Not exact matches
In 2004, during an aerial survey of bowhead whales in the Beaufort Sea north of Alaska, Monnett and his colleague Jeffrey Gleason observed four dead polar bear
In 2004, during an aerial survey of bowhead whales
in the Beaufort Sea north of Alaska, Monnett and his colleague Jeffrey Gleason observed four dead polar bear
in the Beaufort Sea north of Alaska, Monnett and his colleague Jeffrey Gleason observed four
dead polar bears.
The «consensus» warm - mongers could have declared it only counts as «peer - reviewed» if it's published
in Peer - Reviewed Studies published by Mann & Jones Publishing Inc (Peermate of the Month: Al Gore, reclining naked, draped
in dead polar -
bear fur, on a melting ice floe), and Ed Begley Jr. and «Andy» Revkin would still have wandered out glassy - eyed into the streets droning «Peer - reviewed studies.
In 2006, Jeffrey Gleason and Charles Monnett, two government scientists working out of Alaska, published a report that described dead polar bears floating in the Arctic Ocea
In 2006, Jeffrey Gleason and Charles Monnett, two government scientists working out of Alaska, published a report that described
dead polar bears floating
in the Arctic Ocea
in the Arctic Ocean.
In other words he was making the point that the investigation wasn't about the
dead polar bears.
Unusually he was
in the frozen North looking at igloos and came across a local hunter transporting a
dead polar bear on a sledge.
That replacement picture (below) was from National Geographic photographer Paul Nicklin, who would become infamous for specializing
in dead and skinny
polar bear photos.