Aviator Races to Photograph the World's Glaciers
Aviator Races to Photograph the World's Glaciers
01:41
2023年1月10日
說明
Aviator Races to Photograph the World's Glaciers Garrett Fisher is traveling the world in his little blue-white "Super Cub" airplane, as he tries to document every remaining glacier on Earth. The 41-year-old Fisher does it for a simple reason: "Because I love them." However, he does it for another purpose too — the climate is changing, and the planet's glaciers are melting. Fisher believes documenting, archiving, and remembering these changes is important. According to Fisher, the melting glaciers are the first indication that we're losing something because of climate change. "In 100 or 200 years, most of them will be gone," he says. That's why Fisher is building an archive of his glacier photos. He believes any record he makes before the glaciers melt could be very valuable to future generations. In 2021, Fisher started the Global Glacier Initiative, an organization to support and show his work, and he plans to open his archive to the public for research. Many glaciers are hard to get to or photograph — so Fisher has to make some dangerous journeys. Why does he do it? He's looking for the perfect picture; one so beautiful it can make people and policymakers act. And if one image isn't enough, then maybe a whole archive will make people come and look, get close and pay attention. "We can live without [glaciers]. We will live without them," Fisher says. "However, it hurts us to lose them."
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Practice Listening, Reading & Comprehension
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