
One of Iceland's leading ice cave guides has released a series of stunning images revealing the incredible changing landscapes of one of the world's most beautiful countries.

Helen Björnsdóttir works as an ice cave expert - assessing the safety of the caves before leading tourists inside - but also takes photographs herself.

Now, she has released these images of the caves - that never look the same two days in a row.

One of Iceland's leading ice cave guides has released a series of stunning images showcasing Iceland's beauty

No two days are ever the same in Iceland's stunning ice caves, as the landscape constantly changes

The photo set reveals the incredible changing landscapes of one of the worlds most beautiful countries

Helen, who is from Reykjavik, said: 'What attracts me to ice caves are how unique they are, the feeling to enter the glacier and being surrounded by the glacier ice is an amazing feeling.

'Looking at the blue colours and the ever changing forms and shape of the ice caves also amaze me, that you enter an ice cave and you know that it will not be there next year and you have new ice caves to explore.

'Before I moved here I had no interest in photography but when I became an ice cave guide, I just couldn't resist taking pictures. It's quite a complicated art.

'The ice caves are very dangerous though - there is often a lot of work to be done on the ice caves before we can take tourists near them, like chipping the thin ice away from the ceilings.

There is often a lot of work to be done on the ice caves before tourists can visit safely, like chipping the thin ice away from the ceilings

Dangerous beauty: Just because a cave is safe to explore one day, it doesn't mean that it will be the next day

Helen Björnsdóttir works as an ice cave expert - assessing the safety of the caves before leading tourists inside - but also takes photographs herself

Helen, who is from Reykjavik, said: 'What attracts me to ice caves are how unique they are'

'We've also had to move boulders from the glacier above the entrance to make sure they don't roll down and block us in.

'We have to do this every day - just because a cave is safe one day, it doesn't mean that it will be the next day.

'The way the water melts can make a cave very dangerous very quickly.'

The photographer added: 'Looking at the blue colours and the ever changing forms and shape of the ice caves also amaze me'

The adventurers have had to move boulders from the glacier above the entrance to make sure they don't roll down and block them in