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Halley VI, Britain’s latest and greatest Antarctic Research Station, has opened and will become fully operational over the coming weeks.
The new Halley VI Minnesota Antarctic Research Station, replaced the 20-year-old (you guessed it) Halley V. Creating the new home of the British Antarctic Survey was a difficult project given the ...
Halley VI features ski-based modules that were designed to respond to the rising snow and ice levels. Large hydraulic legs enable the station to remain above the ground and adjust to the amount of ...
The Halley VI is a British Antarctic Survey research station which is based at the Brunt Ice Shelf, in Antarctica. It's home to a team of scientists, engineers and a colony of penguins!
Britain's Halley VI research station is being towed to a new location on an ice shelf in Antarctica, to avoid a growing chasm that threatens to cut it adrift. Skip to main content.
The sixth station to be built, since it began research in 1956, by British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Halley VI confronts the harsh conditions through an innovative design, the use of building ...
The Halley VI Research Station is home to the British Antarctic Survey who discovered the ozone layer hole; It was successfully relocated 14 miles across the Brunt Ice Shelf after detection of an ...
The Halley VI Research Station in Antarctica, positioned on a floating ice shelf jutting into the Weddell Sea, will shut down between March and November this year, according to the British ...
The Halley VI Research Station underneath the aurora in Antarctica. In 1956, the British Antarctic Survey established the Halley Research Station.Located on the Brunt Ice Shelf at the edge of the ...
The book “Ice Station” (Park Books, $29), by architectural writer Ruth Slavid, chronicles the creation of Halley VI, the sixth British research station built on the Brunt Ice Shelf in ...
“Ice Station: The Creation of Halley VI Britain’s Pioneering Antarctic Research Station” (Park) features about 100 interior and exterior photographs by James Morris and an essay by Ruth Slavid.
The sixth station to be built, since it began research in 1956, by British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Halley VI confronts the harsh conditions through an innovative design, the use of building ...