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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
March 29, 2008
Ibex Artifact, Jerusalem, Israel, 1999 Photograph by Kenneth Garrett Archaeologists discovered this copper ibex artifact, along with 428 other ceremonial objects, in a 5,500-year-old cache in a cave in Nahal Mishmar canyon in Jerusalem, Israel. Casting objects such as this copper scepter or mace head required technical finesse and the use of materials such as arsenic-rich copper ore, which does not occur naturally within 800 miles (1,290 kilometers) of the Holy Land. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Journey to the Copper Age," April 1999, National Geographic magazine)
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[90 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:04 |
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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
March 30, 2008
Mastiff on Mountain, North America, 1967 Photograph by Christopher Knight Crumbling ice makes for a precarious journey for this mastiff sliding down a slope in North America. As global warming pushes temperatures higher each year, scientists predict that permanent snow lines of mountains around the world will rise, closing skiing resorts, hurting tourism, swelling major rivers, potentially submerging low-lying areas, and significantly changing landscapes. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Science Finds New Clues to our Climate in Alaska's Mighty Rivers of Ice," February 1967, National Geographic magazine)
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[91 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:05 |
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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
March 31, 2008
Collecting Honey, Sundarban Forest, Bangladesh, 2007 Photograph by Tim Laman In Bangladesh's Sundarban Forest, a beekeeper fans smoke into a hive of giant honeybees to calm the swarming insects before collecting their honey. Found in forested areas of the Indian subcontinent, Indonesia, and central China, Apis dorsata, the giant honeybee, grows to nearly an inch (2.5 centimeters) long and builds hives as large as nine feet (three meters) in diameter. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Mangroves: Forests of the Tide," February 2007, National Geographic magazine)
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[92 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:05 |
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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
April 01, 2008
Longnose Hawkfish, Namena Island, Fiji, 2004 Photograph by Tim Laman Longnose hawkfish, like this brightly patterned creature resting in a bed of soft coral off Fiji Island's Namena Island, are tropical marine fish known for their needle-like snouts and striking red-and-white scales. The fish's common name originates from its hawklike habit of perching on the high ground of reefs, where it surveys its surroundings for predator or prey. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Fiji's Rainbow Reefs," November 2004, National Geographic magazine)
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[93 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:06 |
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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
April 02, 2008
Aurora Borealis, Acadia National Park, Maine, 2005 Photograph by Michael Medford Nature's light show—aurora borealis—bathes Maine's Acadia National Park in a pink glow. These dazzling patterns in nature, called aurora australis in the Southern Hemisphere, are created when charged particles outside the Earth's atmosphere collide with atoms in the upper atmosphere, producing a glowing display of curtains, arcs, and bands stretching across the sky. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Autumn in Acadia National Park," November 2005, National Geographic magazine)
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[94 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:07 |
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April 03, 2008
Just-Hatched Froglets, Papua New Guinea, 2001 Photograph by George Grall Carrying out his fatherly duty, a male Oreophryne frog in Papua, New Guinea, guards his clutch and two newly hatched froglets that rest atop the egg mass. Like many of the Microhylidae family, these frogs bypass the tadpole stage, developing fully within the egg. Male frogs embrace their clutch each night to keep the eggs moist and protect them from predators such as insects. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Fragile World of Frogs," May 2001, National Geographic magazine)
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[95 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:07 |
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Re:2008国家地理杂志[每天一张,不定期更新]
April 04, 2008
Yawning Cheetah, Okavango Delta, Botswana, 1999 Photograph by Chris Johns The world's fastest land animal takes a moment to relax with a yawn on Botswana's Okavango Delta. The teeth of these fleet-footed predators are too small to use as daggers for large kill, but the cats have strong jaws that lock around the throat of prey until the victim stops breathing. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Cheetahs: Ghosts of the Grasslands," December 1999, National Geographic magazine)
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[96 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-17 17:08 |
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April 05, 2008
Lights on Street, Key West, Florida, 1999 Photograph by Jim Richardson Headlights leave a stream o***ht in a time-exposed photograph of a busy Key West street. Key West is also known as the Conch Republic, a reference to a mock secession the island staged in protest of an April 23, 1982, roadblock the U.S. Border Patrol set up en route to Key West. When complaints that the roadblock hurt tourism went unanswered, the island's mayor declared the Keys' independence from the U.S. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "South to the Keys," January/February 1999, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
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[97 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-23 18:19 |
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April 06, 2008
Blue Mosque, Iran, 1999 Photograph by Alexandra Avakian A tranquil reflecting pool mirrors a blue-tiled mosque in Iran. An Islamic republic since the country's autocratic monarchy was overthrown in 1978, Iran is ruled by a supreme religious leadership that controls most aspects of Iranian society. But a youthful populace—70 percent of Iranians are under 30—with increasing access to Western media is beginning to push against its boundaries. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Iran: Testing the Waters of Reform," July 1999, National Geographic magazine)
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[98 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-23 18:20 |
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April 07, 2008
River Boats, Sitlakhya River, Bangladesh, 1993 Photograph by James P. Blair A canoe glides past fishing boats at dusk on Bangladesh's flood-swollen Sitlakhya River. Notched into eastern India, this predominantly Muslim nation is a dominated by water, with the Bay of Bengal to the south, mighty rivers throughout, and seasonal monsoon and cyclones that flood up to a third of the country every year. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Bangladesh: When the Water Comes," June 1993, National Geographic magazine)
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[99 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-08-23 18:21 |
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