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May 18, 2008
Afar Herdsmen, Danakil Desert, Ethiopia, 2005 Photograph by Carsten Peter A group of Afar nomads leads camels through Ethiopia's Danakil Desert. The Afar regard themselves as one ethnic group, though their population of about three million is divided among Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Djibouti. "We are the people who move," said one Afar woman. "From the beginning that has been our way." (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Africa's Danakil Desert: Cruelest Place on Earth," October 2005, National Geographic magazine)
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[140 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:28 |
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May 19, 2008
Desert at Dawn, Saudi Arabia, 2003 Photograph by Reza A lone man walks over sand dunes in the Saudi Arabian desert. This oil-rich kingdom on the Arabia Peninsula covers some 770,000 square miles (2 million square kilometers), more than 98 percent of which is desert. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Kingdom on Edge: Saudi Arabia," October 2003, National Geographic magazine)
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[141 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:30 |
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May 20, 2008
Young Seahorses, New South Wales, Australia, 1994 Photograph by George Grall A group of young seahorses drifts in shallow waters off Manly, New South Wales, Australia. From Canada to Tasmania, most coastal areas with sea grass beds, mangroves, or coral reefs can lay claim to a seahorse species or two. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Improbable Seahorse," October 1994, National Geographic magazine)
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[142 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:30 |
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May 21, 2008
Scottish Sea Town, Pennan, Scotland, U.K., 2006 Photograph by Jim Richardson The uniformly whitewashed cottages of Pennan, Scotland, line up around a quiet cove in Moray Firth as boats rest within a small manmade harbor. The town has been in existence for over a thousand years but gained international fame in the 1980s as the fictional village of Ferness in the popular movie Local Hero. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Celt Appeal," March 2006, National Geographic magazine)
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[143 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:31 |
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May 22, 2008
Puss Moth Larva, England, 1997 Photograph by Darlyne Murawski A puss moth larva disposes of its old skin (left) and head capsule (right) after molting on a leaf in England. These disarmingly colorful critters actually pack some potent weaponry. A gland on the moth's thorax sprays formic acid, and its upright rear appendages sport noxious, pink tentacles. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Moths Come to Light," March 1997, National Geographic magazine)
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[144 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:33 |
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May 23, 2008
Sunset and Palm Trees, Captiva Island, Florida, 1992 Photograph by Raymond Gehman A fuchsia sunset backdrops a stand of palm trees on Florida's Captiva Island. Captiva is one of four quiet barrier islands on the Gulf coast of Florida—Sanibel, North Captiva, and Cayo Costa are the others—renowned as havens for boating, fishing, and seashell-collecting. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Islands of the Shell Coast," November/December 1992, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
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[145 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:36 |
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May 24, 2008
Volcanic Soil, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia, 2001 Photograph by Carsten Peter A fisheye lens captures the desolate gray of a volcanic plain on Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula. Kamchatka is a scimitar-shaped spit of land on Russia's far east coast, home to more than a hundred volcanoes, 29 of which are active. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Russia's Frozen Inferno," August 2001, National Geographic magazine)
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[146 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:40 |
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May 25, 2008
Cowrie Shells, Myanmar, 2005 Photograph by Nicolas Reynard A Moken tribesman in Myanmar's Andaman Islands displays two large cowrie shells. The Moken, a nomadic sea people who live among the 800 islands of the Mergui Archipelago, are divers and beachcombers, taking what they need each day from the Andaman Sea. They accumulate little and live on land only during the monsoons. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Sea Gypsies of Myanmar," April 2005, National Geographic magazine)
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[147 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:41 |
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May 26, 2008
Memorial Day Salute, Minnesota, 2000 Photograph by Richard Olsenius A Veterans of Foreign Wars honor guard stands at attention for a three-round salute in honor of Memorial Day. First widely observed in 1868, Decoration Day, as it was originally known, was a time to honor fallen Civil War soldiers by decorating their graves. In 1971, the U.S. Congress made Memorial Day a national holiday honoring all Americans who have died in service to their country. (Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "In Search of Lake Wobegon," December 2000, National Geographic magazine)
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[148 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:42 |
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May 27, 2008
Desert Rainbow, Australia, 2007 Photograph by Randy Olson A rainbow spreads over a desert town in northwest Queensland, Australia, after a monsoon soaking. Every year, a climatological flip-flop draws the rainy-season weather down from India and douses this bone-dry land in a phenomenon known locally as "the wet." (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Wet Down Under," November 2004, National Geographic magazine)
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[149 樓]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-09-14 04:43 |
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