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  • Daniel J. Cox, PBI Advisory Board member and Director of the Arctic Documentary Project, on the back of a Tundra Buggy.
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  • Don Moore, Julene Reed and Tom Smith of PBI in Churchill.
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  • PBI VIP group at Wapusk Adventures dog sledding kennels in Churchill.
    D1653997.jpg
  • Dr. Megan Owen PBI scientist on the back of Buggy One.
    D862134.jpg
  • Dr. Megan Owen, PBI Tundra Connections production on Buggy One.
    D862786.jpg
  • Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) portrait. Hudson Bay, Canada
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  • Polar bear shot with a dart filled with an immobilizing drug. The bear is showing signs of ataxia. Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • A lead in the winter ice of the Beaufort Sea Ice pack. Kaktovik, Alaska
    D125871.jpg
  • Broken ice in the Beaufort Sea. Arctic Ocean
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  • Dr. Jane Goodall waits patiently at a private reception during the Youth 4 Action conference in Ottawa, Canada.
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  • A polar bear (Ursus maritimus) makes tracks in the snow. These tracks are important for being able to find the bears on the ice for darting and capturing for scientific research.
    D125949.jpg
  • Geoff York, USGS biologist, and Katrina Knott, research assistant, collect data from a polar bear (Ursus maritimus) on the Beaufort Sea ice. Kaktovik, Alaska
    D123694.jpg
  • USGS polar bear team preparing for a day of polar bear research. Kaktovik, Alaska
    D125081.jpg
  • Dr. Steve Amstrup, USGS bioogist, analyzing data from recent polar bear captures at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife house in Kaktovik, Alaska.
    D125070.jpg
  • Pancake ice on the waters of the Arctic Ocean.
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  • Dr. Steven Amstrup and Eric Regehr with a large male polar bear on the Beaufort Sea in Alaska.
    D169626.jpg
  • A female polar bear (Ursus maritimus) darted and weak from an immobilizing drug she received from Dr. Steve Amstrup, USGS biologist. Beaufort Sea, Alaska
    D125585.jpg
  • A female polar bear with a newly painted identifying number on her back and a radio collar around her neck, stands in a groggy disoriented state. She has just emerged from an immobilizing drug used by USGS biologist Steven Amstrup. The number is used to identify the bear from the air so she is not captured again that same year. The number wears off after a couple of weeks.
    D123598.jpg
  • Dr Amstrup prepares to attach a GPS satellite tracking collar to an immobilized polar bear on the Beaufort Sea. The collars are placed on females exclusively since the necks of males get too large for them to work properly. The collars are a high tech way to follow these animals far out onto the ice where humans can't go. The bears are tracked by satellites which helps the scientists determine the home range of individual animals and other details about a particular bear's life such as length of time spent resting or hunting in one area.
    D171752.jpg
  • Dr. Steve Amstrup, USGS biologist weighing a large, male polar bear weighing 944 lbs.  on the Beaufort Sea ice pack.
    D124966.jpg
  • BJ, Krista, and Nick hauling the remote camera for deployment near a polar bear den site. Svalbard, Norway
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  • John Whiteman displays the Ibutton Thermochron deep core body temperature device that is implanted into polar bears for long-term body temperature data.
    D228018.jpg
  • Steve Amstrup and Geoff York, USGS biologists, taking field data from an immobilized large male polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Kaktovik, Alaska
    D123987.jpg
  • The bow of the Polar Sea Icebreaker. Arctic Ocean
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  • Steve Amstrup and Geoff York, USGS biologists, taking field data from a large, immobilized male polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • Pancake ice on the Beaufort Sea.
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  • A polar bear stands for a better view of the helicopter. Arctic Ocean.
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  • Ice breaking apart during late April on the Beaufort Sea. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • A polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with an immobilizA polar bear (Ursus maritimus) makes tracks in the snow. these tracks are important for being able to find the bears on the ice for darting and capture.ing dart in it's side makes tracks in the snow. These tracks are important for being able to find the bears on the ice for darting and capture.
    D125422.jpg
  • Dr. Steve Amstrup, leaning from a moving helicopter, takes careful aim with his dart gun used to inject an immobilizing drug into a polar bear. Beaufort Sea ice pack, Kaktovik, Alaska
    D125722.jpg
  • Daniel Whiting and Dawn Sechler check the water collection device called a CTD (Conductivity, Temperature, and Depth) used for collecting water samples from the Arctic Ocean.
    D229911.jpg
  • Mette Kaufman pulls up an ice core sample. Arctic Ocean
    D230254.jpg
  • Dr. Steve Amstrup, USGS biologist, and assistant Karyn Rode preparing to collect data from a small female polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Beaufort Sea ice pack, Kaktovik, Alaska
    D125131.jpg
  • A polar bear (Ursus maritimus) lies spread out over the ice of the Beaufort Sea. He's immobilized from a tranquilizer and on the verge of waking after USGS biologists have just performed their field tests on him. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • Broken ice in the Beaufort Sea. Arctic Ocean
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  • The icebreaker Polar Sea in the arctic pack ice of the Beaufort Sea.
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  • Krista Wright in Svalbard, Norway. Krista Wright, Portrait. Svalbard, Norway
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  • Dr. Steven Amstrup, lead scientist for the US Geological Survey, darts a female polar bear on the Beaufort Sea. Darting the bears from a helicopter can be extremely treacherous. The pilot has to hover over a running animal that is twisting and turning, dodging and ducking, an animal that feels it's running for its life. This bear is hit directly between the shoulders with an immobilizing dart. It takes anywhere from 4-15 minutes for the drug to take effect and immobilize the bear which will be out for 1-2 hours as the scientists process the data.
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  • The Beaufort Sea ice pack breaks into chunks during late April 2007.
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  • Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) a large male lies immobilized on the ice as Dr. Steven Amstrup and his assistant head for a female that was darted at the same time and is down on the ice. Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • Greg Durner, USGS Alaska Science Center, surveying the range of denning polar bears in the Arctic National WIldlife Refuge. Alaska
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  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) jumping across ice in Svalbard, Norway.
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  • Brenna McConnell, Metta Kaufman, and Cristina Galvan working on ice core samples from the Arctic Ocean.
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  • Dr. Steve Amstrup, lead biologist for the USGS polar bear capture project, instructing a co-worker on the fine points of shooting a dart gun at a running polar bear from a moving helicopter. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • USGS biologist Dr. Steve Amstrup and assistant Karyn Rode attempt to lift a small 365 pound female polar bear on the Beaufort Sea ice pack.
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  • Karyn Rode prepares to take data from a large male polar bear on the ice pack of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
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  • A polar bear (Ursus Maitimus) makes its way over the rugged ice of the Beaufort Sea. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • A polar bear (Ursus Maitimus) makes its way over the rugged ice of the Beaufort Sea in Kaktovik, Alaska.
    D123494.jpg
  • A polar bear (Ursus maritimus) makes its way across the Beaufort Sea Ice pack. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • Geoff York, USGS biologist, takes a blood sample of a darted polar bear. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • Dr Steven Amstrup collects data from a polar bear on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
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  • Steve Amstrup, lead USGS biologist, and assistant Karyn Rode, taking field data from an immobilized large male polar bear (Ursus maritmus). Kaktovik, Alaska
    D125246.jpg
  • Steve Amstrup and Geoff York, USGS biologists, taking blood from an immobilized large male polar bear.
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  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus), Barents Sea, off of the northern coast of Norway
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  • A large male polar bear walking along the shores of Hudson Bay. Manitoba, Canada
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  • One of the target polar bears that was never captured runs across newly formed ice in the Arctic Ocean.
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  • Dan Whiting and Dawn Sechler checking the Flow Through Incubation experiment used to identify how additional sunlight through lack of sea ice cover will affect microscopic life in the Arctic Ocean.
    D227748.jpg
  • The sun sets over broken chunks of newly forming ice in the Arctic Ocean.
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  • Jumbled ice from pressure ridges on the ice pack of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • Dr amstrup check a recently immobilized Alaska.
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  • bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus) a mother and her new born pup on the edge of an open water lead on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
    D171456.jpg
  • Dr Steven Amstrup collects data from a recently immobilized polar bear on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska. Steven
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  • Dr Steven Amstrup and Susie Miller taking data from a tranquilized polar bear cub. Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • A large male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) lies immobilized on the ice pack of the Beaufort Sea. Kaktovik, Alaska.
    D124588.jpg
  • Steve Amstrup , lead USGS biologist, paints a number on the back of an immobilized large male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) that was darted for research purposes. Kaktovik, Alaska.
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  • Geoff York, USGS biologist, prepares a radio collar while Katrina Knott, research assistant, paints an ID number on the back of a polar bear. The ID number is to make it easy to see from the air that the bear was captured already.
    D123748.jpg
  • Geoff York, USGS biologist and Katrina Knott, research assistant, prepare a polar bear (Ursus maritimus) to start doing their research.  This female bear will receive a radio collar for future tracking.  Kaktovik, Alaska.
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  • Geoff York, USGS biologist, checks the ear tag of a polar bear (Ursus maritimus) darted from the air for data collection. Kaktovik, Alaska.
    D123633.jpg
  • Beaufort Sea ice pack. Spring. Offshore from Kaktovik, ak.
    D125273.jpg
  • Blain Bearoy a historical guide for the York Factory fort museum shows some of the antiquities of the early days on Hudson Bay relating to York Factory.
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  • The Polar Bears International House in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada.
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  • Latching down gear onto the sled for our trip home. Svalbard, Norway
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  • Maternal Den Study team in the field. Svalbard, Norway
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  • BJ Kirschhoffer and Krista Wright unload materials used for the deployment of remote cameras for the Maternal Den Study. Svalbard, Norway
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  • Adult polar bear (Ursus maritimus) waiting for the winter freeze-up. Hudson Bay, Manitoba, Canada
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  • A polar bear near Svalbard, Norway.
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  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada.
    D237586.jpg
  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) cubs. Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
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  • A pair of male polar bears (Ursus maritimus) wrestling on the ice. Hudson Bay, Churchill, Canada
    00473-52306.jpg
  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) on the shore of Wager Bay. Nunavut, Canada
    00473-35618.jpg
  • Dr. Steven Amstrup shows the canines of a polar bear. Beaufort Sea, Alaska
    D170980.jpg
  • Metta Kaufman and Brenna McConnell from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, taking ice core samples from the ice of the Arctic Ocean.
    D230205.jpg
  • Metta Kaufman and Brenna McConnell from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, taking ice core samples from the ice of the Arctic Ocean.
    D230192.jpg
  • A mother polar bear and her two cubs navigate the newly forming and unstable ice of the Chukchi Sea.
    D229283.jpg
  • Newly formed ice covers the waters of the Arctic Ocean.
    D227187.jpg
  • Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) hind foot, paw. Kaktovik, Alaska
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  • The bow of the Polar Sea icebreaker at night with northern lights just above the horizon. A spotlight from the ship helps guide it through the ice. Arctic Ocean
    D230513.jpg
  • A radio-collared polar bear makes its way across the broken ice pack of the Beaufort Sea. Arctic Ocean
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  • John Whiteman with the IButton Thermochron, deep core body temperature device that was removed from polar bear #21045. Arctic Ocean
    D230466.jpg
  • Dr. Steven Amstrup digs up the body of a female polar bear he tracked with a radio collar. He was unsure of caused her death. She was buried over by sand from ocean waves along the coast of the Beaufort Sea, .Alaska.
    D172322.jpg
  • Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) a lone bear on the sea ice of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • Dr Steven Amstrup leans out of a flying helicopter to shoot an immobilizing drug into a polar bear. Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
    D172014.jpg
  • Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) tracks on the ice of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • Ice scapes on the pack ice of the Beaufort Sea, Alaska
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  • Bearded Seal (Erignathus barbatus) adult in an open water lead on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
    D171442.jpg
  • The Brooks Range rises out of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Alaska
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  • Bearded Seal (Erignathus barbatus) adult lies next to an open water lead on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
    D171194.jpg
  • Dr Steven Amstrup collects data from a polar bear on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.
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  • Dr Steven Amstrup, Susie Miller  and chopper pilot Bob Dunbar collect data from a recently immobilized polar bear on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska. The bear is beginning to wake.
    D170849.jpg
  • Dr Steven Amstrup leans out of the chopper to dart a polar bear on the Beaufort Sea, Alaska. Steven
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