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User:Martingreen

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User Profile
File:Martingreen
Coming Soon
Photograph of Martingreen
General
User name Martingreen
Real name Martin Green
Gender Male
Year of birth 1983
Home Town Scarborough, North Yorkshire
Country England, UK
Personal
Work Software Engineer
Education University
Wikipedia:Babel
enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.
fr-1Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau élémentaire de français.
AmE-0 This user does not understand the American English language and bloody well doesn't want to.
1337-1Th1s us3r is 4bl3 2 c0ntr1but3 w1th 4 b451( l3v3l 0f 1337.
Search user languages
ubx-5This user uses entirely too many userboxes.
What I Use
This user contributes using a PC.
This user contributes with openSUSE.
This user contributes using Firefox.
This user uses Google as a primary search engine.
This user is crunching numbers using BOINC.
What I do for Fun
cvg-4This user is an expert gamer.
This user plays the Halo series.
WoW
This user supports Formula One.
This user enjoys rock music.
Education
This user studies at the University of Huddersfield.
MEngThis user has a Master of Engineering degree.
Other
progThis user is a programmer.


Welcome to my page

[edit]

Hello and welcome to my Wikipedia profile page. I have been using Wikipedia for a few months now, mostly for research for my degree.

I have however just uploaded my first picture, from a recent trip to Canada. I think it is quite a good photo and fits well with the pictures already on the Lake Louise, Alberta page.

Lake Louise and Glacier

--Martin (T|C) 09:06, 8 August 2006 (UTC)

Ice eggs
Ice eggs, also known as ice balls, are a rare phenomenon caused by a process in which small pieces of sea ice in open water are rolled over by wind and currents in freezing conditions and grow into spheroid pieces of ice. They sometimes collect into heaps of balls on beaches where they pack together in striking patterns. The gentle churn of water, blown by a suitably stiff breeze, makes concentric layers of ice form on a seed particle that then grows into the floating ball as it rolls through the freezing currents. This formation of ice eggs was photographed in 2014 on Stroomi Beach in Tallinn, Estonia. The temperature was around −20 to −15 °C (−4 to 5 °F), and the diameter of each ball around 5 to 10 centimetres (2 to 4 in).Photograph credit: Aleksandr Abrosimov