TUVALU-ENVIRONMENT-GLOBAL WARMING-6

Captain Jonathan Gayton, CEO of the Tuvalu Maritime Training Institute, announces the formation of a new lake on Amatuku Islet as king tides hit Funafuti Atoll, 20 February 2004, home to nearly half of Tuvalu's entire population of 11,500. Tuvaluans fear that global warming induced changes in sea level coupled with king tides and cyclones will soon render their Polynesian archipelago uninhabitable. AFP PHOTO/Torsten BLACKWOOD (Photo by TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP) (Photo by TORSTEN BLACKWOOD/AFP via Getty Images)
Captain Jonathan Gayton, CEO of the Tuvalu Maritime Training Institute, announces the formation of a new lake on Amatuku Islet as king tides hit Funafuti Atoll, 20 February 2004, home to nearly half of Tuvalu's entire population of 11,500. Tuvaluans fear that global warming induced changes in sea level coupled with king tides and cyclones will soon render their Polynesian archipelago uninhabitable. AFP PHOTO/Torsten BLACKWOOD (Photo by TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP) (Photo by TORSTEN BLACKWOOD/AFP via Getty Images)
TUVALU-ENVIRONMENT-GLOBAL WARMING-6
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Credit:
TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / Contributor
Editorial #:
1668666518
Collection:
AFP
Date created:
February 20, 2004
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Source:
AFP
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AFP
Object name:
HKG2004022003879
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2048 x 1401 px (6.83 x 4.67 in) - 300 dpi - 1 MB