We live in a world full of contrasts and cultural differences so
that’s why I believe that the most amazing thing in this Universe is
Planet Earth. It’s like hundreds of different planets in one single
place. I know we don’t live in harmony
with the nature…heck, we don’t live in harmony with each other but
that’s the human nature. In this article you can see 30 superb images
from around the world, with photos starting with the most heavenly place
and ending with the exact opposite.
Photograph by Wilfried Niedermayr
Photograph by Jack Paulus
Photograph by Shivji Joshi
Photograph by Anurag Kumar
Photograph by Michael Melford
On the trail to Goodnow Mountain, a yellow birch appears to be ingesting a boulder left behind by a glacier. With its tenacious trees and rebounding wildlife, Adirondack Park is a miracle of regeneration. Committed advocates and legal protections written into New York’s state constitution offer hope that it will remain forever wild.
Photograph by Michael Melford
Sunlight dapples the shoulders of Algonquin and Wright, two of the more than 40 so-called High Peaks that rise above 4,000 feet. Once blighted by logging and industry, the region has undergone a renaissance of woods and waters.
Photograph by Brent Stirton
Their hands stained by the indigo dye in their new clothes, Tuareg women celebrate a birth. Tuareg females rarely cover their faces, while men traditionally wear turbans that conceal all but their eyes.
Photograph by Paul Wilkinson
Smaller fish keep their distance when a blacktip reef shark swims amongst them in shallow water in the Maldives.
Photograph by Diane Jones
Photograph by David Doubilet
The clownish grin of a bridled parrotfish reveals its power tools: grinding teeth used to scrape algae from rock. Though sometimes destructive to individual corals, the fish’s efforts are mostly beneficial. Without them, algal growth could smother the reef. Scarus frenatus
Photograph by Jose Cardona
At a Maui aquarium a Hawaiian green turtle makes a guest appearance. Members of this threatened species are unique among sea turtles for their herbivorous diet, thought to imbue their fat with a greenish hue.
Photograph by Jay Koppelman
I grabbed this shot of a blue heeler dog in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Sometimes it seems that there are two completely separate worlds that are in existence: that of the humans and the other, which belongs to the animals. In this photo the humans are definitely unaware of all the interaction that goes on in the animal world just feet away. I wonder what’s going through this dog’s mind.
Photograph by Marian Ubrankovic
This photograph was taken near Pitt’s Head in Snowdonia National Park. The sun was setting and the backlighting created this dramatic picture.
Photograph by Christian Vizl
Photograph by Madison Hall
A dew-bathed juvenile leopard takes a peaceful moment atop a fallen tree on a wintry South African morning. Compared with other African game, leopards are famously shy and rarely seen, partially because of their largely nocturnal hunting habits. Leopards number among many other species of top predators whose population numbers are falling due to human impacts, making this a special sighting of a rare animal that is both powerful and extraordinarily gorgeous.
Photograph by Dave Rodden-Shortt
A man watches the busy street below while getting some fresh air after a hot Havana day.
Photograph by Lior Patel
Shot in Rodos, Greece. I was there for four days, walking around, and on the first day I had a chat with the guy that owns the car (the one in the shot) and I told him that my grandfather is from Thessaloniki, so for the remaining days, every time I passed him, he would say, “Good morning, Thessaloniki,” and I would say, “Good morning, Rodos.” On the last day he saw me coming from the other side of the road and yelled, “Still here, Thessaloniki,” and this time I took this shot before answering, “Goodbye, Rodos” (it was my last night over there).
Photograph by Travis Teo
On a rainy evening in Tokyo, I was seeking shelter at a cafe with my friend, when all of a sudden a rare Tokyo taxi got trapped by a sea of urbanites and their colorful umbrellas at the busy Shinjuku crossing.
Photograph by Lynsey Dyer
Leaping from Half Dome is illegal, but in Yosemite the sport of BASE jumping is soaring in popularity anyway. Climbers say it’s faster (and more fun) to parachute into the valley than to hike all the way down the back of the mountain.
Photograph by Hardi Budi
Taken at a lake named Situ Gunung in Indonesia
Photograph by Kamala Kannan
Photograph by Rasko Ristic
Photograph by Stefano Unterthiner
Are these the monkeys’ mothers? Not always. Langurs often share babysitting duties within a close-knit group of females and their offspring. The young are born with thin dark fur that turns thick and grayish gold after a few months.
Photograph by Michael Nichols
What a scared orphan elephant needs more than anything is other elephants. The process of becoming socialized begins as soon as the worst injuries heal.
Photograph by Lynsey Addario
Pilgrims visit Al Kazimiyah Shrine, a Shiite holy site relatively unharmed by the years of violence.
Photograph by Charlene Ngo
Photograph by Florian Schulz
Ashore on Svalbard, a male polar bear investigates a whale’s backbone. Fat reserves from hunting ringed and bearded seals, and sometimes walruses, must carry bears through lean summers.
Photograph by Ricardo Ordonez
Photograph by AFP/Getty Images
Sharks, Bahamas
Photograph by Wilfried Niedermayr
Cenotes, Chichén-Itzá, Mexico
Photograph by Jack Paulus
Desert Crossing, Rajasthan, India
Photograph by Shivji Joshi
Holi Celebration, India
Photograph by Anurag Kumar
Yellow Birch, Adirondacks
Photograph by Michael Melford
On the trail to Goodnow Mountain, a yellow birch appears to be ingesting a boulder left behind by a glacier. With its tenacious trees and rebounding wildlife, Adirondack Park is a miracle of regeneration. Committed advocates and legal protections written into New York’s state constitution offer hope that it will remain forever wild.
Autumn Landscape, Adirondacks
Photograph by Michael Melford
Sunlight dapples the shoulders of Algonquin and Wright, two of the more than 40 so-called High Peaks that rise above 4,000 feet. Once blighted by logging and industry, the region has undergone a renaissance of woods and waters.
Tuareg Celebration
Photograph by Brent Stirton
Their hands stained by the indigo dye in their new clothes, Tuareg women celebrate a birth. Tuareg females rarely cover their faces, while men traditionally wear turbans that conceal all but their eyes.
Blacktip Reef Shark, Maldives
Photograph by Paul Wilkinson
Smaller fish keep their distance when a blacktip reef shark swims amongst them in shallow water in the Maldives.
Seagull and Boats
Photograph by Diane Jones
Parrotfish, Great Barrier Reef
Photograph by David Doubilet
The clownish grin of a bridled parrotfish reveals its power tools: grinding teeth used to scrape algae from rock. Though sometimes destructive to individual corals, the fish’s efforts are mostly beneficial. Without them, algal growth could smother the reef. Scarus frenatus
Hawaiian Green Turtle, Maui
Photograph by Jose Cardona
At a Maui aquarium a Hawaiian green turtle makes a guest appearance. Members of this threatened species are unique among sea turtles for their herbivorous diet, thought to imbue their fat with a greenish hue.
Blue Heeler, San Miguel de Allende
Photograph by Jay Koppelman
I grabbed this shot of a blue heeler dog in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Sometimes it seems that there are two completely separate worlds that are in existence: that of the humans and the other, which belongs to the animals. In this photo the humans are definitely unaware of all the interaction that goes on in the animal world just feet away. I wonder what’s going through this dog’s mind.
Horses, Wales
Photograph by Marian Ubrankovic
This photograph was taken near Pitt’s Head in Snowdonia National Park. The sun was setting and the backlighting created this dramatic picture.
Cave Diving, Yucatan Peninsula
Photograph by Christian Vizl
I have been a cave diver since 1997,
and I’ve always been amazed by the natural beauty and uniqueness that
you can find in the cenotes of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. They are
spectacular in many ways, some of them very obvious, like the enormous
stalactites and stalagmites, crystal-clear water, and the mystery and
history mixed in the middle of the jungle. But there is also a more
subtle beauty in them, hidden in their unique colors and details that
are not easily spotted by diving or snorkeling in them. So that is my
goal, to capture the fantastic details hidden in these natural wonders.
Leopard, South Africa
Photograph by Madison Hall
A dew-bathed juvenile leopard takes a peaceful moment atop a fallen tree on a wintry South African morning. Compared with other African game, leopards are famously shy and rarely seen, partially because of their largely nocturnal hunting habits. Leopards number among many other species of top predators whose population numbers are falling due to human impacts, making this a special sighting of a rare animal that is both powerful and extraordinarily gorgeous.
Street Scene, Havana
Photograph by Dave Rodden-Shortt
A man watches the busy street below while getting some fresh air after a hot Havana day.
Ice Cream Vendor, Greece
Photograph by Lior Patel
Shot in Rodos, Greece. I was there for four days, walking around, and on the first day I had a chat with the guy that owns the car (the one in the shot) and I told him that my grandfather is from Thessaloniki, so for the remaining days, every time I passed him, he would say, “Good morning, Thessaloniki,” and I would say, “Good morning, Rodos.” On the last day he saw me coming from the other side of the road and yelled, “Still here, Thessaloniki,” and this time I took this shot before answering, “Goodbye, Rodos” (it was my last night over there).
Taxi, Tokyo
Photograph by Travis Teo
On a rainy evening in Tokyo, I was seeking shelter at a cafe with my friend, when all of a sudden a rare Tokyo taxi got trapped by a sea of urbanites and their colorful umbrellas at the busy Shinjuku crossing.
BASE Jumping, Yosemite
Photograph by Lynsey Dyer
Leaping from Half Dome is illegal, but in Yosemite the sport of BASE jumping is soaring in popularity anyway. Climbers say it’s faster (and more fun) to parachute into the valley than to hike all the way down the back of the mountain.
Situ Gunung, Indonesia
Photograph by Hardi Budi
Taken at a lake named Situ Gunung in Indonesia
Boy With Balloons, India
Photograph by Kamala Kannan
Street Scene, Rio de Janeiro
Photograph by Rasko Ristic
Babysitting Langurs, India
Photograph by Stefano Unterthiner
Are these the monkeys’ mothers? Not always. Langurs often share babysitting duties within a close-knit group of females and their offspring. The young are born with thin dark fur that turns thick and grayish gold after a few months.
Orphan Elephants, Kenya
Photograph by Michael Nichols
What a scared orphan elephant needs more than anything is other elephants. The process of becoming socialized begins as soon as the worst injuries heal.
Al Kazimiyah Shrine, Baghdad
Photograph by Lynsey Addario
Pilgrims visit Al Kazimiyah Shrine, a Shiite holy site relatively unharmed by the years of violence.
Parrot, Manila
Photograph by Charlene Ngo
Polar Bear With Whale Bone
Photograph by Florian Schulz
Ashore on Svalbard, a male polar bear investigates a whale’s backbone. Fat reserves from hunting ringed and bearded seals, and sometimes walruses, must carry bears through lean summers.
Banos de Valdearados
Photograph by Ricardo Ordonez
Actors, dressed as men of clay,
perform at a parade during a show reviving the ancient Roman circus in
the central Spanish village of Banos de Valdearados Aug. 21. The
village, founded by the Romans and located in the famous Spanish
wine-growing area Ribera del Duero, holds yearly festivities in honour
of the Roman god Baccus in which all villagers wear Roman costumes and
take part in various street shows and attend spectacular ancient Roman
performances.
The North Korean military parades
Photograph by AFP/Getty Images
The North Korean military parades to
celebrate the 63rd founding anniversary of the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea in Pyongyang on Sept. 9. North Korean leader Kim
Jong-Il and his son reviewed the parade of military hardware and
thousands of goose-stepping troops, in what analysts saw as a bid to
bolster loyalty to the regime.
Los Encuentros, Solola
Photograph by Jorge Dan Lopez
A girl sits in a decorated vehicle
during a parade ahead of the country’s 190th anniversary of independence
at the Joaquin Robles elementary school in Los Encuentros, Solola, 130
km (112 miles) from Guatemala City Sept. 14. The country celebrates its
independence on September 15.
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