Nature, 1st prize
Paul Nicklen
National Geographic
National Geographic
30 October, 2008
A light-mantled sooty albatross flies over South Georgia, Antarctica. After months at sea feeding on krill, the birds come to the island to breed and raise a single chick.
South Georgia is a 160-km-long arc of mountains and glaciers, half covered by snow and ice, half by rock and tundra-like vegetation. A high density of krill (protein-rich crustaceans) in the surrounding seas helps make the island a haven for wildlife.
Paul Nicklen
As a young boy, Paul Nicklen, a Canadian-born polar specialist and marine biologist, moved to Baffin Island and spent his childhood among the Inuit people. From them he learned t...
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