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January 22, 2008 Grazing Sheep, Denmark, 1998 Photograph by Bob Krist Puffy clouds and grazing sheep make a postcard-perfect scene in Denmark's Jutland Peninsula. A craggy projection of northern Europe, the Jutland Peninsula is an 11,496-square-mile (29,775-square-kilometer) spread of land that makes up continental Denmark. The generally low-lying, flood-prone peninsula was named after a Germanic tribe, the Jutes. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Danish Light," July/August 1998, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
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[22 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:10 |
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January 23, 2008 Girl Jumping into Water, Puerto Rico, 2003 Photograph by Amy Toensing A girl free-falls into a river in Puerto Rico's Caribbean National Forest. The area, also called El Yunque, is just an hour's drive from the capital, San Juan, and is the only tropical rain forest in the U.S. Forest Service system. It was first set aside as a reserve by the king of Spain in 1876. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "True Colors: Divided Loyalties in Puerto Rico," March 2003, National Geographic magazine)
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[23 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:11 |
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January 24, 2008
Sand Dunes, The Dalles, Oregon, 2001 Photograph by Jim Richardson In a curious juncture, a wrinkled span of desert dunes pours into the Columbia River Gorge in The Dalles, Oregon. Eons of erosion by the mighty Columbia River carved this dramatic 80-mile-long (130-kilometer-long) gorge into the Cascade Range. Declared the nation's first National Scenic Area in 1986, the area is known for its 4,000-foot (1,220-meter) canyon walls, lush rain forest, and dozens of waterfalls. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "A River Dammed," April 2001, National Geographic magazine)
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[24 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:12 |
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January 25, 2008 The Aquadettes Synchronized Swim Team, California, 1996 Photograph by Karen Kasmauski Members of the Aquadettes, a synchronized swimming team at Leisure World Retirement Community in Laguna Hills, California, practice their formations. Activities like line dancing, lawn bowling, and computer classes make such retirement communities increasingly popular among people with decades of free time to fill. "Anyone who's bored here is a stick in the mud," says Aquadette Barbara Hack. (Text adapted from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Aging—New Answers to Old Questions," November 1997, National Geographic magazine)
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[25 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:13 |
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January 26, 2008 Newborn Calf, Ontario, Canada, 1977 Photograph by Sam Abell A cow cares for her newborn calf on a Mennonite farm in Elora, Ontario, Canada. Settled by Scottish immigrants in the early 1800s, Elora became an important agricultural town. The tiny village on the banks of the Grand River is now a haven for artists and a destination for tourists seeking the town's tranquility and spectacular vistas. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Ontario: Canada's Keystone," December 1978, National Geographic magazine)
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[26 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:14 |
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January 27, 2008 On Board the Observer, Alaska, 1998 Photograph by Michael Melford Observer, a wooden-hulled, World War II-era minesweeper that has been converted to a 12-passenger cruising yacht, glides through glassy water in Alaska's Inside Passage. This meticulously restored boat takes tourists through the heart of Tongass National Forest, 500 miles (800 kilometers) of sky-blue glaciers, grizzly bear tracks, wild beaches, bald eagles, spruce trees, and deep, mountain-ringed fjords. (Text from and photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "A Wilder Passage," May/June 1999, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
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[27 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:16 |
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January 29, 2008 Ostrich Farm, Utah, 1999 Photograph by Len Jenshel A flock of ostriches greets a photographer at a farm near Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah. Ostriches have been raised as livestock in the United States for over a century, particularly in the West, where the climate mimics that of their native African savanna. But these quirky birds require some special accommodations, like extra-tall fences—they can leap more than six feet (two meters) in the air. (Photo shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Celebrating Canyon Country," July 1999, National Geographic magazine)
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[29 楼]
From:上海 | Posted:2008-02-12 07:17 |
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