Aurora australis over Mawson
Trendy skier and Porsche
Snowtrac on the slope
Icy abstract
Climbing to the plateau
Spring Tripping
From Mt Twintops
Blizz'd in
Rolling past Depot Peak
Late evening running
On Peak 7
Nunataks
Midnight Sun
Final stop for the main tractor trains
Surveying southward
South of Mount Lacey
Away!
Argentine Islands
Deception Island
Desolation on Deception Island
Adelie Penguin
Pygoscelis antarctica
Memories
MV Nella Dan in Melbourne, December 1965
Fog Bow, Macquarie Island
Elephant seals and giant petrels (2xPiP)
Iceberg Alley (PiP)
Skua enjoying the view
Anvers Island
Keeping afloat
Panorama of Macquarie Island, looking south from N…
Green Antarctica (PiP)
Pygoscelis papua
Cuverville Island
Shall I jump back in?
Neko Harbour
Broken (PiP)
It's in the book
Frosty beard
Dancing round the Union Jack
Guardians of Port Lockroy
Neumayer Channel
Una's Tits
Summer evening
Lemaire Channel
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Aurora Australis to the SE
Well, after the "no uploads" problem and the frustration of having to use the original tiny copies for old images I was bringing forward, I decided it was time to replace a few. That was when I found the latest "bug" - it's possible to upload but at present the system cannot handle replacements - the new image won't connect to the old. So, as a workaround, I've included the old (2012) version as a clickable PiP to preserve the original comments etc. Apart from the year, the date is meaningless. :-)
Mawson lies under the auroral oval, the annular zone around the south magnetic pole where auroras are most prevalent. In plain language, there was an aurora most nights. They were so commonplace that, when someone entered a building and said there was an aurora outside, the usual question was "is it a good one?" before anyone would consider going out to look! This is from one of the Ektachrome films we "home developed" while there, hence a little grit.
Mawson lies under the auroral oval, the annular zone around the south magnetic pole where auroras are most prevalent. In plain language, there was an aurora most nights. They were so commonplace that, when someone entered a building and said there was an aurora outside, the usual question was "is it a good one?" before anyone would consider going out to look! This is from one of the Ektachrome films we "home developed" while there, hence a little grit.
Günter Klaus, Cämmerer zu Nau, Holger Hagen, Erhard Bernstein and 30 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Link to the original posting of this image in 2012.
Would love to see that once.
Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
Keep safe. Herb