Container Ship and Chemical Ship Crashes Compilation | Video

भिडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स भित्र क्लिक गर्नुहोस

The mountains and glaciers around me are cloaked in darkness. I’m in a small boat cruising a remote fjord of the Svalbard archipelago, halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole, following a motorized kayak as it putts back and forth across the choppy water. Through the blackness, I can just barely see the kayak, called a Jetyak, as it occasionally rams into ice along its pre-programmed course. This is the second time the Jetyak laden with high-tech gear has been dispatched to collect information about the tiny organisms living in the frigid water, and it’s about to yield some remarkable data for the scientists with me on this boat. Since 2012, the biologists Jørgen Berge of the Arctic University of Norway (UiT) and Geir Johnsen of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) have made regular trips aboard the research vessel Helmer Hanssen to explore the marine life that survives in the dead of the polar night, the darkness that envelops the Arctic from November to February. Berge is the leader of the research team, which also includes scientists from the U.S. and the U.K.; Johnsen is in charge of submersibles and other equipment. watch video

भिडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स भित्र क्लिक गर्नुहोस

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