A trip to the Arctic of Finland and Alaska to meet the people who decide to live in these remote areas, tens of kilometers from the nearest soul.
Lux Aestiva is a celebration of ever-changing light of summer in Finland. These hyperlapses were shot during June and July 2020 in various locations in Southern Finland: Turku, Kaarina, Lieto, Salo and Parainen.
Finland
Hiking in Finland’s Repovesi National Park
A rare visitor
This snow apollo (Parnassius apollo) is a rare butterfly, and, therefore, a protected species here in Finland, and one of the largest too. I have seen it only twice now, once last year in passing, and yesterday, the 23rd of July, 2019, when it obliged me with posing for a couple of quick snaps while leisurely sipping the nectar.
The belt of Venus and our world's shadow Every sunny day around dawn and dusk, the shadow of our planet appears opposite the solar orb, often lined with pink and purple colours. So named because it is the zone where the morning and evenstar appear (since the inner planets are never very far from the sun as seen from earth), it is most clear when the air is dusty and the sky cloud free. The pinks are due to backscattered light off the dust in the atmosphere, at the edge of the world's umbra. In this case, the sun was rising over Lapland, and the ice covered trees formed a beautiful backdrop to a wonderful and common sight, which becomes more awe inspiring when we remind ourselves that we are seeing our planet's shadow extending off towards space. Loz Image credit: Niccolò Bonfadini http://bit.ly/1aWZrAF https://www.yahoo.com/news/photos/arctic-circle-transformed-into-ghostly-world-slideshow/arctic-trees-photo-1343068100.html
The Eridanos
Today, the Amazon is the uncrowned king of rivers on our planet. But this has not always been the case. In fact, it's only since very recently that South America took the title from Northern Europe for supporting the biggest river system on the planet. Geologists call this ancient river the Eridanos. In Greek mythology, the Eridanos was beyond the river Po, famous for its islands of amber.
Looking at a map of Northern Europe, this first thing people will notice are the intricate systems of waterways in this part of the continent. It's easy to imagine looking at that same map, that millions of years ago, a river ran from the north of Lapland, down through the Gulf of Bothnia, through the southern Baltic. Further down its stream it would first be carving out the various straits between the Danish isles before reaching the Atlantic Ocean south of Rogaland in Norway. At later times, after Denmark lifted up in the Miocene, this river would flow through what is now Jutland and the German Bight, taking in the waters of the rivers Elbe, Rhine, Scheldt and Thames, before creating an enormous delta system in what's now the central North Sea and the Northern Netherlands. At this time in its history, the Eridanos was at its largest, carrying as much sediment as the modern Ganges, nearly as much water as the modern Amazon, and being as long as the modern Danube, draining virtually all of Europe north of the Alps.
The Ice Ages eventually spelled doom for this magnificent river. At first, the advent of the ice caps in northern Fennoscandia allowed for more glacial runoff. However, when the severity of the ice ages increased in the Mid-Pleistocene, more and more of the Eridanos basin got buried underneath glacial ice, and by 700.000 years BP, the entire river disappeared underneath the ice cap. The sheer weight of the ice depressed the northern part of Europe so much, that after the retreat of the ice, what was formerly the wide valley of the Eridanos, got filled in with water, creating the modern day Baltic Sea.
Some aspects of this great river's legacy remained, though; 90% of the world's extractable amber can be found near coasts and islands of today's Baltic Sea. Also, with Northern Fennoscandia rising faster than the current sea level rise, the Baltic essentially behaves like a giant river, even at this date; the flow is primarily north to south, with most of the salty water flowing out through the Kattegat, being constantly replaced with fresh water from the many rivers that feed it. As a result, the Baltic Sea is merely brackish in its main basin, and by some definitions, the Gulf of Bothnia and Gulf of Finland could be considered fresh-water bodies.
~Clint.
Further reading and sources:
De Ondergrond van Nederland, Wolters-Noordhoff, ISBN 90-01-60514-1
Image: Lake Kilpisjarvi in Lapland, the source region of the Eridanos
Image credits: Clint.
Original caption:
Highlights from my encounters with the Green Lady between August 16th 2018 and April 24th 2019. Shot in Pöytyä, Marttila, Hetta, Utsjoki, Muonio, Kolari and Raisio, Finland.
Gear: Canon EOS 5D Mark IV Sony A7 III Sigma 35 mm f/1.4 Art Sigma 20 mm f/1.4 Art Sigma 14 mm f/1.8 Art Syrp Genie
Music: Kevin Graham - From Within
Original caption:
Northern lights in Ylläsjärvi, Finland - shot on February 21st 2019
Music: Salue by Kai Engel is licensed under an Attribution License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Original caption:
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One week across the wilderness of Lapland. Snowshoeing in the middle of nowhere, trekking on a snowmobile, crossing the empty roads of northern Finland. Put this on your bucket list NOW !
My gears in this trip: Cameras: BMPCC4K & GH5 Drone: Mavic 2 pro with polar pro filters ND PL Gimbale: Zhiyun crane V2 And a good coat ;-)
Music: Meris - Jordan Critz licensed with musicbed.com
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- "Most people huddled inside the ferry for warmth — but I stayed outside to watch the ice breaking. At one point, I looked back into the room and saw teenage kids on their phones and mothers holding their babies and thought to myself, 'I can’t believe this is their every day.'” Tag who you'd love to venture to Finland with! (🎥: @everchanginghorizon 📍: Helsinki City, Finland)
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