Toggle navigation
Explore Posts
Most Recent
Near You
At your Latitude
Advanced Search
Posts by Topic
Weather
Ocean / Sea
Plants / Kelp
Human Health
Buildings
More Topics
Posts by Date
Past Week
Past Month
Past Year
Posts by Season
Winter
Spring
Summer
Fall
Submit a Post
Submit your Own Event Observation
Have you observed an unusual environmental or climate event in your area? Please share it with us.
Submit an Event Article
Has your local news media reported on an unusual environmental or climate event? Please let us know.
Cross Post from Another Network
Add a LEO post that references data in another observer network.
Members
About
LEO Network
Northern Climate Observer Newsletter
Projects
Funding & Support
Learn More
Sign In / Join
My LEO
My LEO
My Maps
My Community
Messages
Editor
Sign Out
English
Tokens
English
Español
Français
Deutsch
Русский
Norsk
Svenska
Suomi
Dansk
Magyar
Iñupiaq
Yup'ik
Portuguese
Монгол хэл
日本語 (にほんご)
한국어
中文
العربية
Davvisámegiella
Skolt Sámi
Íslenska
Українська
Kwak'wala
Swahili
हिंदी
اُردُو
Türkçe
Eesti
×
×
Follow
Following
My Maps
Share
Add Comment
Discussion
Edit
Edit
3 September 2020
/
The Independent Barents Observer
/
Atle Staalesen
Event
Researchers came to study Russian Arctic glacier, but found only big lake
N 68º 10' 57.589" E 65º 28' 42.656"
DMS:
N 68º 10' 57.589" E 65º 28' 42.656"
Lat/Lng:
68.1826636668277 65.478515625
Nearby
The glaciologists from Moscow came too late to see the MGU glacier in the North Ural.
Read On
The Independent Barents Observer
(English)
Or translated into
Español
Français
Deutsch
Русский
Norsk
Svenska
Suomi
Dansk
Magyar
Portuguese
Монгол хэл
日本語 (にほんご)
한국어
中文
العربية
Íslenska
Українська
Kwak'wala
Swahili
हिंदी
اُردُو
Türkçe
Eesti
View a screenshot of the article
See Also
The Independent Barents Observer
Surface Waters / Wetlands
Ice / Snow Change
Extreme Temperature
Glacier Change
Contributed to LEO Network by
Mike Brubaker