gathering of 35,000 walruses pack onto an Alaskan beach after sea ice melts early "due to climate change". Report by Claire Lomas.
PigmineNews.com: http://www.pigminenews.com
PigmineNews on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PigMineNews
PigmineNews on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PigmineNews
PigMine6 on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/PigMine6/videos
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 106A-117 of the U.S. Copyright Law.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/user/itnnews
October 01, 2014 - A huge gathering of 35,000 walruses pack onto an Alaskan beach after sea ice melts early "due to climate change". Report by Claire Lomas.
PigmineNews.com: http://www.pigminenews.com
PigmineNews on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PigMineNews
PigmineNews on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PigmineNews
PigMine6 on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/PigMine6/videos
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 106A-117 of the U.S. Copyright Law.
published:02 Oct 2014
views:119
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
This is a 19-minute video introduction to Alaska, produced by Deborah Mercy, filmmaker with the Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program. The video was made to greet participants to the 2012 Sea Grant Week, a biennial meeting of the nation's Sea Grant programs and institutions around the nation.
This is a 19-minute video introduction to Alaska, produced by Deborah Mercy, filmmaker with the Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program. The video was made to greet participants to the 2012 Sea Grant Week, a biennial meeting of the nation's Sea Grant programs and institutions around the nation.
published:07 Mar 2015
views:1
Alaska, USA 8 Collage Video - youtube.com/tanvideo11
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Alaska Colonization - Some researchers believe that the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th ...
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Alaska Colonization - Some researchers believe that the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th ...
Upon arriving in America's northernmost city, DJ Chris Wilcox and I are greeted by councilman (and crazyman) Mike Shults. Mike will serve as our guide throug...
Upon arriving in America's northernmost city, DJ Chris Wilcox and I are greeted by councilman (and crazyman) Mike Shults. Mike will serve as our guide throug...
"Nine Worlds," a film from the multimedia installation "The Shaman's Journey" by Thomas Ross Miller, in the exhibition Siberian Shamans, Linden State Museum ...
"Nine Worlds," a film from the multimedia installation "The Shaman's Journey" by Thomas Ross Miller, in the exhibition Siberian Shamans, Linden State Museum ...
What is Russia?
A report all about Russia for homework/assignment
Russia or (), also officially known as the Russian Federation (), is a country in northern Eurasia. It is a federal semi-presidential republic. From northwest to southeast, Russia shares land borders with Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland (both with Kaliningrad Oblast), Belarus, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, and North Korea. It shares maritime borders with Japan by the Sea of Okhotsk, the US state of Alaska across the Bering Strait and Canada's Arctic islands. At, Russia is the largest country in the world, covering more than one-eighth of the Earth's inhabited land area. Russia is also the world's ninth most populous nation with 143 million people as of 2012. Extending across the entirety of northern Asia and much of Eastern Europe, Russia spans nine time zones and incorporates a wide range of environments and landforms.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Text to Speech powered by voice-rss.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Russia_natural_population_growth_rates_2012.PNG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Russian_Tsardom_1500_to_1700.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsardom_of_Russia
2000px-Soviet_Union_-_Russia.svg.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Soviet_Federative_Socialist_Republic
Russia_ethnic.JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Empire
Flag-map_of_Russia.svg from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag-map_of_Russia.svg
COA-map_of_Russia.png from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:COA-map_of_Russia.png
Miss_Russia_2010.JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Russia_2010
World_around_1900.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Bear
What is Russia?
A report all about Russia for homework/assignment
Russia or (), also officially known as the Russian Federation (), is a country in northern Eurasia. It is a federal semi-presidential republic. From northwest to southeast, Russia shares land borders with Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland (both with Kaliningrad Oblast), Belarus, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, and North Korea. It shares maritime borders with Japan by the Sea of Okhotsk, the US state of Alaska across the Bering Strait and Canada's Arctic islands. At, Russia is the largest country in the world, covering more than one-eighth of the Earth's inhabited land area. Russia is also the world's ninth most populous nation with 143 million people as of 2012. Extending across the entirety of northern Asia and much of Eastern Europe, Russia spans nine time zones and incorporates a wide range of environments and landforms.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Text to Speech powered by voice-rss.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
Russia_natural_population_growth_rates_2012.PNG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Russian_Tsardom_1500_to_1700.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsardom_of_Russia
2000px-Soviet_Union_-_Russia.svg.png from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Soviet_Federative_Socialist_Republic
Russia_ethnic.JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Empire
Flag-map_of_Russia.svg from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag-map_of_Russia.svg
COA-map_of_Russia.png from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:COA-map_of_Russia.png
Miss_Russia_2010.JPG from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Russia_2010
World_around_1900.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Bear
VISIT FLORIDA's Larry Elliston spent the day on the beaches around Venice where he discovered that this is the place to find shark teeth big and small.
VISIT FLORIDA's Larry Elliston spent the day on the beaches around Venice where he discovered that this is the place to find shark teeth big and small.
Peter Hambro, the founder and chairman of Petropavlovsk (LON:POG), is quizzed by Proactive Investors on the road ahead now the Russian gold miner has secured its future following the recent refinancing. Hambro discusses activist shareholder Sapinda’s attempts to hijack the rescue plan and highlights the return of chief executive Pavel Maslovskiy as crucial to the fortunes of the company. He also warns investors against investing in gold companies purely for a rise in the share price. ‘They [investors] should be there for the long-term in order to get the cash flow,’ Hambro says.
Peter Hambro, the founder and chairman of Petropavlovsk (LON:POG), is quizzed by Proactive Investors on the road ahead now the Russian gold miner has secured its future following the recent refinancing. Hambro discusses activist shareholder Sapinda’s attempts to hijack the rescue plan and highlights the return of chief executive Pavel Maslovskiy as crucial to the fortunes of the company. He also warns investors against investing in gold companies purely for a rise in the share price. ‘They [investors] should be there for the long-term in order to get the cash flow,’ Hambro says.
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Royal Dutch Shell has stopped Arctic oil and gas exploration off the coast of Alaska after "disappointing" results from a key well in the Chukchi Sea.
In a surprise announcement, the company said it would end exploration off Alaska "for the foreseeable future".
Shell said it did not find sufficient amounts of oil and gas in the Burger J well to warrant further exploration.
The company has spent about $7bn (£4.5bn) on Arctic offshore development in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.
"Shell continues to see important exploration potential in the basin, and the area is likely to ultimately be of strategic importance to Alaska and the US," said M
9:59
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
Catherine Berchok's research in the Chukchi: Ocean sounds, currents, climate change and their effects and potential effects on marine mammals.
0:11
Fall waves
Fall waves
Fall waves
Chukchi Sea, after snowfall, October 14, 2013
11:50
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
Mary Sweeters, Greenpeace USA, joins Thom. The president yesterday continued to confuse and anger climate activists and environmentalists by giving Shell .
John Deans, Greenpeace USA joins Thom. The Obama administration gave Royal Dutch Shell permission last month to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea in the .
Cruiser m/v Braemar with apprx.1000 British Tourists on board arrived to Szczecin ( former Stettin) and was Lying Afloat at Wały Chrobrego ( former Haken .
Sharks head north after migrating south for the winter. Incredible aerial video shows hundreds of sharks returning to Louisiana waters.
0:11
Shell NO
Shell NO
Shell NO
Shell still plans to drill in the arctic.
Sign here:
https://www.savethearctic.org/
Source:
http://www.onearth.org/earthwire/drilling-chukchi-sea
photos by:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/backbone_campaign/18875132502/sizes/l
by Backbone Campaign
https://www.flickr.com/photos/greenpeacemuenchen/7789687364/
Greenpeace München
1:21
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
The Polar Pioneer drilling rig, leased by Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska, leaves the port of Seattle on Monday, June 15, 2015. Opponents of Shell's Arctic drilling plans, known as kayaktivists, are in front of the rig, which is moved by tugboats, to try and prevent it from leaving Seattle after a stay of about a month at the city's port. The rig is en route to Dutch Harbour, Alaska, from where it will be moved to the Chukchi Sea.
23:19
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
Cultures of Energy Spring Symposium - 2015
As we consider how various cultures of energy relate to global warming, we can see differing visions of the human future already sparking into conflict. Climate wars and drought-driven fighting threaten civic stability from Raqqa to the Chukchi Sea. Approaching the existential problem of learning to live in the Anthropocene in terms of both the political structures of energy production and the mediating forces of social energetics, I argue for the value of philosophical contemplation, or more substantially learning to die, as a necessary practice of interrupting what Greek philosopher Heraclitus cal
2:30
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic riches beckon. Anglo-Dutch oil company Shell has received renewed permission from the US government to prospect in Alaska's Chukchi Sea.
Washington gave Shell a permit in 2012, then called a halt when a rig broke loose, ringing environmental alarms, and concerns are far from being resolved to everyone's satisfaction.
Now, more parts of Alaskan waters are close to opening. The Chukchi and Beaufort Seas skirt the state's northern coast, together the entire US Arctic domain.
Ecologist gr…
READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2015/05/13/arctic-oil-prospecting-imminent-as-shell-given-go-ahead
What are the top stories today? Click to wat
1:39
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Shell has won conditional approval to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, a move that's infuriating for environmentalists.
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
Score a major victory for the oil industry as Shell now has approval to drill offshore in the Arctic, though there are restrictions.
Late Monday, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued this letter listing 18 separate conditions for drilling in the Chukchi Sea, opening the door for Shell to invest another $1 billion in the region analysts believe holds vast oil reserves. (Video via Shell)
The feds' decision is a huge blow for environmentalists who argue a mistake i
1:11
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
Washington: US President Barack Obama's administration on Monday approved petroleum giant Shell's request to drill for oil and gas in the Arctic under certain conditions, despite opposition from environmental groups.
The decision by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted Shell the right to explore the Chukchi Sea as long as the Anglo-Dutch firm gets the correct permits from the agencies that regulate the environment and marine mammal health.
"We have taken a thoughtful approach to carefully considering potential exploration in the Chukchi Sea," BOEM director Abigail Ross Hopper said.
47:26
Crude Awakening full hour
Crude Awakening full hour
Crude Awakening full hour
The Exxon Valdez oil spill was a clear warning of the dangers of oil production in the Arctic. It's an issue that is even more urgent now as climate change in the region accelerates a potential resource boom. This CBS News documentary was produced by Andrew Tkach and the rest of the 48 Hours team.
3:31
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
The Chukchi Sea lease sale, Sale 193, was held in 2008 by the Bush administration. It offered nearly 30 million acres in the Chukchi Sea for oil drilling.
0:08
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
Virginia Ungudruk launching Nanook for Chukchi Sea UAS mission
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Royal Dutch Shell has stopped Arctic oil and gas exploration off the coast of Alaska after "disappointing" results from a key well in the Chukchi Sea.
In a surprise announcement, the company said it would end exploration off Alaska "for the foreseeable future".
Shell said it did not find sufficient amounts of oil and gas in the Burger J well to warrant further exploration.
The company has spent about $7bn (£4.5bn) on Arctic offshore development in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.
"Shell continues to see important exploration potential in the basin, and the area is likely to ultimately be of strategic importance to Alaska and the US," said Marvin Odum, president of Shell USA.
"However, this is a clearly disappointing exploration outcome for this part of the basin."
Environmental groups oppose Arctic offshore drilling and say industrial activity and more greenhouse gases will harm polar bears, walrus and ice seals.
Over the summer, protesters in kayaks unsuccessfully tried to block Arctic-bound Shell vessels in Seattle and Portland, Oregon.
Shell said it would take financial charges as a result of halting exploration, which it would disclose during its third quarter results. The company has existing contracts for rigs, ships and other assets.
Royal Dutch Shell has stopped Arctic oil and gas exploration off the coast of Alaska after "disappointing" results from a key well in the Chukchi Sea.
In a surprise announcement, the company said it would end exploration off Alaska "for the foreseeable future".
Shell said it did not find sufficient amounts of oil and gas in the Burger J well to warrant further exploration.
The company has spent about $7bn (£4.5bn) on Arctic offshore development in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.
"Shell continues to see important exploration potential in the basin, and the area is likely to ultimately be of strategic importance to Alaska and the US," said Marvin Odum, president of Shell USA.
"However, this is a clearly disappointing exploration outcome for this part of the basin."
Environmental groups oppose Arctic offshore drilling and say industrial activity and more greenhouse gases will harm polar bears, walrus and ice seals.
Over the summer, protesters in kayaks unsuccessfully tried to block Arctic-bound Shell vessels in Seattle and Portland, Oregon.
Shell said it would take financial charges as a result of halting exploration, which it would disclose during its third quarter results. The company has existing contracts for rigs, ships and other assets.
Mary Sweeters, Greenpeace USA, joins Thom. The president yesterday continued to confuse and anger climate activists and environmentalists by giving Shell .
John Deans, Greenpeace USA joins Thom. The Obama administration gave Royal Dutch Shell permission last month to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea in the .
Cruiser m/v Braemar with apprx.1000 British Tourists on board arrived to Szczecin ( former Stettin) and was Lying Afloat at Wały Chrobrego ( former Haken .
Sharks head north after migrating south for the winter. Incredible aerial video shows hundreds of sharks returning to Louisiana waters.
Mary Sweeters, Greenpeace USA, joins Thom. The president yesterday continued to confuse and anger climate activists and environmentalists by giving Shell .
John Deans, Greenpeace USA joins Thom. The Obama administration gave Royal Dutch Shell permission last month to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea in the .
Cruiser m/v Braemar with apprx.1000 British Tourists on board arrived to Szczecin ( former Stettin) and was Lying Afloat at Wały Chrobrego ( former Haken .
Sharks head north after migrating south for the winter. Incredible aerial video shows hundreds of sharks returning to Louisiana waters.
Shell still plans to drill in the arctic.
Sign here:
https://www.savethearctic.org/
Source:
http://www.onearth.org/earthwire/drilling-chukchi-sea
photos by:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/backbone_campaign/18875132502/sizes/l
by Backbone Campaign
https://www.flickr.com/photos/greenpeacemuenchen/7789687364/
Greenpeace München
Shell still plans to drill in the arctic.
Sign here:
https://www.savethearctic.org/
Source:
http://www.onearth.org/earthwire/drilling-chukchi-sea
photos by:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/backbone_campaign/18875132502/sizes/l
by Backbone Campaign
https://www.flickr.com/photos/greenpeacemuenchen/7789687364/
Greenpeace München
The Polar Pioneer drilling rig, leased by Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska, leaves the port of Seattle on Monday, June 15, 2015. Opponents of Shell's Arctic drilling plans, known as kayaktivists, are in front of the rig, which is moved by tugboats, to try and prevent it from leaving Seattle after a stay of about a month at the city's port. The rig is en route to Dutch Harbour, Alaska, from where it will be moved to the Chukchi Sea.
The Polar Pioneer drilling rig, leased by Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska, leaves the port of Seattle on Monday, June 15, 2015. Opponents of Shell's Arctic drilling plans, known as kayaktivists, are in front of the rig, which is moved by tugboats, to try and prevent it from leaving Seattle after a stay of about a month at the city's port. The rig is en route to Dutch Harbour, Alaska, from where it will be moved to the Chukchi Sea.
Cultures of Energy Spring Symposium - 2015
As we consider how various cultures of energy relate to global warming, we can see differing visions of the human future already sparking into conflict. Climate wars and drought-driven fighting threaten civic stability from Raqqa to the Chukchi Sea. Approaching the existential problem of learning to live in the Anthropocene in terms of both the political structures of energy production and the mediating forces of social energetics, I argue for the value of philosophical contemplation, or more substantially learning to die, as a necessary practice of interrupting what Greek philosopher Heraclitus called “the compulsion of strife.”
Cultures of Energy Spring Symposium - 2015
As we consider how various cultures of energy relate to global warming, we can see differing visions of the human future already sparking into conflict. Climate wars and drought-driven fighting threaten civic stability from Raqqa to the Chukchi Sea. Approaching the existential problem of learning to live in the Anthropocene in terms of both the political structures of energy production and the mediating forces of social energetics, I argue for the value of philosophical contemplation, or more substantially learning to die, as a necessary practice of interrupting what Greek philosopher Heraclitus called “the compulsion of strife.”
published:16 Jun 2015
views:0
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic riches beckon. Anglo-Dutch oil company Shell has received renewed permission from the US government to prospect in Alaska's Chukchi Sea.
Washington gave Shell a permit in 2012, then called a halt when a rig broke loose, ringing environmental alarms, and concerns are far from being resolved to everyone's satisfaction.
Now, more parts of Alaskan waters are close to opening. The Chukchi and Beaufort Seas skirt the state's northern coast, together the entire US Arctic domain.
Ecologist gr…
READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2015/05/13/arctic-oil-prospecting-imminent-as-shell-given-go-ahead
What are the top stories today? Click to watch: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSyY1udCyYqBeDOz400FlseNGNqReKkFd
euronews: the most watched news channel in Europe
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Arctic riches beckon. Anglo-Dutch oil company Shell has received renewed permission from the US government to prospect in Alaska's Chukchi Sea.
Washington gave Shell a permit in 2012, then called a halt when a rig broke loose, ringing environmental alarms, and concerns are far from being resolved to everyone's satisfaction.
Now, more parts of Alaskan waters are close to opening. The Chukchi and Beaufort Seas skirt the state's northern coast, together the entire US Arctic domain.
Ecologist gr…
READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2015/05/13/arctic-oil-prospecting-imminent-as-shell-given-go-ahead
What are the top stories today? Click to watch: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSyY1udCyYqBeDOz400FlseNGNqReKkFd
euronews: the most watched news channel in Europe
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=euronews
euronews is available in 13 languages: https://www.youtube.com/user/euronewsnetwork/channels
In English:
Website: http://www.euronews.com/news
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/euronews
Twitter: http://twitter.com/euronews
Google+: http://google.com/+euronews
VKontakte: http://vk.com/en.euronews
published:14 May 2015
views:131
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Shell has won conditional approval to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, a move that's infuriating for environmentalists.
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
Score a major victory for the oil industry as Shell now has approval to drill offshore in the Arctic, though there are restrictions.
Late Monday, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued this letter listing 18 separate conditions for drilling in the Chukchi Sea, opening the door for Shell to invest another $1 billion in the region analysts believe holds vast oil reserves. (Video via Shell)
The feds' decision is a huge blow for environmentalists who argue a mistake in the Arctic could be even more devastating than the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The region for proposed drilling has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is more remote, making it hard for responders to reach a disaster if something went wrong. (Video via RT & U.S. Geological Survey)
"Right where Shell proposes to be drilling, we found more coral than people have seen in most other places in the world's oceans," said John Hocevar, a marine biologist for Greenpeace. "The pink, fuzzy bits — those are the soft corals and you see them fairly often."
Shell, however, has done a lot to try to ease concerns over its drilling plans in the Arctic, including this video released in 2012 with details on how its equipment would manage a blowout.
President Obama initially gave Shell the go-ahead to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, but that same rig featured in the Shell video ran aground on New Years Eve 2012. A U.S. Coast Guard team rescued some crew members, towed the rig ashore and the Department of the Interior banned Shell from drilling until the company addressed safety issues. (Video via ODN)
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management also released this letter finding no significant impact on human environment or physical environment, though the acting regional supervisor acknowledged the operation would be "highly controversial."
This video includes images from Getty Images and music from Broke for Free / CC BY NC 3.0.
Sources:
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/video/ruble-prices-for-fuel-sit-illuminated-on-a-sign-outside-a-news-footage/456656800
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-EP-Conditional-Approval.pdf
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/president-barack-obama-delivers-a-statement-about-the-news-photo/453387932
ODN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFs7n9u6J-E
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-FONSI.pdf
Image via: Getty Images / Jeff J. Mitchell
Shell has won conditional approval to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, a move that's infuriating for environmentalists.
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
Score a major victory for the oil industry as Shell now has approval to drill offshore in the Arctic, though there are restrictions.
Late Monday, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued this letter listing 18 separate conditions for drilling in the Chukchi Sea, opening the door for Shell to invest another $1 billion in the region analysts believe holds vast oil reserves. (Video via Shell)
The feds' decision is a huge blow for environmentalists who argue a mistake in the Arctic could be even more devastating than the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The region for proposed drilling has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is more remote, making it hard for responders to reach a disaster if something went wrong. (Video via RT & U.S. Geological Survey)
"Right where Shell proposes to be drilling, we found more coral than people have seen in most other places in the world's oceans," said John Hocevar, a marine biologist for Greenpeace. "The pink, fuzzy bits — those are the soft corals and you see them fairly often."
Shell, however, has done a lot to try to ease concerns over its drilling plans in the Arctic, including this video released in 2012 with details on how its equipment would manage a blowout.
President Obama initially gave Shell the go-ahead to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, but that same rig featured in the Shell video ran aground on New Years Eve 2012. A U.S. Coast Guard team rescued some crew members, towed the rig ashore and the Department of the Interior banned Shell from drilling until the company addressed safety issues. (Video via ODN)
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management also released this letter finding no significant impact on human environment or physical environment, though the acting regional supervisor acknowledged the operation would be "highly controversial."
This video includes images from Getty Images and music from Broke for Free / CC BY NC 3.0.
Sources:
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/video/ruble-prices-for-fuel-sit-illuminated-on-a-sign-outside-a-news-footage/456656800
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-EP-Conditional-Approval.pdf
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/president-barack-obama-delivers-a-statement-about-the-news-photo/453387932
ODN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFs7n9u6J-E
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-FONSI.pdf
Image via: Getty Images / Jeff J. Mitchell
Washington: US President Barack Obama's administration on Monday approved petroleum giant Shell's request to drill for oil and gas in the Arctic under certain conditions, despite opposition from environmental groups.
The decision by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted Shell the right to explore the Chukchi Sea as long as the Anglo-Dutch firm gets the correct permits from the agencies that regulate the environment and marine mammal health.
"We have taken a thoughtful approach to carefully considering potential exploration in the Chukchi Sea," BOEM director Abigail Ross Hopper said.
Washington: US President Barack Obama's administration on Monday approved petroleum giant Shell's request to drill for oil and gas in the Arctic under certain conditions, despite opposition from environmental groups.
The decision by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted Shell the right to explore the Chukchi Sea as long as the Anglo-Dutch firm gets the correct permits from the agencies that regulate the environment and marine mammal health.
"We have taken a thoughtful approach to carefully considering potential exploration in the Chukchi Sea," BOEM director Abigail Ross Hopper said.
The Exxon Valdez oil spill was a clear warning of the dangers of oil production in the Arctic. It's an issue that is even more urgent now as climate change in the region accelerates a potential resource boom. This CBS News documentary was produced by Andrew Tkach and the rest of the 48 Hours team.
The Exxon Valdez oil spill was a clear warning of the dangers of oil production in the Arctic. It's an issue that is even more urgent now as climate change in the region accelerates a potential resource boom. This CBS News documentary was produced by Andrew Tkach and the rest of the 48 Hours team.
published:27 Apr 2015
views:6
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
The Chukchi Sea lease sale, Sale 193, was held in 2008 by the Bush administration. It offered nearly 30 million acres in the Chukchi Sea for oil drilling.
The Chukchi Sea lease sale, Sale 193, was held in 2008 by the Bush administration. It offered nearly 30 million acres in the Chukchi Sea for oil drilling.
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
http://www.YouTube.com/user/BourgeoisPhotography
www.BourgeoisPhotography.com
I don't know if Barack Obama will actually visit the top of the world, but if he did, this is what he would see... is this global warming? climate change?
I personally don't know how true global warming or climate change or whatever you want to call it is... BUT what I can tell you and show you through this thoughtful video that I shot, is that the city/village of Barrow, Alaska, the United States most northern city, is living at the edge of the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea in the Arctic Ocean and there appears to be opportunity here for concern.
Through this tho
24:34
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
The Chukchi are an indigenous people living in Russia's far northeast. As the climate is too inhospitable to grow crops, the sea has always been their main source of food. The population of 16,000 subsists primarily on a diet of marine mammals, the meat from which provides locals with enough fat-rich food to see them through the harsh winters. By and large, hunting species such as the grey whale is illegal. However, as the Chukchi's survival and traditional way of life is dependent on this activity, the International Whaling Commission grants them an annual whaling quota. Moreover, the meat from these animals is not sold, but distributed amon
Wildlife Documentary: Wild Alaska Animals (Wild Alaska Documentary)
The wildlife documentary, a great wild Alaska documentary, is about wild Alaska animals. This animal life documentary shows us how animal life evolves in Alaska during spring. The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
In this wild Alaska documentary, you can see the following animals: Walruses, polar bears, brown bears, grey wolves, caribous.
Polar bear: Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. D
21:37
Sea hunters in Russia's east tell stories through bone carving
Sea hunters in Russia's east tell stories through bone carving
Sea hunters in Russia's east tell stories through bone carving
For hundreds of years, the Chukchi and the Eskimos have lived on the shores of Uelen by the Bering Strait, and preserved their traditions of hunting at sea. This lifestyle gave rise to the...
140:55
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming - 2008-01-17 - Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy ...
34:46
ns12 cs 14
ns12 cs 14
ns12 cs 14
Video from ShoreZone Chukchi Sea 2012 aerial survey, Tape 14.
26:16
Chukchi: Where the world ends
Chukchi: Where the world ends
Chukchi: Where the world ends
The word "Chukchi" means "rich in reindeer". These people who live in the Russian Far East can't imagine their life without the usual Chukchi routine: huntin...
139:27
January 17th, 2008: Select Committee Hearing, "The Future of the Polar Bear"
January 17th, 2008: Select Committee Hearing, "The Future of the Polar Bear"
January 17th, 2008: Select Committee Hearing, "The Future of the Polar Bear"
Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming questioned members of the Bush Administration regarding...
34:50
Climate Change Impacts in the Arctic Ocean - Kevin Arrigo (SETI Talks)
Climate Change Impacts in the Arctic Ocean - Kevin Arrigo (SETI Talks)
Climate Change Impacts in the Arctic Ocean - Kevin Arrigo (SETI Talks)
SETI Talks Archive: http://seti.org/talks Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is in rapid decline. This reduction in ice extent and thickness has resulted in a longe...
20:44
Eskimo Hunters in Northwestern Alaska 1949 United World Films
Eskimo Hunters in Northwestern Alaska 1949 United World Films
Eskimo Hunters in Northwestern Alaska 1949 United World Films
more at http://news.quickfound.net/states/alaska.html First person narrative describing the lives of Eskimos on the coast of Alaska. Public domain film from ...
85:49
A New Security Architecture for the Arctic: A North American Perspective
A New Security Architecture for the Arctic: A North American Perspective
A New Security Architecture for the Arctic: A North American Perspective
Potential offshore drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, a scarcity of icebreakers and critical infrastructure, and a dramatic increase in shipping and ...
28:41
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
more at http://news.quickfound.net/cities/fairbanks.html
'FEATURES ACTIVITY OF ESKIMO SCOUTS IN THE ALASKA NATIONAL GUARD AS THEY OPERATE FROM FISHING VILLAGE OF SHISHMAREF, NEAR ARCTIC CIRCLE. '
'A century ago, Alaska, our most northern frontier, was popularly called "Seward's Folly." The top of the world seemed remote then. Today, the polar concept has changed our ideas of distances and now that which was once considered a wasteland, is of great military importance and a vital link in our preparations to insure security. The mission of our Army in Alaska is to repel any aggressive action, and be prepared to hit back. An important segment
43:41
The Wildlife of Alaska
The Wildlife of Alaska
The Wildlife of Alaska
The Wildlife of Alaska
Video 1: The national wildlife refugees of alaska
Video 2: Wildlife conservation - Wood Bison, Buffalo on the run
Video 3: Becharof National wildlife Refuge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
Brown bear[edit]
Brown bear at Katmai National Park.
Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.[1]
Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the minor exceptions of the islands west of Unimak in the Aleutians, the islands s
68:54
The Dickey Center at Dartmouth: "Who 'Owns' the North Pole and Who Decides?
The Dickey Center at Dartmouth: "Who 'Owns' the North Pole and Who Decides?
The Dickey Center at Dartmouth: "Who 'Owns' the North Pole and Who Decides?
Betsy Baker, Associate Professor at Vermont Law School and Senior Fellow for Oceans and Energy at the Institute for Energy and the Environment "Who 'Owns' th...
24:04
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (English)
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (English)
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (English)
This film (narrated in English) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of t
58:50
Can the Environment and Technology Coexist?
Can the Environment and Technology Coexist?
Can the Environment and Technology Coexist?
Filmed Tuesday, March 4, 2014 at 2:30pm Is drilling for Arctic oil worth the risk to the environment? America's Arctic Ocean, the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, ...
24:04
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (Inupiaq)
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (Inupiaq)
Arctic Currents: A Year in the Life of the Bowhead Whale (Inupiaq)
This film (narrated in Inupiaq) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of t
42:35
BERING SEA GOLD SE4 EP9 THE BATTLE FOR TOMCOD
BERING SEA GOLD SE4 EP9 THE BATTLE FOR TOMCOD
BERING SEA GOLD SE4 EP9 THE BATTLE FOR TOMCOD
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
http://www.YouTube.com/user/BourgeoisPhotography
www.BourgeoisPhotography.com
I don't know if Barack Obama will actually visit the top of the world, but if he did, this is what he would see... is this global warming? climate change?
I personally don't know how true global warming or climate change or whatever you want to call it is... BUT what I can tell you and show you through this thoughtful video that I shot, is that the city/village of Barrow, Alaska, the United States most northern city, is living at the edge of the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea in the Arctic Ocean and there appears to be opportunity here for concern.
Through this thoughtful video I put together, I wanted to give YOU the viewer a chance to see what Barack Obama will see if he TRULY comes to visit the high Arctic of Alaska. I live here and I can see this effort to keep the ocean out every day...
The day that I filmed this the tide was not exceptionally high, thank goodness.
The Inupiaq people have been living at the top of the world for thousands of years and living peacefully here with nature...
It now appears that some of the oldest homes and structures are getting dangerously close to becoming one with the Chukchi Sea and the Beaufort Sea along with the full on Arctic Ocean here in Barrow.
Take a look at this compelling video and tell me what you think... where your thoughts lead you. It is purposefully shot in long shot pieces to give you time to reflect on what you see and come to your own conclusions...
I personally don't have an opinion one way or another, I have been living in Barrow for 8 months and now living in Alaska total 17 years.
I can tell you that I have had an elder here tell me that 50 feet of coastline has vanished in the last 10 years. Period.
All I can comment on is the obvious signs that I see the people of this region doing to protect the shore, their land, and their heritage.
Is it global warming or climate change along coastal Alaska?
President Barack Obama needs to see this video and decide if he should come here. We SEEM to be on the front lines of global warming and climate change.
Please put your thoughts below.
http://www.YouTube.com/user/BourgeoisPhotography
www.BourgeoisPhotography.com
I don't know if Barack Obama will actually visit the top of the world, but if he did, this is what he would see... is this global warming? climate change?
I personally don't know how true global warming or climate change or whatever you want to call it is... BUT what I can tell you and show you through this thoughtful video that I shot, is that the city/village of Barrow, Alaska, the United States most northern city, is living at the edge of the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea in the Arctic Ocean and there appears to be opportunity here for concern.
Through this thoughtful video I put together, I wanted to give YOU the viewer a chance to see what Barack Obama will see if he TRULY comes to visit the high Arctic of Alaska. I live here and I can see this effort to keep the ocean out every day...
The day that I filmed this the tide was not exceptionally high, thank goodness.
The Inupiaq people have been living at the top of the world for thousands of years and living peacefully here with nature...
It now appears that some of the oldest homes and structures are getting dangerously close to becoming one with the Chukchi Sea and the Beaufort Sea along with the full on Arctic Ocean here in Barrow.
Take a look at this compelling video and tell me what you think... where your thoughts lead you. It is purposefully shot in long shot pieces to give you time to reflect on what you see and come to your own conclusions...
I personally don't have an opinion one way or another, I have been living in Barrow for 8 months and now living in Alaska total 17 years.
I can tell you that I have had an elder here tell me that 50 feet of coastline has vanished in the last 10 years. Period.
All I can comment on is the obvious signs that I see the people of this region doing to protect the shore, their land, and their heritage.
Is it global warming or climate change along coastal Alaska?
President Barack Obama needs to see this video and decide if he should come here. We SEEM to be on the front lines of global warming and climate change.
Please put your thoughts below.
published:23 Aug 2015
views:13
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
The Chukchi are an indigenous people living in Russia's far northeast. As the climate is too inhospitable to grow crops, the sea has always been their main source of food. The population of 16,000 subsists primarily on a diet of marine mammals, the meat from which provides locals with enough fat-rich food to see them through the harsh winters. By and large, hunting species such as the grey whale is illegal. However, as the Chukchi's survival and traditional way of life is dependent on this activity, the International Whaling Commission grants them an annual whaling quota. Moreover, the meat from these animals is not sold, but distributed among the local population for free.
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The Chukchi are an indigenous people living in Russia's far northeast. As the climate is too inhospitable to grow crops, the sea has always been their main source of food. The population of 16,000 subsists primarily on a diet of marine mammals, the meat from which provides locals with enough fat-rich food to see them through the harsh winters. By and large, hunting species such as the grey whale is illegal. However, as the Chukchi's survival and traditional way of life is dependent on this activity, the International Whaling Commission grants them an annual whaling quota. Moreover, the meat from these animals is not sold, but distributed among the local population for free.
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Instagram http://instagram.com/rt
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT
Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.
Wildlife Documentary: Wild Alaska Animals (Wild Alaska Documentary)
The wildlife documentary, a great wild Alaska documentary, is about wild Alaska animals. This animal life documentary shows us how animal life evolves in Alaska during spring. The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
In this wild Alaska documentary, you can see the following animals: Walruses, polar bears, brown bears, grey wolves, caribous.
Polar bear: Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.
Grey wolf: Alaska is home to the largest remaining population of gray wolves in the United States. Though one of Alaska’s most iconic creatures, the state has a long history of killing wolves through various means. Early in the 20th century, wolves were hunted with virtually no controls, and bounties were common.
But the wolf’s fight in Alaska hasn’t been against extinction — the state’s wolf population is healthy, with estimates ranging from 7,000 to 12,000. Instead, their fight has been one against inadequately monitored control programs which aim to increase game populations through controversial methods. As game populations declined in the 60s and 70s, state-sponsored wolf control commenced and included aerial gunning.
Mink: Mink are found in every region of Alaska except Kodiak Island, the Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea offshore islands, and most of the North Slope. Mink are opportunistic hunters, eating almost anything that they can kill; important food sources include fish, birds, bird eggs, insects, crabs, clams, and small mammals. Wolves, foxes, hawks, owls, lynx, and river otters occasionally prey on mink, but the effects of predation on mink population have been studied relatively little. In Alaska, Mink are sometimes trapped for their fur.
Brown Bear: Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the exclusion of some outlying islands. Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies of brown bear that is the largest of all the Brown Bears and second only to the Polar Bear in size. The density of brown bear populations in Alaska varies according to the availability of food, and in some places is as high as one bear per square mile.
Caribou: Alaska is home to the Rangifer tarandus granti subspecies of caribou. Caribou in Alaska generally are found in tundra and mountain regions, where there are few trees. However, many herds spend the winter months in the boreal forest areas. Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state. The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).
Animal Life TV brings you a wide range of full length wildlife documentaries for children like wild Alaska animals documentary, polar bear documentary, brown bear documentary and animal documentary for kids.
If you enjoy watching full length wildlife documentaries for children like animal documentary for kids, wild Alaska animals documentary, polar bear documentary and brown bear documentary, please subscribe here:
http://goo.gl/AiBYzo
Tags-Please Ignore
“animal life documentary”, “wildlife documentaries full length”, “animal documentary for children”, “Animal Documentary Full Length”, “animal documentary for kids”, “wild Alaska animals”, “wild Alaska documentary”, “polar bear documentary”, “wildlife documentary for children”
Sources
http://www.defenders.org/gray-wolf/gray-wolves-alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_of_Alaska
Wildlife Documentary: Wild Alaska Animals (Wild Alaska Documentary)
The wildlife documentary, a great wild Alaska documentary, is about wild Alaska animals. This animal life documentary shows us how animal life evolves in Alaska during spring. The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
In this wild Alaska documentary, you can see the following animals: Walruses, polar bears, brown bears, grey wolves, caribous.
Polar bear: Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.
Grey wolf: Alaska is home to the largest remaining population of gray wolves in the United States. Though one of Alaska’s most iconic creatures, the state has a long history of killing wolves through various means. Early in the 20th century, wolves were hunted with virtually no controls, and bounties were common.
But the wolf’s fight in Alaska hasn’t been against extinction — the state’s wolf population is healthy, with estimates ranging from 7,000 to 12,000. Instead, their fight has been one against inadequately monitored control programs which aim to increase game populations through controversial methods. As game populations declined in the 60s and 70s, state-sponsored wolf control commenced and included aerial gunning.
Mink: Mink are found in every region of Alaska except Kodiak Island, the Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea offshore islands, and most of the North Slope. Mink are opportunistic hunters, eating almost anything that they can kill; important food sources include fish, birds, bird eggs, insects, crabs, clams, and small mammals. Wolves, foxes, hawks, owls, lynx, and river otters occasionally prey on mink, but the effects of predation on mink population have been studied relatively little. In Alaska, Mink are sometimes trapped for their fur.
Brown Bear: Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the exclusion of some outlying islands. Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies of brown bear that is the largest of all the Brown Bears and second only to the Polar Bear in size. The density of brown bear populations in Alaska varies according to the availability of food, and in some places is as high as one bear per square mile.
Caribou: Alaska is home to the Rangifer tarandus granti subspecies of caribou. Caribou in Alaska generally are found in tundra and mountain regions, where there are few trees. However, many herds spend the winter months in the boreal forest areas. Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state. The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).
Animal Life TV brings you a wide range of full length wildlife documentaries for children like wild Alaska animals documentary, polar bear documentary, brown bear documentary and animal documentary for kids.
If you enjoy watching full length wildlife documentaries for children like animal documentary for kids, wild Alaska animals documentary, polar bear documentary and brown bear documentary, please subscribe here:
http://goo.gl/AiBYzo
Tags-Please Ignore
“animal life documentary”, “wildlife documentaries full length”, “animal documentary for children”, “Animal Documentary Full Length”, “animal documentary for kids”, “wild Alaska animals”, “wild Alaska documentary”, “polar bear documentary”, “wildlife documentary for children”
Sources
http://www.defenders.org/gray-wolf/gray-wolves-alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_of_Alaska
published:04 Oct 2015
views:2
Sea hunters in Russia's east tell stories through bone carving
For hundreds of years, the Chukchi and the Eskimos have lived on the shores of Uelen by the Bering Strait, and preserved their traditions of hunting at sea. This lifestyle gave rise to the...
For hundreds of years, the Chukchi and the Eskimos have lived on the shores of Uelen by the Bering Strait, and preserved their traditions of hunting at sea. This lifestyle gave rise to the...
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming - 2008-01-17 - Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy ...
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming - 2008-01-17 - Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy ...
The word "Chukchi" means "rich in reindeer". These people who live in the Russian Far East can't imagine their life without the usual Chukchi routine: huntin...
The word "Chukchi" means "rich in reindeer". These people who live in the Russian Far East can't imagine their life without the usual Chukchi routine: huntin...
Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming questioned members of the Bush Administration regarding...
Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming questioned members of the Bush Administration regarding...
SETI Talks Archive: http://seti.org/talks Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is in rapid decline. This reduction in ice extent and thickness has resulted in a longe...
SETI Talks Archive: http://seti.org/talks Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is in rapid decline. This reduction in ice extent and thickness has resulted in a longe...
more at http://news.quickfound.net/states/alaska.html First person narrative describing the lives of Eskimos on the coast of Alaska. Public domain film from ...
more at http://news.quickfound.net/states/alaska.html First person narrative describing the lives of Eskimos on the coast of Alaska. Public domain film from ...
Potential offshore drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, a scarcity of icebreakers and critical infrastructure, and a dramatic increase in shipping and ...
Potential offshore drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, a scarcity of icebreakers and critical infrastructure, and a dramatic increase in shipping and ...
more at http://news.quickfound.net/cities/fairbanks.html
'FEATURES ACTIVITY OF ESKIMO SCOUTS IN THE ALASKA NATIONAL GUARD AS THEY OPERATE FROM FISHING VILLAGE OF SHISHMAREF, NEAR ARCTIC CIRCLE. '
'A century ago, Alaska, our most northern frontier, was popularly called "Seward's Folly." The top of the world seemed remote then. Today, the polar concept has changed our ideas of distances and now that which was once considered a wasteland, is of great military importance and a vital link in our preparations to insure security. The mission of our Army in Alaska is to repel any aggressive action, and be prepared to hit back. An important segment of our force which is fulfilling that purpose, are men who were born above the Arctic Circle -- the Alaskan Scouts. They, along with the rest of our military establishment, undergo constant training and reevaluation in this land where nature herself is hostile -- Alaska.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shishmaref,_Alaska
Shishmaref (SHISH-muh-reff) (Qiġiqtaq in Iñupiaq; Russian: Шишмарёв) is a city and village in the Nome Census Area, Alaska, United States. It is located on Sarichef Island in the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait and five miles from the mainland. Shishmaref lies within the Bering Land Bridge National Preserve. The population was 563 at the 2010 census...
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 7.3 square miles (19 km2), of which, 2.8 square miles (7.3 km2) of it is land and 4.5 square miles (12 km2) of it (61.62%) is water.
Shishmaref was named in 1821 by explorer Lt. Otto von Kotzebue, of the Imperial Russian Navy, after Capt. Lt. Gleb Shishmaryov who accompanied him on his exploration.
Sarichef Island (on which Shishmaref is located) is part of a dynamic, 100 km-long barrier island chain that records human and environmental history spanning the past 2000 years; the oldest subaerial evidence for the formation of this system is about 1700 14c yr bp (see References, below). Erosion at Shishmaref is unique along the islands because of its fetch exposure and high tidal prism, relatively intense infrastructure development during the 20th century, and multiple shoreline defense structures built beginning in the 1970s.
Global warming
The effect of global climate change upon Shishmaref is sometimes seen as the most dramatic in the world.[6] Rising temperatures have resulted in a reduction in the sea ice which serves to buffer Shishmaref from storm surges. At the same time, the permafrost that the village is built on has also begun to melt, making the shore even more vulnerable to erosion. In recent years the shore has been receding at an average rate of up to 10 feet (3.3 m) per year. Although a series of barricades has been put up to protect the village, the shore has continued to erode at an alarming rate. The town's homes, water system and infrastructure are being undermined...
Culture
Shishmaref is a traditional Inupiaq Eskimo village. Residents rely heavily on a subsistence lifestyle, hunting and gathering much of their food. Primary food sources include sea mammals such as oogruk (bearded seal), other seals and walrus, fish, birds (such as ptarmigan), caribou and moose. The village is well known in the region for its high-quality seal oil and fermented meat.
It is known for its Native art. Local carvings of whalebone and walrus ivory are sought after by galleries in Alaska and the Lower 48.
Shishmaref was home to one of Alaska's most-beloved dog mushers. Herbie Nayokpuk, known as the "Shishmaref Cannonball", died in December 2006. He finished the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race numerous times, including a second-place finish.
It is sometimes referred to as "the friendliest village in Alaska." Researchers, journalists and the occasional tourist visit Shishmaref, and the city has acquired a reputation for being a gracious host...
more at http://news.quickfound.net/cities/fairbanks.html
'FEATURES ACTIVITY OF ESKIMO SCOUTS IN THE ALASKA NATIONAL GUARD AS THEY OPERATE FROM FISHING VILLAGE OF SHISHMAREF, NEAR ARCTIC CIRCLE. '
'A century ago, Alaska, our most northern frontier, was popularly called "Seward's Folly." The top of the world seemed remote then. Today, the polar concept has changed our ideas of distances and now that which was once considered a wasteland, is of great military importance and a vital link in our preparations to insure security. The mission of our Army in Alaska is to repel any aggressive action, and be prepared to hit back. An important segment of our force which is fulfilling that purpose, are men who were born above the Arctic Circle -- the Alaskan Scouts. They, along with the rest of our military establishment, undergo constant training and reevaluation in this land where nature herself is hostile -- Alaska.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shishmaref,_Alaska
Shishmaref (SHISH-muh-reff) (Qiġiqtaq in Iñupiaq; Russian: Шишмарёв) is a city and village in the Nome Census Area, Alaska, United States. It is located on Sarichef Island in the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait and five miles from the mainland. Shishmaref lies within the Bering Land Bridge National Preserve. The population was 563 at the 2010 census...
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 7.3 square miles (19 km2), of which, 2.8 square miles (7.3 km2) of it is land and 4.5 square miles (12 km2) of it (61.62%) is water.
Shishmaref was named in 1821 by explorer Lt. Otto von Kotzebue, of the Imperial Russian Navy, after Capt. Lt. Gleb Shishmaryov who accompanied him on his exploration.
Sarichef Island (on which Shishmaref is located) is part of a dynamic, 100 km-long barrier island chain that records human and environmental history spanning the past 2000 years; the oldest subaerial evidence for the formation of this system is about 1700 14c yr bp (see References, below). Erosion at Shishmaref is unique along the islands because of its fetch exposure and high tidal prism, relatively intense infrastructure development during the 20th century, and multiple shoreline defense structures built beginning in the 1970s.
Global warming
The effect of global climate change upon Shishmaref is sometimes seen as the most dramatic in the world.[6] Rising temperatures have resulted in a reduction in the sea ice which serves to buffer Shishmaref from storm surges. At the same time, the permafrost that the village is built on has also begun to melt, making the shore even more vulnerable to erosion. In recent years the shore has been receding at an average rate of up to 10 feet (3.3 m) per year. Although a series of barricades has been put up to protect the village, the shore has continued to erode at an alarming rate. The town's homes, water system and infrastructure are being undermined...
Culture
Shishmaref is a traditional Inupiaq Eskimo village. Residents rely heavily on a subsistence lifestyle, hunting and gathering much of their food. Primary food sources include sea mammals such as oogruk (bearded seal), other seals and walrus, fish, birds (such as ptarmigan), caribou and moose. The village is well known in the region for its high-quality seal oil and fermented meat.
It is known for its Native art. Local carvings of whalebone and walrus ivory are sought after by galleries in Alaska and the Lower 48.
Shishmaref was home to one of Alaska's most-beloved dog mushers. Herbie Nayokpuk, known as the "Shishmaref Cannonball", died in December 2006. He finished the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race numerous times, including a second-place finish.
It is sometimes referred to as "the friendliest village in Alaska." Researchers, journalists and the occasional tourist visit Shishmaref, and the city has acquired a reputation for being a gracious host...
The Wildlife of Alaska
Video 1: The national wildlife refugees of alaska
Video 2: Wildlife conservation - Wood Bison, Buffalo on the run
Video 3: Becharof National wildlife Refuge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
Brown bear[edit]
Brown bear at Katmai National Park.
Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.[1]
Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the minor exceptions of the islands west of Unimak in the Aleutians, the islands south of Frederick Sound in southeast Alaska, and the islands in the Bering Sea.[1] Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies that is the largest type of brown bear in the world.[1] The brown bear is the top predator in Alaska.
Black bear[edit]
The black bear is much smaller than the brown bear. They are found in larger numbers on the mainland of Alaska, but are not found on the islands off of the Gulf of Alaska and the Seward Peninsula.[6] Black bears have been seen in Alaska in a few different shades of colors such as black, brown, cinnamon, and even a rare blue shade.[7] They are widely scattered over Alaska, and pose more of a problem to humans because they come in close contact with them on a regular basis.
Polar bear[edit]
Polar bears on the Beaufort Sea coast.
Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.[9]
Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state.[12] The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).[12] Though in the 1970s there were worries that oil drilling and development in Alaska would harm caribou populations, they seem to have adapted to the presence of humans, and so far there have been few adverse effects.[12]
Mountain Goat[edit]
Mountain goats are found in the rough and rocky mountain regions of Alaska, throughout the southeastern Panhandle and along the Coastal Mountains of the Cook Inlet.[14] Populations are generally confined in the areas of the Chugach and Wrangell Mountains. Mountain goats have been transplanted to the islands of Baranof and Kodiak, where they have maintained a steady population.[14]
Bison[edit]
The ancestors of the American bison (Bison bison) now in Alaska were transplanted from Montana in 1928, when 20 animals were imported by the Alaska Game Commission and released in the area of what is now Delta Junction. Additional herds have developed along the Copper River, Chitina River, and near Farewell from natural emigration and transplant. Small domesticated herds have also been established near Kodiak and Delta Junction, as well as on Popov Island.[15]
Another sub-species of bison, the wood bison (b. b. athabascae) was once Alaska’s most common large land mammal. The combined effects of pre-contact habitat change and human harvest were probably responsible for their disappearance. The last reported sighting of wood bison in Alaska was in the early 1900s. Oral history accounts from Alaska Native elders suggest that these bison were a resource for indigenous peoples in Alaska as recently as 200 years ago.[16]
Orca[edit]
The orca is known as the killer whale (although they are dolphins) because of the way in which it hunts in large groups. The hunting style has often been compared to that of wolves. Another reason is their tendencies to eat other whales and large prey animals such as seals and sea lions.[19] Orcas are scattered among the Continental Shelf from southeast Alaska through the Aleutian Islands. They can also be seen in the waters of Prince William Sound.[19]
Source Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/108604212235001938418/108604212235001938418/videos
The Wildlife of Alaska
Video 1: The national wildlife refugees of alaska
Video 2: Wildlife conservation - Wood Bison, Buffalo on the run
Video 3: Becharof National wildlife Refuge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
Brown bear[edit]
Brown bear at Katmai National Park.
Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.[1]
Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the minor exceptions of the islands west of Unimak in the Aleutians, the islands south of Frederick Sound in southeast Alaska, and the islands in the Bering Sea.[1] Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies that is the largest type of brown bear in the world.[1] The brown bear is the top predator in Alaska.
Black bear[edit]
The black bear is much smaller than the brown bear. They are found in larger numbers on the mainland of Alaska, but are not found on the islands off of the Gulf of Alaska and the Seward Peninsula.[6] Black bears have been seen in Alaska in a few different shades of colors such as black, brown, cinnamon, and even a rare blue shade.[7] They are widely scattered over Alaska, and pose more of a problem to humans because they come in close contact with them on a regular basis.
Polar bear[edit]
Polar bears on the Beaufort Sea coast.
Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.[9]
Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state.[12] The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).[12] Though in the 1970s there were worries that oil drilling and development in Alaska would harm caribou populations, they seem to have adapted to the presence of humans, and so far there have been few adverse effects.[12]
Mountain Goat[edit]
Mountain goats are found in the rough and rocky mountain regions of Alaska, throughout the southeastern Panhandle and along the Coastal Mountains of the Cook Inlet.[14] Populations are generally confined in the areas of the Chugach and Wrangell Mountains. Mountain goats have been transplanted to the islands of Baranof and Kodiak, where they have maintained a steady population.[14]
Bison[edit]
The ancestors of the American bison (Bison bison) now in Alaska were transplanted from Montana in 1928, when 20 animals were imported by the Alaska Game Commission and released in the area of what is now Delta Junction. Additional herds have developed along the Copper River, Chitina River, and near Farewell from natural emigration and transplant. Small domesticated herds have also been established near Kodiak and Delta Junction, as well as on Popov Island.[15]
Another sub-species of bison, the wood bison (b. b. athabascae) was once Alaska’s most common large land mammal. The combined effects of pre-contact habitat change and human harvest were probably responsible for their disappearance. The last reported sighting of wood bison in Alaska was in the early 1900s. Oral history accounts from Alaska Native elders suggest that these bison were a resource for indigenous peoples in Alaska as recently as 200 years ago.[16]
Orca[edit]
The orca is known as the killer whale (although they are dolphins) because of the way in which it hunts in large groups. The hunting style has often been compared to that of wolves. Another reason is their tendencies to eat other whales and large prey animals such as seals and sea lions.[19] Orcas are scattered among the Continental Shelf from southeast Alaska through the Aleutian Islands. They can also be seen in the waters of Prince William Sound.[19]
Source Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/108604212235001938418/108604212235001938418/videos
published:04 Oct 2015
views:1
The Dickey Center at Dartmouth: "Who 'Owns' the North Pole and Who Decides?
Betsy Baker, Associate Professor at Vermont Law School and Senior Fellow for Oceans and Energy at the Institute for Energy and the Environment "Who 'Owns' th...
Betsy Baker, Associate Professor at Vermont Law School and Senior Fellow for Oceans and Energy at the Institute for Energy and the Environment "Who 'Owns' th...
This film (narrated in English) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film is also available in these languages:
St. Lawrence Island Yupik: http://youtu.be/VGv1Ip03NN4
Inupiaq: http://youtu.be/sd9jvwXDsbg
For more information, please see the museum's production blog at https://www.arcticcurrents.wordpress.com
This film (narrated in English) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film is also available in these languages:
St. Lawrence Island Yupik: http://youtu.be/VGv1Ip03NN4
Inupiaq: http://youtu.be/sd9jvwXDsbg
For more information, please see the museum's production blog at https://www.arcticcurrents.wordpress.com
Filmed Tuesday, March 4, 2014 at 2:30pm Is drilling for Arctic oil worth the risk to the environment? America's Arctic Ocean, the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, ...
Filmed Tuesday, March 4, 2014 at 2:30pm Is drilling for Arctic oil worth the risk to the environment? America's Arctic Ocean, the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, ...
This film (narrated in Inupiaq) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film (narrated in St. Lawrence Island Yupik) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas.
The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film is also available in these languages:
English: http://youtu.be/I-ksl2YXdd4
St. Lawrence Island Yupik: http://youtu.be/VGv1Ip03NN4
For more information, please see the museum's production blog at https://www.arcticcurrents.wordpress.com
This film (narrated in Inupiaq) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas. The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film (narrated in St. Lawrence Island Yupik) presents the epic journey of bowhead whales as they make their annual migration across the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas.
The film takes its narrative and title from the 2013 calendar edited by Steve Okkonen. The vision for this film is to improve public understanding of the iconic bowhead whales and their role in the Pacific Arctic marine ecosystem.
The film explores whale taxonomy, physiology, diet, behaviors, and their widespread movement through Subarctic and Arctic waters. Other topics include the study of the whales through ongoing tagging and aerial observation programs, and the extensive body of traditional knowledge gathered and sustained by the indigenous whaling peoples.
This film is also available in these languages:
English: http://youtu.be/I-ksl2YXdd4
St. Lawrence Island Yupik: http://youtu.be/VGv1Ip03NN4
For more information, please see the museum's production blog at https://www.arcticcurrents.wordpress.com
http://gallery.usgs.gov/videos/600 Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific W...
55:36
Gateway to the Arctic: The Chukchi Sea - Perspectives on Ocean Science
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influe...
The Chukchi Sea, a broad and shallow sea between Siberia and Alaska, has a profound influence on Arctic climate and on the supply of fresh water and nutrient...
52:13
Chukchi Sea Cultural Awareness
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Asso...
This video was produced by Progressive Media Alaska & Walsh & Sheppard for Ahmaogak & Associates and Fairweather, Inc. This program details cultural informat...
3:13
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Satur...
published:17 May 2015
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
'Kayaktivists,' The Chukchi Sea And Is Big Oil Wiser Now?
published:17 May 2015
views:0
Around 1,000 Seattle activists in kayaks were set to protest Shell's Arctic drilling Saturday. Has the oil industry learned from past disasters?
Follow Cliff Judy: http://www.twitter.com/cliffjudy
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
If you're not familiar with the term "kayaktivists" — well, get ready.
Around 1,000 of them are expected to paddle through the Puget Sound Saturday to protest the Royal Dutch Shell ships and oil drilling rig currently docked in Seattle. The ships are headed north this summer. (Video via KING)
Earlier this week, Shell won conditional approval from the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to explore for oil in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska's coast. The move infuriated environmentalists who point to the infamous Deepwater Horizon explosion and environmental disaster as a worst-case scenario. (Video via Shell and RT)
But given an incredibly cautious public sentiment in wake of past tragedies and the enormous backlash if Shell did produce another disaster, has the oil industry learned from past mistakes?
The concern is certainly fair. The Chukchi Sea has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is far more remote than drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, making disaster response more difficult if something went wrong. (Video via U.S. Geological Survey)
Shell is pushing hard to present a message of safety. Ahead of its approval to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, it released several videos explaining its response plans if something went wrong. It also pointed out features on its rigs meant to prevent a massive BP-like oil leak into the sea.
It also has a 12-point explainer on its website on how it would deal with a leak in the nearby Beaufort Sea. But part of that plan includes "using detailed ice and weather forecasting to warn of extreme conditions" — something it's seemingly already failed to do.
The rig mentioned in that Shell video we featured earlier was the Kulluk. When Shell tried to move the rig in late 2012 to avoid taxes, a Coast Guard report shows the tow master warned the rig it was a bad idea because the frozen conditions "guarantees an ass kicking."
Sure enough, the tow lines broke and Kulluk ran aground, forcing a Coast Guard rescue and eventually leading the Department of the Interior to rescind Shell's Arctic drilling approval. (Video via ODN)
And then there's a February report from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management predicting a 75 percent chance there will be a large oil spill in the Chukchi Sea if drilling begins there.
That figure understandably inspired a flurry of foreboding headlines. But the bureau has since released a larger explanation saying the 75 percent figure is over the course of 77 years if the Chukchi Sea had hundreds of wells in production, not one company exploring the area.
A "large" oil spill is defined as anything leaking 1,000 barrels or more, which pales in comparison to the Exxon Valdez oil spill that dumped an estimated 257,000 barrels or the 4.9 million barrels spilled by Deepwater Horizon.
Ultimately, this is a crystal ball issue. The government has tried to make sure Shell is fully prepared for any situation in the name of a potentially huge economic impact.
But in doing so, it's also accepting the risk a largely untouched ecosystem suffers some kind of significant setback. (Video via Greenpeace)
A risk management consultant who used to work for Shell in the Arctic told The Atlantic, "Have we really worried enough about the potential of a catastrophic blowout? Have we learned enough about the prevention and mitigation of spills? At this point it’s an unanswered question.”
This video includes images from Edward Boatman / CC BY 3.0, Thibault Geffroy / CC BY 3.0, Getty Images, and music by @nop / CC by NC 3.0.
Sources: Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/environmental-activists-in-a-kayak-flotilla-protest-the-news-photo/473372406
KING http://www.king5.com/story/news/local/shell-oil-rig/2015/05/14/shell-oil-rig-seattle-thursday/27292545/
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKwN4xoq25U
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Shell http://www.shell.com/global/future-energy/arctic/oil-spill-prevention-reponse/ready-for-the-unexpected.html
U.S. Coast Guard http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
ODN http://www.uscg.mil/hq/cg5/cg545/docs/documents/Kulluk.pdf
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/BOEM-Newsroom/Risk-and-Benefits-in-the-Chukchi-Sea.aspx
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/05/getting-approval-for-arctic-drilling-mightve-been-the-least-of-shells-problems/393056/
Image via: Getty Images / Karen Ducey
6:47
Polar Bear Research on the Chukchi Sea
Join USFWS Wildlife Biologist Eric Regeher as he darts, captures and releases a polar bear...
"Shell readies the drill bit for first spud!" This weekend crews aboard the Noble Discoverer began drilling at Shell's "Burger" prospect in the Chukchi Sea, ...
4:34
Chukchi Sea at Toddler Speed
A month of arctic trekking with an 18 month old....
Wells, like houses, begin with a foundation. In the Arctic, the foundational well -- also called a top hole - starts with a 20-by-40 foot area excavated into...
3:03
Amazing video of walrus island in the Chukchi Sea..dnt miss it..
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in ...
Extraordinary pictures capture scores of walruses crammed onto a chunk of ice floating in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska. American photographer Stev...
5:50
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
We wanted to get a video to see if we could see the algal layer at the bottom of Chukchi S...
published:19 May 2015
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
GoPro Under the Chukchi Sea Ice
published:19 May 2015
views:11
We wanted to get a video to see if we could see the algal layer at the bottom of Chukchi Sea ice in May 2015.
10:21
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska p...
published:04 May 2015
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
Shell Alaska Oil Spill Response Animation
published:04 May 2015
views:400
Shell’s plans include drilling exploratory wells in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea. Shell’s Alaska program has gone to great lengths to make sure a worst-case scenario, such as an oil spill, never takes place. But in the unlikely event that one did, Shell’s onsite oil spill response assets would be deployed within one hour. Shell Alaska maintains a highly capable emergency response planning and management program.
0:32
ice flow jumping on the chukchi sea
steve-o jumping ice flows on the fourth of july 2008 in Barrow, AK....
Every year, locals and tourists enjoy whale-watching excursions with Hornblower Cruises & Events. Aboard every Hornblower Whale and Dolphin-watching cruise a...
31:57
America's Wildest Places - Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is the most remote and far flung unit of the ...
The Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge is the most remote and far flung unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System. A place of great distances and gre...
0:31
Shell oil rig
I cant believe how many Kayaktavists there are in the water there can you see them all , y...
published:20 May 2015
Shell oil rig
Shell oil rig
published:20 May 2015
views:5
I cant believe how many Kayaktavists there are in the water there can you see them all , you cant even see the water ... oh wait sorry but never took place in port angeles , we have a protected harbor so the protesters could not do a thing . maybe seattle should think about protecting there harbor as well .
Kayaktavists Take Over Seattle's Port to Protest Shell Oil's Arctic Drilling Rig
Seattleites took a dramatic stand, er paddle, against Arctic oil drilling on Saturday afternoon. Against the backdrop of the Pacific Northwest city's skyline, around 200 activists, local Native Americans, and concerned citizens took to kayak and canoe and surrounded a giant, Arctic-bound Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig currently making a layover in the Port of Seattle.
Despite the oil giant's rocky history in the Arctic region, last Monday the Obama administration conditionally approved Shell's summer plans to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, north of Alaska. Environmentalists are not happy, and neither are many in Seattle, whose port has become a home base for the two Shell oil rigs' operations. The Port of Seattle's commissioners took heat for their controversial decision to lease one of its piers to Shell, tying the progressive city to fossil fuel extraction and the potential for environmental catastrophe in the Arctic.
As the first of the towering oil rigs arrived in Elliott Bay late last week, a group of "activists, artists, and noisemakers" calling themselves ShellNo organized a series of protests to welcome the oil company. The "Paddle in Seattle" yesterday drew an impressive flotilla of kayaks, canoes, and boats into the Duwamish River, which feeds into the Elliott Bay, to surround the Coast-Guard-protected rig
10:28
Alaska Travelogue: "The Iceless Arctic" circa 1940 Educational Pictures 10min
more at http://travel.quickfound.net/ Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prel...
more at http://travel.quickfound.net/ Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the as...
0:33
Cute Pacific Walruses
A cute Pacific Walruses that we all thought it was a sea lion or seal at Ocean Park Hong K...
My blog post: http://thisholysword.blogspot.com/2013/07/on-extremely-long-life-spans-in-genesis.html On the Extremely long life spans in Genesis For a while ...
3:41
Bering Sea Expedition 2009
This video provides impressions from an NSF/NPRB funded expedition onboard the USCGC Healy...
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....
5:30
White and Barents Sea
At the White sea in northern Russia, orthodox monks have for centuries kept meticulous rec...
At the White sea in northern Russia, orthodox monks have for centuries kept meticulous records. Today, these records provide us with an understanding of how the White Sea looked hundreds of...
43:07
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
The Trans-Siberian...
published:18 Mar 2015
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
published:18 Mar 2015
views:8
Trans-Siberian Railway - Road To Power Documentary - World Documentary
The Trans-Siberian Railway is a network of trains connecting Moscow with the Russian Far East as well as the Sea of Japan.
It was built from 1891 to 1916 under the supervision of Russian government ministers that were personally assigned by Tsar Alexander III as well as by his kid, Tsar Nicholas II. Also before it had actually been completed, it brought in travelers which composed of their journeys.
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1:11
Healy 1201 Gravity Core and Trawl
PolarTREC Teacher Deanna Wheeler record science work, gravity core and trawling, on Healy ...
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. ...
1:13
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
Source: https://www.youtube.com/user/itnnews
October 01, 2014 - A huge gathering of 35,00...
published:02 Oct 2014
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
35,000 Walruses Pack Onto Alaskan Beach 'Due To Climate Change'
published:02 Oct 2014
views:119
Source: https://www.youtube.com/user/itnnews
October 01, 2014 - A huge gathering of 35,000 walruses pack onto an Alaskan beach after sea ice melts early "due to climate change". Report by Claire Lomas.
PigmineNews.com: http://www.pigminenews.com
PigmineNews on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PigMineNews
PigmineNews on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PigmineNews
PigMine6 on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/PigMine6/videos
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 106A-117 of the U.S. Copyright Law.
19:32
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
This is a 19-minute video introduction to Alaska, produced by Deborah Mercy, filmmaker wit...
published:07 Mar 2015
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
100,000 glaciers, an overview of the great state of Alaska
published:07 Mar 2015
views:1
This is a 19-minute video introduction to Alaska, produced by Deborah Mercy, filmmaker with the Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program. The video was made to greet participants to the 2012 Sea Grant Week, a biennial meeting of the nation's Sea Grant programs and institutions around the nation.
4:27
Alaska, USA 8 Collage Video - youtube.com/tanvideo11
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Alaska Colonization - Some researchers believe that ...
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Alaska Colonization - Some researchers believe that the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th ...
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Royal Dutch Shell has stopped Arctic oil and gas exploration off the coast of Alaska after...
published:28 Sep 2015
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
Shell stops Arctic activity after 'disappointing' tests
published:28 Sep 2015
views:14
Royal Dutch Shell has stopped Arctic oil and gas exploration off the coast of Alaska after "disappointing" results from a key well in the Chukchi Sea.
In a surprise announcement, the company said it would end exploration off Alaska "for the foreseeable future".
Shell said it did not find sufficient amounts of oil and gas in the Burger J well to warrant further exploration.
The company has spent about $7bn (£4.5bn) on Arctic offshore development in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas.
"Shell continues to see important exploration potential in the basin, and the area is likely to ultimately be of strategic importance to Alaska and the US," said Marvin Odum, president of Shell USA.
"However, this is a clearly disappointing exploration outcome for this part of the basin."
Environmental groups oppose Arctic offshore drilling and say industrial activity and more greenhouse gases will harm polar bears, walrus and ice seals.
Over the summer, protesters in kayaks unsuccessfully tried to block Arctic-bound Shell vessels in Seattle and Portland, Oregon.
Shell said it would take financial charges as a result of halting exploration, which it would disclose during its third quarter results. The company has existing contracts for rigs, ships and other assets.
9:59
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
Catherine Berchok's research in the Chukchi: Ocean sounds, currents, climate change and th...
published:11 Sep 2015
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
Chukchi Life Str8 Science Part 1
published:11 Sep 2015
views:9
Catherine Berchok's research in the Chukchi: Ocean sounds, currents, climate change and their effects and potential effects on marine mammals.
0:11
Fall waves
Chukchi Sea, after snowfall, October 14, 2013...
published:07 Sep 2015
Fall waves
Fall waves
published:07 Sep 2015
views:1
Chukchi Sea, after snowfall, October 14, 2013
11:50
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
Mary Sweeters, Greenpeace USA, joins Thom. The president yesterday continued to confuse an...
published:19 Aug 2015
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
Lookout! The Risks of Arctic Drilling
published:19 Aug 2015
views:1
Mary Sweeters, Greenpeace USA, joins Thom. The president yesterday continued to confuse and anger climate activists and environmentalists by giving Shell .
John Deans, Greenpeace USA joins Thom. The Obama administration gave Royal Dutch Shell permission last month to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea in the .
Cruiser m/v Braemar with apprx.1000 British Tourists on board arrived to Szczecin ( former Stettin) and was Lying Afloat at Wały Chrobrego ( former Haken .
Sharks head north after migrating south for the winter. Incredible aerial video shows hundreds of sharks returning to Louisiana waters.
0:11
Shell NO
Shell still plans to drill in the arctic.
Sign here:
https://www.savethearctic.org/
Sourc...
published:08 Jul 2015
Shell NO
Shell NO
published:08 Jul 2015
views:28
Shell still plans to drill in the arctic.
Sign here:
https://www.savethearctic.org/
Source:
http://www.onearth.org/earthwire/drilling-chukchi-sea
photos by:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/backbone_campaign/18875132502/sizes/l
by Backbone Campaign
https://www.flickr.com/photos/greenpeacemuenchen/7789687364/
Greenpeace München
1:21
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
The Polar Pioneer drilling rig, leased by Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Se...
published:21 Jun 2015
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
Shell's Polar Pioneer rig leaves Seattle
published:21 Jun 2015
views:1
The Polar Pioneer drilling rig, leased by Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off the coast of Alaska, leaves the port of Seattle on Monday, June 15, 2015. Opponents of Shell's Arctic drilling plans, known as kayaktivists, are in front of the rig, which is moved by tugboats, to try and prevent it from leaving Seattle after a stay of about a month at the city's port. The rig is en route to Dutch Harbour, Alaska, from where it will be moved to the Chukchi Sea.
23:19
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
Cultures of Energy Spring Symposium - 2015
As we consider how various cultures of energy ...
published:16 Jun 2015
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
Roy Scranton - "The Compulsion of Strife"
published:16 Jun 2015
views:0
Cultures of Energy Spring Symposium - 2015
As we consider how various cultures of energy relate to global warming, we can see differing visions of the human future already sparking into conflict. Climate wars and drought-driven fighting threaten civic stability from Raqqa to the Chukchi Sea. Approaching the existential problem of learning to live in the Anthropocene in terms of both the political structures of energy production and the mediating forces of social energetics, I argue for the value of philosophical contemplation, or more substantially learning to die, as a necessary practice of interrupting what Greek philosopher Heraclitus called “the compulsion of strife.”
2:30
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic riches beckon. Anglo-Dutch oil company Shell has received renewed permission from t...
published:14 May 2015
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
Arctic oil prospecting imminent as Shell given go-ahead
published:14 May 2015
views:131
Arctic riches beckon. Anglo-Dutch oil company Shell has received renewed permission from the US government to prospect in Alaska's Chukchi Sea.
Washington gave Shell a permit in 2012, then called a halt when a rig broke loose, ringing environmental alarms, and concerns are far from being resolved to everyone's satisfaction.
Now, more parts of Alaskan waters are close to opening. The Chukchi and Beaufort Seas skirt the state's northern coast, together the entire US Arctic domain.
Ecologist gr…
READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2015/05/13/arctic-oil-prospecting-imminent-as-shell-given-go-ahead
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1:39
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Shell has won conditional approval to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, a move that's infu...
published:12 May 2015
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
Feds Know Shell's Return To Arctic Is 'Highly Controversial'
published:12 May 2015
views:5
Shell has won conditional approval to drill for oil in the Chukchi Sea, a move that's infuriating for environmentalists.
See more at http://www.newsy.com
Transcript:
Score a major victory for the oil industry as Shell now has approval to drill offshore in the Arctic, though there are restrictions.
Late Monday, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued this letter listing 18 separate conditions for drilling in the Chukchi Sea, opening the door for Shell to invest another $1 billion in the region analysts believe holds vast oil reserves. (Video via Shell)
The feds' decision is a huge blow for environmentalists who argue a mistake in the Arctic could be even more devastating than the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The region for proposed drilling has far more extreme oceanic conditions and is more remote, making it hard for responders to reach a disaster if something went wrong. (Video via RT & U.S. Geological Survey)
"Right where Shell proposes to be drilling, we found more coral than people have seen in most other places in the world's oceans," said John Hocevar, a marine biologist for Greenpeace. "The pink, fuzzy bits — those are the soft corals and you see them fairly often."
Shell, however, has done a lot to try to ease concerns over its drilling plans in the Arctic, including this video released in 2012 with details on how its equipment would manage a blowout.
President Obama initially gave Shell the go-ahead to drill in the Chukchi Sea in 2012, but that same rig featured in the Shell video ran aground on New Years Eve 2012. A U.S. Coast Guard team rescued some crew members, towed the rig ashore and the Department of the Interior banned Shell from drilling until the company addressed safety issues. (Video via ODN)
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management also released this letter finding no significant impact on human environment or physical environment, though the acting regional supervisor acknowledged the operation would be "highly controversial."
This video includes images from Getty Images and music from Broke for Free / CC BY NC 3.0.
Sources:
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/video/ruble-prices-for-fuel-sit-illuminated-on-a-sign-outside-a-news-footage/456656800
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jFUtHlG0yU
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-EP-Conditional-Approval.pdf
RT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-rJH9xB7fk
U.S. Geological Survey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF-aNYhCr8k
Greenpeace https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fIdwVawOfg
Shell https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLrT-G4fRiA
Getty Images http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/president-barack-obama-delivers-a-statement-about-the-news-photo/453387932
ODN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFs7n9u6J-E
U.S. Department of the Interior http://www.boem.gov/uploadedFiles/BOEM/About_BOEM/BOEM_Regions/Alaska_Region/Leasing_and_Plans/Plans/2015-05-11-Shell-FONSI.pdf
Image via: Getty Images / Jeff J. Mitchell
1:11
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
Washington: US President Barack Obama's administration on Monday approved petroleum giant...
published:12 May 2015
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
Barack Obama Approves Oil Drilling in Arctic
published:12 May 2015
views:0
Washington: US President Barack Obama's administration on Monday approved petroleum giant Shell's request to drill for oil and gas in the Arctic under certain conditions, despite opposition from environmental groups.
The decision by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted Shell the right to explore the Chukchi Sea as long as the Anglo-Dutch firm gets the correct permits from the agencies that regulate the environment and marine mammal health.
"We have taken a thoughtful approach to carefully considering potential exploration in the Chukchi Sea," BOEM director Abigail Ross Hopper said.
47:26
Crude Awakening full hour
The Exxon Valdez oil spill was a clear warning of the dangers of oil production in the Arc...
published:27 Apr 2015
Crude Awakening full hour
Crude Awakening full hour
published:27 Apr 2015
views:6
The Exxon Valdez oil spill was a clear warning of the dangers of oil production in the Arctic. It's an issue that is even more urgent now as climate change in the region accelerates a potential resource boom. This CBS News documentary was produced by Andrew Tkach and the rest of the 48 Hours team.
3:31
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein, hunting,Sheep,Moose,C130,L100,Walru...
published:31 Dec 2014
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
Alaska Northern Journey intro time-lapse James Unrein
The Chukchi Sea lease sale, Sale 193, was held in 2008 by the Bush administration. It offe...
published:07 Nov 2014
ALASKA: The Fight Against Chukchi
ALASKA: The Fight Against Chukchi
published:07 Nov 2014
views:1
The Chukchi Sea lease sale, Sale 193, was held in 2008 by the Bush administration. It offered nearly 30 million acres in the Chukchi Sea for oil drilling.
0:08
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
Virginia Ungudruk launching Nanook for Chukchi Sea UAS mission...
published:31 Oct 2014
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
Nanook launch by Virginia Ungudruk
published:31 Oct 2014
views:1
Virginia Ungudruk launching Nanook for Chukchi Sea UAS mission
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
http://www.YouTube.com/user/BourgeoisPhotography
www.BourgeoisPhotography.com
I don't know...
published:23 Aug 2015
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
Obama will see this visiting high Arctic Alaska | Global Warming | Climate Change
published:23 Aug 2015
views:13
http://www.YouTube.com/user/BourgeoisPhotography
www.BourgeoisPhotography.com
I don't know if Barack Obama will actually visit the top of the world, but if he did, this is what he would see... is this global warming? climate change?
I personally don't know how true global warming or climate change or whatever you want to call it is... BUT what I can tell you and show you through this thoughtful video that I shot, is that the city/village of Barrow, Alaska, the United States most northern city, is living at the edge of the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea in the Arctic Ocean and there appears to be opportunity here for concern.
Through this thoughtful video I put together, I wanted to give YOU the viewer a chance to see what Barack Obama will see if he TRULY comes to visit the high Arctic of Alaska. I live here and I can see this effort to keep the ocean out every day...
The day that I filmed this the tide was not exceptionally high, thank goodness.
The Inupiaq people have been living at the top of the world for thousands of years and living peacefully here with nature...
It now appears that some of the oldest homes and structures are getting dangerously close to becoming one with the Chukchi Sea and the Beaufort Sea along with the full on Arctic Ocean here in Barrow.
Take a look at this compelling video and tell me what you think... where your thoughts lead you. It is purposefully shot in long shot pieces to give you time to reflect on what you see and come to your own conclusions...
I personally don't have an opinion one way or another, I have been living in Barrow for 8 months and now living in Alaska total 17 years.
I can tell you that I have had an elder here tell me that 50 feet of coastline has vanished in the last 10 years. Period.
All I can comment on is the obvious signs that I see the people of this region doing to protect the shore, their land, and their heritage.
Is it global warming or climate change along coastal Alaska?
President Barack Obama needs to see this video and decide if he should come here. We SEEM to be on the front lines of global warming and climate change.
Please put your thoughts below.
24:34
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
The Chukchi are an indigenous people living in Russia's far northeast. As the climate is t...
published:08 Dec 2014
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
'I am hunter': Whale catch is survival in Russia's Far East (RT Documentary)
published:08 Dec 2014
views:301
The Chukchi are an indigenous people living in Russia's far northeast. As the climate is too inhospitable to grow crops, the sea has always been their main source of food. The population of 16,000 subsists primarily on a diet of marine mammals, the meat from which provides locals with enough fat-rich food to see them through the harsh winters. By and large, hunting species such as the grey whale is illegal. However, as the Chukchi's survival and traditional way of life is dependent on this activity, the International Whaling Commission grants them an annual whaling quota. Moreover, the meat from these animals is not sold, but distributed among the local population for free.
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RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.
Wildlife Documentary: Wild Alaska Animals (Wild Alaska Documentary)
The wildlife documentary, a great wild Alaska documentary, is about wild Alaska animals. This animal life documentary shows us how animal life evolves in Alaska during spring. The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
In this wild Alaska documentary, you can see the following animals: Walruses, polar bears, brown bears, grey wolves, caribous.
Polar bear: Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.
Grey wolf: Alaska is home to the largest remaining population of gray wolves in the United States. Though one of Alaska’s most iconic creatures, the state has a long history of killing wolves through various means. Early in the 20th century, wolves were hunted with virtually no controls, and bounties were common.
But the wolf’s fight in Alaska hasn’t been against extinction — the state’s wolf population is healthy, with estimates ranging from 7,000 to 12,000. Instead, their fight has been one against inadequately monitored control programs which aim to increase game populations through controversial methods. As game populations declined in the 60s and 70s, state-sponsored wolf control commenced and included aerial gunning.
Mink: Mink are found in every region of Alaska except Kodiak Island, the Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea offshore islands, and most of the North Slope. Mink are opportunistic hunters, eating almost anything that they can kill; important food sources include fish, birds, bird eggs, insects, crabs, clams, and small mammals. Wolves, foxes, hawks, owls, lynx, and river otters occasionally prey on mink, but the effects of predation on mink population have been studied relatively little. In Alaska, Mink are sometimes trapped for their fur.
Brown Bear: Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the exclusion of some outlying islands. Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies of brown bear that is the largest of all the Brown Bears and second only to the Polar Bear in size. The density of brown bear populations in Alaska varies according to the availability of food, and in some places is as high as one bear per square mile.
Caribou: Alaska is home to the Rangifer tarandus granti subspecies of caribou. Caribou in Alaska generally are found in tundra and mountain regions, where there are few trees. However, many herds spend the winter months in the boreal forest areas. Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state. The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).
Animal Life TV brings you a wide range of full length wildlife documentaries for children like wild Alaska animals documentary, polar bear documentary, brown bear documentary and animal documentary for kids.
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Sources
http://www.defenders.org/gray-wolf/gray-wolves-alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_of_Alaska
21:37
Sea hunters in Russia's east tell stories through bone carving
For hundreds of years, the Chukchi and the Eskimos have lived on the shores of Uelen by th...
For hundreds of years, the Chukchi and the Eskimos have lived on the shores of Uelen by the Bering Strait, and preserved their traditions of hunting at sea. This lifestyle gave rise to the...
140:55
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Gl...
On Thin Ice: The Future of the Polar Bear - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming - 2008-01-17 - Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy ...
34:46
ns12 cs 14
Video from ShoreZone Chukchi Sea 2012 aerial survey, Tape 14....
published:13 Sep 2014
ns12 cs 14
ns12 cs 14
published:13 Sep 2014
views:1
Video from ShoreZone Chukchi Sea 2012 aerial survey, Tape 14.
26:16
Chukchi: Where the world ends
The word "Chukchi" means "rich in reindeer". These people who live in the Russian Far East...
The word "Chukchi" means "rich in reindeer". These people who live in the Russian Far East can't imagine their life without the usual Chukchi routine: huntin...
139:27
January 17th, 2008: Select Committee Hearing, "The Future of the Polar Bear"
Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Glo...
Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming questioned members of the Bush Administration regarding...
34:50
Climate Change Impacts in the Arctic Ocean - Kevin Arrigo (SETI Talks)
SETI Talks Archive: http://seti.org/talks Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is in rapid decline....
SETI Talks Archive: http://seti.org/talks Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is in rapid decline. This reduction in ice extent and thickness has resulted in a longe...
20:44
Eskimo Hunters in Northwestern Alaska 1949 United World Films
more at http://news.quickfound.net/states/alaska.html First person narrative describing th...
more at http://news.quickfound.net/states/alaska.html First person narrative describing the lives of Eskimos on the coast of Alaska. Public domain film from ...
85:49
A New Security Architecture for the Arctic: A North American Perspective
Potential offshore drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, a scarcity of icebreakers an...
Potential offshore drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, a scarcity of icebreakers and critical infrastructure, and a dramatic increase in shipping and ...
28:41
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
more at http://news.quickfound.net/cities/fairbanks.html
'FEATURES ACTIVITY OF ESKIMO SCO...
published:23 Mar 2015
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
Alaskan Scout 1963 US Army; The Big Picture; Eskimo Scouts in the Alaska National Guard
published:23 Mar 2015
views:12
more at http://news.quickfound.net/cities/fairbanks.html
'FEATURES ACTIVITY OF ESKIMO SCOUTS IN THE ALASKA NATIONAL GUARD AS THEY OPERATE FROM FISHING VILLAGE OF SHISHMAREF, NEAR ARCTIC CIRCLE. '
'A century ago, Alaska, our most northern frontier, was popularly called "Seward's Folly." The top of the world seemed remote then. Today, the polar concept has changed our ideas of distances and now that which was once considered a wasteland, is of great military importance and a vital link in our preparations to insure security. The mission of our Army in Alaska is to repel any aggressive action, and be prepared to hit back. An important segment of our force which is fulfilling that purpose, are men who were born above the Arctic Circle -- the Alaskan Scouts. They, along with the rest of our military establishment, undergo constant training and reevaluation in this land where nature herself is hostile -- Alaska.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shishmaref,_Alaska
Shishmaref (SHISH-muh-reff) (Qiġiqtaq in Iñupiaq; Russian: Шишмарёв) is a city and village in the Nome Census Area, Alaska, United States. It is located on Sarichef Island in the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait and five miles from the mainland. Shishmaref lies within the Bering Land Bridge National Preserve. The population was 563 at the 2010 census...
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 7.3 square miles (19 km2), of which, 2.8 square miles (7.3 km2) of it is land and 4.5 square miles (12 km2) of it (61.62%) is water.
Shishmaref was named in 1821 by explorer Lt. Otto von Kotzebue, of the Imperial Russian Navy, after Capt. Lt. Gleb Shishmaryov who accompanied him on his exploration.
Sarichef Island (on which Shishmaref is located) is part of a dynamic, 100 km-long barrier island chain that records human and environmental history spanning the past 2000 years; the oldest subaerial evidence for the formation of this system is about 1700 14c yr bp (see References, below). Erosion at Shishmaref is unique along the islands because of its fetch exposure and high tidal prism, relatively intense infrastructure development during the 20th century, and multiple shoreline defense structures built beginning in the 1970s.
Global warming
The effect of global climate change upon Shishmaref is sometimes seen as the most dramatic in the world.[6] Rising temperatures have resulted in a reduction in the sea ice which serves to buffer Shishmaref from storm surges. At the same time, the permafrost that the village is built on has also begun to melt, making the shore even more vulnerable to erosion. In recent years the shore has been receding at an average rate of up to 10 feet (3.3 m) per year. Although a series of barricades has been put up to protect the village, the shore has continued to erode at an alarming rate. The town's homes, water system and infrastructure are being undermined...
Culture
Shishmaref is a traditional Inupiaq Eskimo village. Residents rely heavily on a subsistence lifestyle, hunting and gathering much of their food. Primary food sources include sea mammals such as oogruk (bearded seal), other seals and walrus, fish, birds (such as ptarmigan), caribou and moose. The village is well known in the region for its high-quality seal oil and fermented meat.
It is known for its Native art. Local carvings of whalebone and walrus ivory are sought after by galleries in Alaska and the Lower 48.
Shishmaref was home to one of Alaska's most-beloved dog mushers. Herbie Nayokpuk, known as the "Shishmaref Cannonball", died in December 2006. He finished the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race numerous times, including a second-place finish.
It is sometimes referred to as "the friendliest village in Alaska." Researchers, journalists and the occasional tourist visit Shishmaref, and the city has acquired a reputation for being a gracious host...
43:41
The Wildlife of Alaska
The Wildlife of Alaska
Video 1: The national wildlife refugees of alaska
Video 2: Wildli...
published:04 Oct 2015
The Wildlife of Alaska
The Wildlife of Alaska
published:04 Oct 2015
views:1
The Wildlife of Alaska
Video 1: The national wildlife refugees of alaska
Video 2: Wildlife conservation - Wood Bison, Buffalo on the run
Video 3: Becharof National wildlife Refuge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The wildlife of Alaska is diverse and abundant.
Brown bear[edit]
Brown bear at Katmai National Park.
Alaska contains about 98% of the U.S. brown bear population and 70% of the total North American population.[1]
Brown bears can be found throughout the state, with the minor exceptions of the islands west of Unimak in the Aleutians, the islands south of Frederick Sound in southeast Alaska, and the islands in the Bering Sea.[1] Most brown bears in Alaska are grizzly bears (the subspecies of brown bear found throughout North America), but Kodiak Island is home to Kodiak bears, another subspecies that is the largest type of brown bear in the world.[1] The brown bear is the top predator in Alaska.
Black bear[edit]
The black bear is much smaller than the brown bear. They are found in larger numbers on the mainland of Alaska, but are not found on the islands off of the Gulf of Alaska and the Seward Peninsula.[6] Black bears have been seen in Alaska in a few different shades of colors such as black, brown, cinnamon, and even a rare blue shade.[7] They are widely scattered over Alaska, and pose more of a problem to humans because they come in close contact with them on a regular basis.
Polar bear[edit]
Polar bears on the Beaufort Sea coast.
Alaska's polar bear populations are concentrated along its Arctic coastlines. In the winter, they are most common in the Kuskokwim Delta, St. Matthew Island, and at the southernmost portion of St. Lawrence Island. During the summer months, they migrate to the coastlines of the Arctic Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.[9] There are two main polar bear populations in Alaska. The Chukchi population is found off in the western part of Alaska near the Wrangell Islands, and the Beaufort Sea population is located near Alaska’s North Slope.[9]
Caribou in Alaska are abundant; currently there are an estimated 950,000 in the state.[12] The populations of caribou are controlled by predators and hunters (who shoot about 22,000 caribou a year).[12] Though in the 1970s there were worries that oil drilling and development in Alaska would harm caribou populations, they seem to have adapted to the presence of humans, and so far there have been few adverse effects.[12]
Mountain Goat[edit]
Mountain goats are found in the rough and rocky mountain regions of Alaska, throughout the southeastern Panhandle and along the Coastal Mountains of the Cook Inlet.[14] Populations are generally confined in the areas of the Chugach and Wrangell Mountains. Mountain goats have been transplanted to the islands of Baranof and Kodiak, where they have maintained a steady population.[14]
Bison[edit]
The ancestors of the American bison (Bison bison) now in Alaska were transplanted from Montana in 1928, when 20 animals were imported by the Alaska Game Commission and released in the area of what is now Delta Junction. Additional herds have developed along the Copper River, Chitina River, and near Farewell from natural emigration and transplant. Small domesticated herds have also been established near Kodiak and Delta Junction, as well as on Popov Island.[15]
Another sub-species of bison, the wood bison (b. b. athabascae) was once Alaska’s most common large land mammal. The combined effects of pre-contact habitat change and human harvest were probably responsible for their disappearance. The last reported sighting of wood bison in Alaska was in the early 1900s. Oral history accounts from Alaska Native elders suggest that these bison were a resource for indigenous peoples in Alaska as recently as 200 years ago.[16]
Orca[edit]
The orca is known as the killer whale (although they are dolphins) because of the way in which it hunts in large groups. The hunting style has often been compared to that of wolves. Another reason is their tendencies to eat other whales and large prey animals such as seals and sea lions.[19] Orcas are scattered among the Continental Shelf from southeast Alaska through the Aleutian Islands. They can also be seen in the waters of Prince William Sound.[19]
Source Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Alaska
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/108604212235001938418/108604212235001938418/videos
68:54
The Dickey Center at Dartmouth: "Who 'Owns' the North Pole and Who Decides?
Betsy Baker, Associate Professor at Vermont Law School and Senior Fellow for Oceans and En...
Betsy Baker, Associate Professor at Vermont Law School and Senior Fellow for Oceans and Energy at the Institute for Energy and the Environment "Who 'Owns' th...
South expected to be cooler and a parched California may get more than the usual precipitation its reservoirs usually fill ...NOAA expects a cooler and wetter winter for the south ... ....
photo: Russian Presidential Press and Information Office
Russian PresidentVladimir Putin said US policy on Syria is weak and lacks objectives, though he remains open to direct talks as Russia continues its bombing campaign in support of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad. "I don't really understand how the US can criticise Russia's actions in Syria if they refuse to have direct dialogue," Mr Putin told reporters on Thursday during a visit to Astana, Kazakhstan... ... ....
(CNN)With the recent NASA announcement of liquid water flowing on Mars and the movie "The Martian" making a splash at the box office, we might well ask whether humans should go to Mars. There is almost no chance that Mars has intelligent life and for decades we earthlings have dreamed of living on Mars. But let's think about this from an ethical point of view. What is the moral value of native Martian life vs. creating a "backup Earth"?....
Jihadists have a long record targeting Moscow, but the situation appears to be growing worse. MOSCOW — Syria is not Russia’s only war. In recent days, Russian security units have fought full-scale counter-insurgency battles in three North Caucuses republics. Chechnya, Dagestan and Inigushetia, as well as chasing alleged terrorists around Moscow ... In Syria, on Tuesday afternoon, two shells hit the Russian embassy in the capital, Damascus ... ....
The UNSecurity Council is set to hold a special meeting to discuss the spate of violence between Israelis and Palestinians in which 39 people have been killed over the past two weeks. The meeting, which diplomats said was called at the request of council member Jordan, will include a briefing from the UN secretariat on the situation on the ground and will take place at 15.00 GMT, the UN said on Thursday ... RELATED ... Source ... ....
Shell announced on Sept. 28 that it would cease further exploration in the Chukchi and Beaufortseas after spending upward of $7 billion. The company cited disappointing results from an exploratory well drilled this summer about 80 miles off Alaska's northwest coast in the Chukchi and the unpredictable federal regulatory environment ... Operations in the ChukchiSea ramped down almost immediately after the announcement, Smith said ... ....
Jeff Goodell... What was your "oh, shit" moment?" ... Would he still have allowed the massive expansion of leases for new coal production on federal land? Would he have given Shell leave to to explore for oil in the ChukchiSea? Might he have killed the Keystone XL pipeline years ago? In other words, would he have abandoned his "all of the above" energy strategy in favor of one that leads us more quickly to a 100% renewable energy future? ... ....
Jeff Goodell... What was your "oh, shit" moment?" ... Would he still have allowed the massive expansion of leases for new coal production on federal land? Would he have given Shell leave to explore for oil in the ChukchiSea? Might he have killed the Keystone XL pipeline years ago? In other words, would he have abandoned his "all of the above" energy strategy in favor of one that leads us more quickly to a 100% renewable energy future? ... ....
The state is suffering significant climate impacts from rising seas forcing the relocation of remote villages ... The recent decision by Shell to pull out of drilling in the Chukchisea off the state's north coast has compounded the problem ... This isolated community of 400 sits on a narrow spit of land that is constantly under threat from the sea, despite huge expenditure on defences....
oil exports and allow competition in the global marketplace ... Let’s face it, Royal Dutch Shell turned down a chance to drill in Alaska’s ChukchiSea because current prices are too low to justify such exploration unless the market is expanded ... A threatened White House veto will make Senate support more problematic ... ....
As Obama Instagrammed his way across the majestic terrain, Shell was preparing to wind down its first full summer season of drilling for oil in the ChukchiSea, potentially tapping into huge reserves of oil and gas that – as the president well knows – can not be burned without triggering a climate catastrophe ... at its test well in the ChukchiSea....
The firm took investors and its environmental opponents by surprise when it announced last week that it would end its drilling programme in the ChukchiSea... ....
But for the foreseeable future, the ChukchiSea won’t be developed ... issue), extend offshore lease terms, and open up new areas in the BeaufortSea. With the Chukchi now in the rearview mirror, we can expect a much stronger push for onshore development in sensitive areas....
After seven years of preparation and several billion dollars spent, Shell has decided to abandon its exploration program in the US Arctic “for the foreseeable future.” This follows barely two months’ drilling in the ChukchiSea at the company’s Burger J well, located 150 miles northwest of Barrow, Alaska... But it has meaning well beyond the ChukchiSea ... No company, American or foreign, will rush to replace Shell in the ChukchiSea....
Putting the ChukchiSea on ice, again ... But in the ChukchiSea, in the Alaskan Arctic, Shell has poured $7 billion into a single 6,800-foot exploratory well, making it possibly the most expensive hole yet drilled, only to admit ......
Surely not only the “kayaktivists” but also the maritime workers and other Seattleites are aware of the scientific effects of oil extraction and its production and uses on climate change. While we admire the activists, let’s not overlook the oil company’s declared economic reasons to discontinue its exploration of the ChukchiSea. For The Times […]> ... ....
Arctic waters “for the foreseeable future” after a well drilled this summer in the ChukchiSea off the Alaskan coast failed to find natural gas and oil in sufficient quantities ... Protesters with climbing gear hung suspended from a bridge in Portland, Oregon, to briefly delay a Shell support vessel from departing for the ChukchiSea....