Can you spot the person? Explorer dwarfed by almighty nature
CGTN

The gallery below shows a magnificent glacier in Iceland. If you are awed by the spectacular scene, try finding a person in the picture. 

There is a person...

There is a person...

...among the ice hills.

...among the ice hills.

Can you see her?

Can you see her?

Take a closer look at the third picture and you may find a woman in red, who looks like a tiny speck in front of the grand glacier. 

She is Sarah Rodgers, an adventurer and explorer. The pictures were taken by photographer Jack Anstey in front of the huge glacier in Vatnajokull National Park, Iceland. 

The incredible pictures show Sarah on the edge of the massive glacier. Fjallsjökull – an outlet glacier in Vatnajokull National Park, is so large that the woman can barely be seen. 

Jack was amazed by the glacier's size, and in this photo, Sarah becomes a tiny dot of color against the intimidating field of ice.  

But this awesome scene may not remain for long. Iceland, as well as many other countries, is losing its glaciers rapidly. As a consequence of global warming, most glaciers in Iceland have begun to retreat. Earlier this year, the country even set up a monument for Okjokull, Iceland's first glacier lost to climate change. NASA images showed that the glacier had melted away in 30 years, and was declared "dead" in 2014. 

Global warming keeps threatening the country's 400 remaining glaciers, as well as thousands of glaciers worldwide. Around much of the earth, deglaciation during the last 100 years has been accelerating as a result of climate change, partly brought on by greenhouse gases emitted by humans. 

(All photos via VCG)

(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at nature@cgtn.com.)