A RESEARCHER has followed in the footsteps of his father after replicating photos taken by his father after nearly 32 years.
Dr Kieran Baxter, a lecturer in Communication Design at the University of Dundee, replicated photos showing the devastating effects of climate change.
Dr Baxter’s father, Colin Baxter a famous Scottish landscape photographer took the same photo 3 decades earlier in Iceland.
The pair worked together to replicate original images, taken by Colin on a family holiday in 1989, to show the retreat of several outlet glaciers of the Vatnajökull ice cap.
The locations were Fla?ajo?kull, Heinabergsjo?kull, Hoffellsjokull, Ho?larjo?kull, and Skaftafellsjo?kull – in the south east of the country.
They now hope these new images can highlight the impact of climate change on some of the planet’s most fragile and beautiful landscapes
“I grew up visiting these amazing places and inherited an understanding of the quiet power of these landscapes.
“It is personally devastating to see them change so drastically in the last few decades in a way that is not immediately obvious from a single visit.
“On surface appearances the extent of the climate crisis often remains largely invisible, but here we can clearly see the gravity of the situation that is affecting the entire globe.”
“To replicate the photographs we have to locate features in the foreground and background and then use trial and error to find the right location on the ground.
“It can take some time to correctly align the old and new photographs but in the end we can usually find the camera position to within a few metres of the original location.
Dr Baxter has established himself as a leading expert in the visual communication of glacial retreat across Europe.
In the three decades that have elapsed since 1989, Vatnajökull ice cap, the largest glacier Europe, has lost 150–200 km³ of ice and its area has been reduced by more than 400 km² according to the Icelandic Meteorological Office.
Many glacier termini have retreated by more than a kilometre in this time period.
Dr Baxter’s father, Colin said: “Revisiting my pictures of Iceland in 1989 of course brought back many good memories of being there for the first time with our very young children.
“I remember being in absolute awe of the stunning natural landscape and overwhelmed by the beauty of the glaciers tumbling down from the icecap up there in the distance.
“Now in 2020 it is equally overwhelming, and extremely alarming, to see the disappearance of all that ice after only 30 years. We all have to take responsibility for that, myself included.
“Our activity has indisputably contributed to the colossal volume of the melt which carries on today.
“I just hope that we can wake up to the real dangers that lie ahead with the continued degradation of our environment, not just in Iceland but around the world, and accelerate our efforts to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental impacts.
“We certainly owe that to the families of the future. I hope they can continue to enjoy these inspirational landscapes as we have done in previous decades.”
Dr Baxter concluded: “I was too young to remember the 1989 trip, but I can picture our later visits to Iceland as a family in the 1990s.
“It is a bittersweet experience to relive those memories and witness the glacial landscapes that we visited that have now changed so radically.”