ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 6月14日 22時10分
Photo @Keith Ladzinski / In less then a week, North Carolina's #CapeHatteras, received over 17 inches of rain. This is roughly 30 percent of the annual rainfall the area generally sees, squeezed into a mere days. Many areas in the Outer Banks were flooded and some closed, including the Cape Point Campground. Beneath the surface of the flood is a surreal world of wispy algae clinging to the grasses and vegetation. It's an #algeabloom, derived from an excess of nutrients in the water, like phosphorus, resulting in an increased growth of algae. It's transformed the mowed lawns of the campground into a wild scene where marine life, like crabs, are now swimming and osprey are hovering over head hunting fish, all where cars and tents once were. Photographed #onassignment for @ナショナルジオグラフィック on a story covering #climatechange and it's affects on America's National Parks and Sea Shores
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