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قديم 02-08-2012, 05:38 PM   #25
ابن روزه
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افتراضي رد: صور غريبه نادره ومميزه ***الجزء الثاني

[frame="8 80"]القطب الشمالي

Arctic portal on the way to the North Pole has amazing auroras. These Northern Lights, or Aurora Borealis, shine above Eielson Air Force Base, Bear Lake, Alaska. USAF Photo #1 by Senior Airman Joshua Strang


Icebergs around Cape York, Greenland, which is considered part of the Arctic Circle even if it’s not quite the North Pole. The hole was caused by weathering effects – erosion by waves, wind and melting. Photo #2 by Mila Zinkova

This photo was taken near a town called Nes in the Nenets Autonomous District in Northwest Russia. Nenets people are Vishnevets via Windows to the Universe

A Muskoxen is an Arctic mammal believed to be a survivor or the Pleistocene period and to have migrated to North America between 200,000 and 90,000 years ago. Photo #4 by USFWS

Taste the freedom over the 81° parallel; the North Pole is just a hop away from here. Photo #5 by Tunde Pecsvari

Whale Bone Rib Arc and Skin Boat Frames at Barrow, Alaska located on the coastal waters of the Arctic Ocean. Photo #6 by Donna Dewhurst

USS Providence Surfaced At The North Pole. U.S. Navy Photo #7 by Yeoman 1st Class (SS) J. Thompson

Titled ‘Global Warming at the North Pole’. Photo #8 by Jeff Kubina

Arctic portal — Humpback Whale breaching. Photo #9 by Whit Welles

Mush! Explorers and adventurers often travel by dog sled near the North Pole. Photo #10 by Adam Grimes

Old school or perhaps simply reality more than 110 years ago: Traveling by reindeer at Archangel, Russia. Image is photomechanical taken between 1890-1900. Photo #11 by Detroit Publishing Co. / Library of Congress

Building an Eskimo igloo in 1924, real people setting up house in the North Pole region. Photo #12 by Frank Kleinschmidt via Library of Congress

Mosaic of the Arctic — North Pole. On June 30, 2011 the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard NASA’s Terra satellite made multiple passes over the Arctic, capturing a true-color image of the summer lSpace Flight Center

Broken glaciers as seen when flying above the North Pole. Photo #14 by { pranav }

Iceberg between Langø and Sanderson Hope, south of Upernavik, Greenland. Photo #15 by Hansen

Near the North Pole during Ben Saunders’ solo expedition. Photo #16 by Ben Saunders

Andree’s Station at Danskoen, Spitzbergen, Norway. This photochrom color image was taken between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900. Photo #17 by Detroit Publishing via The Library of Congress

View of a total solar eclipse on Earth above the Arctic as seen from NASA’s Terra satellite. It covered the Arctic Ocean, northern Norway, and northwest Russia. The affected area was dark for two minutes during the eclipse. Satellite path was nearly perpendicular to the eclipse. Photo #18 by NASA Terra satellite

Brave Arctic dwellers during the summer; this photo of a Sami (Lapp) family in Norway was taken around 1900. Photo #19 by Detroit Publishing Co.

This cute fella is an Arctic Seehund — which is the German name for seal. Photo #20 by Marcel Burkhard

1949 NOAA Arctic expedition. The caption stated, “Even the dogs thought it was cold.” NOAA At The Ends of the Earth Collection Photo #21 by Rear Admiral Harley D. Nygren, NOAA Corp

After the 1996 Pribilof Island Oil Spill, this Arctic fox was scavenging for carcasses. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Photo #22 by Art Sowls / Paul Flint

Inupiat Eskimos: Whaling boat on the coastal waters of the Arctic Ocean. Photo #23 by Donna Dewhurst Collection

Polar Circle during winter as seen along the Norwegian coast. Photo #24 by Janter

1905 — 82 N. Latitude, panorama shot during the unsuccessful Ziegler polar expedition of 1903-1905. Photo #25 by Anthony Fiala

April 1909 Peary Sledge Party and Flags at the North Pole. Pictured are (left to right): Ooqueh, holding the Navy League flag; Ootah, holding the D.K.E. fraternity flag; Matthew Henson, holding the polar flag; Egingwah, holding the D.A.R. peace flag; and Seeglo, holding the Red Cross flag. Photo #26 by Robert Edwin Peary

Rainbow seen by NOAA’s Camera 2 over North Pole. Photo #27 by NOAA

Beaufort Sea Ice. This sea is located within the Arctic Ocean and is frozen over most of the year; it de-thaws only along the shoreline during August–September. Brr! Photo #28 by Chuck Young / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

NASA wrote of this aurora, “Sometimes, after your eyes adapt to the dark, a spectacular sky appears. In this case, a picturesque lake lies in front of you, beautiful green aurora flap high above you, brilliant stars shiKuenzli / via NASA APOD


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