Quote from jack hershey:
That is over 200 feet high and goes down in the water about 1800 feet.
That guy is twice as long as the ship and we are about 75 feet away and doing the weaving and bobbing routine.
They all leave wakes in the water as they move and the wind (there it was under 40mph) does not affect them.
In that area you could see five deep from ship to shore and each one could be a mile on a side and sticking up over 200 feet.
I took shear and torsion effects shots and everything else to understand the action. The grand canyon is zip compared to this stuff.
It is like the whole earth's action is speeding up and everything has become unstable. For example, the seal and penguin roosting sites are moving 50 miles a year at this point. They do move about and they have to adapt to temp changes to keep things straight. But at one time they used fences and automatic weighing gates (the animals are banded with microchips) for several years. Now yearly change prevents this.
The antarctic Strait (iceberg alley) research station has 28 buildiing (two stories) and to get to equal conditions nowadays takes a lot of travel.
We always have an evening slide show in the offing simply because of the local interest in climate change, etc... Liz is softened up for Greenland, etc....but I will probably not sneak it in this Summer. Maybe trader's Expo could use some comic relief.