THE IK FOUNDATION PICTURES

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  1. FIELD STATION | NATURAE OBSERVATIO | MARTIN'S EYE | Spitsbergen 2019 - 2020
  2. PICTURES TRAIL CAMERAS | BIOSPHERE IN ALL DIRECTIONS

PICTURES TRAIL CAMERAS | HAVOC DIRECTIONS | July - September 2019

Research pictures – facing West, North, East and South – by four trail cameras on the Field Station | Naturae Observatio | Martin's Eye, placed on the west coast of Forlandsletta on Spitsbergen. Coordinates: LAT: 78.363333 LON: 11.614458. Altitude: 5.5 m | The Field Station is named after the first scientist (naturalist) who visited this place in 1758, Anton Rolandsson Martin, one of the so called Linnaeus apostles’.

[ READ MORE | About the Field Station project: https://www.ikfoundation.org/fieldstations | About Anton Rolandsson Martin: https://www.ikfoundation.org/ifacts/antonrolandssonmartin.php ]

CITING SOURCES: It is free to use the information/knowledge and pictures in The IK FOUNDATION PICTURES so long as you follow a few rules. Learn more > https://www.ikfoundation.org/citingsources.php
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    The four trail cameras have captured images due to that they are activated by movements in the near landscape around the Field Station. In July, the Field Station was visited by polar bears, which out of curiosity, managed to open some of the trail cameras and/or change the photo angle. Some of the cameras then continued to be activated by movements until the end of September. The different angles are of great interest because they capture cloud structures, passing birds, curious polar bears and reindeer, and even a visiting civil servant from the local Governor of Svalbard - really a unique specimen on this spot. All these pictures are published in a special gallery called “Pictures Trail Cameras | Havoc direction”.
    The four trail cameras have captured images due to that they are activated by movements in the near landscape around the Field Station. In July, the Field Station was visited by polar bears, which out of curiosity, managed to open some of the trail cameras and/or change the photo angle. Some of the cameras then continued to be activated by movements until the end of September. The different angles are of great interest because they capture cloud structures, passing birds, curious polar bears and reindeer, and even a visiting civil servant from the local Governor of Svalbard - really a unique specimen on this spot. All these pictures are published in a special gallery called “Pictures Trail Cameras | Havoc direction”.
    The four trail cameras have captured images due to that they are activated by movements in the near landscape around the Field Station. In July, the Field Station was visited by polar bears, which out of curiosity, managed to open some of the trail cameras and/or change the photo angle. Some of the cameras then continued to be activated by movements until the end of September. The different angles are of great interest because they capture cloud structures, passing birds, curious polar bears and reindeer, and even a visiting civil servant from the local Governor of Svalbard - really a unique specimen on this spot. All these pictures are published in a special gallery called “Pictures Trail Cameras | Havoc direction”.