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发表于 2006-4-3 14:12
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1426. The Andes is a relatively young system of mountains and they are still rising. Seen here near the southern tip of South America, the Andes stretch nearly the entire length of the continent.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, the National Geographic book Secret Corners of the World, 1982
1427. The forest elephant traditionally lives in smaller family groups than the savanna-dwelling African elephant does. Both species have been hunted excessively and are listed as endangered on the World Conservation Union's Red List.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Gabon's Loango National Park," August 2004, National Geographic magazine)
1428. Growing in an area that receives only nine inches (22.86 centimeters) of annual precipitation, these small trees and shrubs still manage to survive. Grassland such as this covers many of the desert flats in the 337,570-acre (136,614.6-hectare) expanse of Canyonlands.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Utah: Land of Promise Kingdom of Stone," January 1996, National Geographic magazine)
1429. Two competitors scramble up 60-foot (18-meter) poles in the speed-climbing event at a lumberjack tournament. Other events include log-rolling and sawing events.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Washington's Olympic Peninsula," May 1984, National Geographic magazine)
1430. Created after the collapse of Mount Mazama, an ancient volcano, Crater Lake is the world's seventh deepest lake. At it's greatest depth it measures 1,932 feet (588 meters) deep.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Amtrak's Coast Starlight" March 1998, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
1431. The quetzal is a symbol of freedom and the national bird of Guatemala. Loss of habitat, along with hunting for food and trade, has led to the steep declines in the number of quetzals in the Central American country.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Elusive Quetzal," June 1998, National Geographic magazine)
1432. Revelers during Venice's Carnival line a footbridge. Wearing of masks in Venice was first documented in the late 1200s and may have been intended in part to allow different classes to temporarily mix, thereby easing social tensions.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Venice Masquerade," Jan/Feb 1999, National Geographic Traveler magazine)
1433.The native Inuit people call the Arctic Bay Ikpiarjuk, meaning "the pocket," because the bay is nearly landlocked by hills.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Greenland Sharks," September 1998, National Geographic magazine)
1434. Home to a variety of animals, including kangaroos and wallabies, the rock basin known as Wilpena Pound was carved from ancient mountains by erosion. The high walls of rock are made of weather-resistant quartzite.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Rise of Life on Earth—Life Grows Up," April 1998, National Geographic magazine)
1435. Within a lion pride, the females generally do the hunting.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Cheetahs: Ghosts of the Grassland," December 1999, National Geographic magazine)
1436. Hanging from bows and limbs of trees throughout the U.S. South, Spanish moss is not a true moss. Belonging to the plant family Bromeliacae, this iconic element of the southern landscape is more closely related to the pineapple than to peat.
1437. A man and child enjoy Pacific Beach State Park. The 10-acre (4.05-hectare) camping park offers 2,300 feet (701 meters) of shoreline.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "San Diego Serenade," January 1998, National Geographic magazine)
1438. Built in 1808 and rebuilt in 1858, the red-and-white-striped West Quoddy Head Light still holds its original lens. The lighthouse was one of the first to use a fog bell. Such bells warned ships when fog rendered a lighthouse's lamp useless.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Founders of New England: Centuries After the Pilgrims and Puritans, an Englishman Seeks Forgotten Shrines In His Homeland and Theirs," June 1953, National Geographic magazine)
1439. Sunsets are one of the Florida Keys' biggest attractions. Made up of limestone and coral, the island chain stretches some 220 miles (355 kilometers) from just south of Miami to Key West, the southernmost city in the Unites States.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "A Journey Down Old U.S. 1," December 1984, National Geographic magazine)
1442. A baby bearded seal rests on an ice floe.] Soon after birth, bearded seal pups spend half their time romping and diving in near-freezing water, so they need energy to burn with some left over to store as fat. Mothers provide most of the fuel during a nursing period from 16 to 24 days, with pups feeding about every three hours day and night.?
(Text from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Bearded Seals: Going With the Floe," March 1997, National Geographic magazine)
1443. With the towers of the Basilica of Notre-Dame-de-Fourvi鑢e in the far distance the city of Lyon sprawls around the Sa鬾e River.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "A Castle Under the Louvre," July 1989, National Geographic magazine)
1445. With the Chesapeake Bay Bridge in the background fishers set crab lines in North America's largest estuary. Overharvesting and environmental damage have led to a decrease in adult crab populations in the bay.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Chesapeake Bay: Hanging in the Balance," June 1993, National Geographic magazine)
1446. "Muscled with mountains, Acapulco crooks a protective arm around a yacht-studded bay."
—Text from "Mexico in Motion," October 1961, National Geographic magazine
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Mexico City," May 1973, National Geographic magazine)
1447. About 74,000 years ago, a volcano erupted and collapsed in on itself on Sumatra. The resulting crater later filled with water and became known as Lake Toba (pictured).
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "A Sumatran Journey," March 1981, National Geographic magazine)
1449. "Lucky Waimanalo: A sheltering reef and soft three-mile [4.83-kilometer] beach梠ne of the longest undeveloped strands on Oahu [island]梘ive the town a blissful front yard."
1450. "Oxen and donkeys tread the bygone glories at Ghazni, seat of conquerors. To Ghazni, Afghanistan's great empire builder Mahmud carried back the plunder of India almost ten centuries ago. Ghazni's splendor died in 1152 when the Indian prince Ala-ud-Din gave it fire and sword. In 1839 the British stormed Ghazni and blew in this gate."
1451. Fireworks explode and are reflected in water by the Washington Monument. The first public Fourth of July party at the White House occurred in 1801.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, the National Geographic book The Revolutionary War: America's Fight For Freedom, 1967)
1452. A U.S. flag dries on a clothesline after a 1993 flood in Iowa. Already saturated, Des Moines received a downpour of 8 inches (20.32 centimeters) of rain in just four hours. The result was a wall of water, 15 feet (4.5 meters) above flood level, barreling through the city.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Des Moines, Iowa: Riding Out the Worst of Times," January 1994, National Geographic magazine)
1454. Home to hundreds of Buddha statues, the 1,200-year-old Borobudur temple is the world's largest Buddhist monument.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Indonesia Rescues Ancient Borobudur," January 1983, National Geographic magazine)
1455. The main role of males within a lion pride is the defense of family and territory.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Africa's Wild Dogs," May 1999, National Geographic magazine)
1458. "[Film star] Amitabh and a tattered Shah Rukh frame former Miss World Aishwarya Rai. Such posters lure India's star-obsessed populace into the movies' fantasy realm, where true love and justice always prevail."
1459. "Within a modest radius of ten miles (16.09 kilometers), photographer Michael Nichols found a dramatic sampling of creatures that pass through the Loango area. Canoeing on the Echira River, he surprised an elephant swimming in the murky waters."
From "Gabon's Loango National Park," August 2004, National Geographic magazine
1460. "A 1912 eruption [from Mount Martin at Katmai National Park and Preserve] spewed ash as far as Washington state, shredded clothes on lines a hundred miles (160 kilometers) away, but, amazingly killed no one. From a new vent, Novarupta, incandescent pumice flowed down the valley in a glowing avalanche. Woodland pickets, killed by hot mudflows, spike the pale plain."
From the National Geographic book Alaska, 1969
1463. "With an average birthrate of six children per family, the ultra-Orthodox population in Jerusalem is surging. [In 1996] roughly 30 percent of the city's 420,000 Jews [were] ultra-Orthodox, as [were] 50 percent of the schoolchildren [such as the Ultra-Orthodox men and boys at this Hasidic temple].
"If trends continue, the ultra-Orthodox population will increase by 70 percent here by the year 2010 and will exert significant influence on the city's destiny."
(Text from "The Three Faces of Jerusalem," April 1996, National Geographic magazine)
1466. "A fleet of hired combines cuts 80 bushels of wheat an acre from Walter Mehmke's Montana farm. 'When I was in high school, if we cut 30 bushels an acre, that was an excellent crop,' recalled Mehmke."
—From "Special Issue: Best of America," September 2002, National Geographic magazine
1467. "The splendors of the depths are known to a fortunate few, like this biologist tagging a giant Pacific octopus in Washington's Puget Sound."
—From "Special Issue: Best of America", September 2002, National Geographic magazine
1468. Hot water bottles lie across a hedge. There are anywhere from a dozen to 50 or more types of hedges in Britain. Each type is as distinctive and as historic as the county in which it stands.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Hedgerows," September 1992, National Geographic magazine)
1474. "As other family members relax along the Rio Grande on the Mexican border, a mother dips her reluctant infant into a makeshift bathtub."
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