The Marine photograph

The Marine

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Initial release USA
Directors John Bonito
Box office22. 2 million USD
Budget15 million USD
Producers Joel Simon
Jonathan Winfrey
Kathryn Sommer-Parry
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID406143
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About The Marine


A discharged soldier (John Cena) returns home from Iraq and finds that his wife (Kelly Carlson) has been kidnapped by the gang of a murderous jewel thief (Robert Patrick). Soldier John Triton must use all his military skills to rescue his wife from her ruthless captors.

Channel deaths: Government orders inquiry into mass drowning

Channel deaths: Government orders inquiry into mass drowning
Nov 8,2023 7:41 pm

... A report by The Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) said the UK s emergency response had been hampered by the lack of dedicated aircraft to carry out aerial surveillance of the Dover Strait...

Boom in unusual jellyfish spotted in UK waters

Boom in unusual jellyfish spotted in UK waters
Nov 3,2023 12:51 am

...By Georgina RannardClimate and science reporterThe number of jellyfish spotted in UK waters and on beaches increased by 32% in the past year, according to a survey by The Marine Conservation Society...

Why are whales throwing seaweed on their heads?

Why are whales throwing seaweed on their heads?
Oct 20,2023 10:51 pm

... While The Marine mammals enjoyed rolling around in the seaweed, there was one spot in particular that the whales targeted...

F-35 crash: Pilot called 911 after parachuting into backyard

F-35 crash: Pilot called 911 after parachuting into backyard
Sep 22,2023 12:51 pm

... According to The Marine Corps, the pilot ejected as a result of a malfunction and landed in a residential area near Charleston s international airport...

Sand dredging devastating ocean floor, UN warns

Sand dredging devastating ocean floor, UN warns
Sep 5,2023 5:51 pm

... The Marine environment must be given time to recover, he said, adding that " it s not sustainable"...

Turtle swept 4,000 miles to Wales flies home to Texas

Turtle swept 4,000 miles to Wales flies home to Texas
Aug 30,2023 12:10 pm

......

Former Royal Marine shot by pirate in Amazon

Former Royal Marine shot by pirate in Amazon
Aug 16,2023 2:51 pm

... The Marine said he felt a " jolt" through his body and knew he had been shot...

Period pants should not be subject to 20% VAT, say firms

Period pants should not be subject to 20% VAT, say firms
Aug 9,2023 8:11 pm

... As well as politicians, the bosses of Ocado, The Marine Conservation society and leaders from The Football Association and campaigners Breast Cancer Now have signed the letter...

'The closest thing on Earth to interplanetary travel'

Aug 4,2023 12:31 am

Finding out how fast Antarctic ice is melting is critical to understanding the scale of the climate crisis. The BBC's chief environmental correspondent, Justin Rowlatt , is therefore joining scientists as they check the health of The West Antarctic Ice Sheet . But first he has to undergo some checks himself.

We were an hour into the medical examination.

Dr McGovern had asked every conceivable question. He had peered at, measured and squeezed me.

Then there was a pause.

"Now I need to examine your prostate", he says.

"You're kidding," I say.

"I Am not," he replies, reaching for a latex Glove .

Mount Erebus - the southernmost active volcano on Earth

Don't get me wrong, I understand why men of a certain age should undergo the procedure, I just couldn't see why this should be a condition of going to Antarctica.

But , as I was discovering, everything Antarctic is extreme. Fall ill and dozens of people might have to risk their lives to try and Rescue You .

It is the coldest and driest continent, and is also vast - Home to 90% of The World 's ice.

You're familiar with The Marine life here, The Penguins , seals and whales, But the largest indigenous land animal is actually a wingless midge.

"Travelling to Antarctica is the closest thing you'll get to interplanetary travel while staying earth-bound," one old Antarctic hand told me When I visited The British Antarctic Survey's HQ in Cambridge.

I had a stack of books about The Continent beside me on the long flight to New Zealand .

They are full of tales of The First explorers' epic exertions in the tooth-shattering cold.

They call it the Heroic Age , But it says a lot about Antarctica that the "heroes" we celebrate were more often failures, defeated by this unforgiving place.

Scott didn't come back.

Shackleton did, But on his most famous journey never actually set foot on The Continent .

Meanwhile Amundsen, who planted The Flag , is regarded by some as a cheat, because he didn't suffer enough.

David Vaughan , The Head of science at The British Antarctic Survey, is dismissive of those who come to Antarctica In Search of Adventure .

"If you want to suffer you can do that just as well in the Lake District ," he tells me over coffee in the spring sunshine of our hotel in New Zealand .

The air smells of fresh-mown grass. Birds squabble in the trees. A Christmas tree flashes incongruously in The Corner .

David takes another sip of cappuccino.

"You can die of exposure there too, if that's what you want to do. "

I'm not heading down south for Adventure - But what I'm doing is very adventurous.

I'm here because the ice at the end of The World has begun to stir. Satellite images show The Retreat of The Mighty Thwaites glacier has begun to accelerate.

It already accounts for 4% of global sea-level rise.

If Thwaites goes, The World 's oceans would rise by over half a metre, But it would almost certainly also precipitate a wider collapse of The West Antarctic Ice Sheet - which could add another three metres or more.

The Scientists I'm with want to find out how likely this is to happen and, if it does, When .

But only a handful of people have ever been to Thwaites, one of The Most challenging places to reach - let alone work in - in the whole of Antarctica.

It is remote, 1,000 miles from the nearest research station, the glacier is riddled with treacherous crevasses, and the whole region is subject to terrible storms.

By the time the C-17 cargo plane skids to a halt on the Ross Ice Shelf we're already late - Snow on The Runway has set us back A Day .

I walk down The Ladder and into a dazzling world of white and blue. The Light is refracted into rainbows as it scissors off the ice. It is breathtakingly beautiful But I Am entering a world in which time dissolves.

Within days of arriving at McMurdo, the main American research station in Antarctica, I feel As If I have been here for years. It isn't just that The Sun never sets, it is also because the 1,000 or so people here are so Friendly .

Justin Rowlatt (left) and cameraman Ben Sadd pose with the masked organiser of an Antarctic 10K run, and (right) David Vaughan

Perhaps the vastness of the landscape and vagaries of The Weather make co-operation and generosity the default option down here.

I'm piling second helpings on To My plate in the Galley - the canteen that serves The Base - When A Man in overalls and a shaggy beard asks what I'm here for.

"I'm with the Thwaites project," I tell him.

"You mean hurry up and Thwaites?" he says with a laugh.

It turns out not a single flight has made it from McMurdo to our base camp in West Antarctica for days. Three of McMurdo's Hercules planes are broken and there's a nasty weather system barrelling our way.

I help Myself to an extra scoop of fries. When I sit back down I discover a fascinating marine biologist has joined our table. She's studying how the extraordinary marine life forms that have evolved in Antarctica's frigid waters respond to changing sea temperatures.

There are worse places to wait than the end of The World , I tell Myself .



environment, british antarctic survey, glaciers, sea level rise, antarctic, climate change

Source of news: bbc.com

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