Sunday, 28 November 2010
skiing in 'mørketid'
Although the sun is now officially below the horizon, it doesn't mean that it is dark day and night. The days are very short, but we do get about 4-5 hours of daylight, often with beautiful diffuse light and colours. And with the cold temperatures and good snow, rather unusual for November, it is nice skiing at the moment as long as you time it well. Here some photos of a short ski trip up Lille Blåmann, close to Tromsø.
Sunday, 21 November 2010
fieldwork September-October
A selection of photos from a number of day and overnight trips doing fieldwork in Troms and Lofoten-Vesterålen.
2 beautiful and warm days on Senja |
2 beautiful and warm days on Senja |
sampling trip up Gammelgårdsfjellet on Ringvassøya |
alterations in a brittle fault zone on Tussøya |
nicely exposed fault plane on Vannøya |
Vannøya |
looking from Vannøya towards Helgøya |
fault zone in Vesterålen |
fault zone with faultgouge in Vesterålen |
fault zone on Grytøya, north of Harstad |
weekend in Kåfjord
The 'mørketid' (the dark period when the sun stays below the horizon) is about to start, so this is a good time to catch up with some blogging. The official mørketid in Tromsø lasts from 25. November to 17. January, but as the mountains in the south block the true horizon, we don't actually see the sun from 22. November to 20 January unless you climb a mountain. It is now proper winter here in Tromsø, with about 15 cm of snow, and we have been out skiing a few times (catching the last sun!) in the last 2 weeks.
Here are some photos from a weekend back in July, one of the few sunny weekends we had this summer. The photos are from a hike to the end of the glacier Noammerjiehkki in the mountains around Kåfjord, about 80 km east of Tromsø.
the valley up from Trollvik |
following the ridge to the end of the glacier |
Tony showing his sheep-building skills |
we reached the glacier Noammerjiehkki |
flowers high up in between the rocks |
glacier scratches |
Saturday, 20 November 2010
Bergen
I spend 4 weeks in Bergen in October/November, using the laboratory facilities at the University of Bergen to prepare my samples for fission track dating. First crushing the rock samples, then mineral separation, followed by embedding the separated apatite in epoxy, and finally polishing, cutting and etching the mounts. Four weeks with long days in the lab. But, halfway, I had a half day off and went for a beautiful hike up Fløyen and Blåmanen, one of the mountains overlooking Bergen. Sunshine, fresh snow, this was Bergen at its best.
Moving house
We have bought a house and will be moving at the end of this year. So far we have always rented a house or apartment, but unfortunately, the last and current rental property has been an uncomfortable experience. The house owners conveniently 'forgot' to tell us that the property was for sale when we signed the rental contract, but asked us if they could show the property to some prospective buyers 3 weeks after we moved in. Luckily for us the house market in this area has been pretty slow this year. I am looking forward moving in to our own house and not having to deal with landlords, at least not while we live in Tromsø.
Wednesday, 25 August 2010
Fieldtrip Mull - Thermo 2010 conference #2
Thursday, 12 August 2010
Fieldtrip Mull - Thermo 2010 conference
Iona
Iona abbey
Iona abbey
Staffa
Staffa
adder
crossbedding in sandstone
kyanite replaced by andalusite
sediment lenses within the lower part of the Ross of Mull granite
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