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The interior soldado of Isla Espiritu Santo, Baja California Sur, Sea of Cortez, Mexico, North America
Panoramic of frozen soil of Montespluga, Chiavenna Valley, Sondrio province, Valtellina, Lombardy, Italy, Europe
One tourist photographing Skaelingsfjall mountain standing on cracked soil in summer, Streymoy Island, Faroe Islands, Denmark, Europe
Cracked soil at Dead Vlei, around Sossusvlei, Namib Naukluft National Park, Namibia, Namib desert, Africa
Cracked mud in a dried up water hole, Painted Desert, Hopi Reservation, Navajo Nation Reservation, Arizona, Southwest, United States of America, USA, North America
Farmer with closed eyes sitting on dried loamy soil, dreaming, Basti Lehar Walla village, Punjab, Pakistan, Asia
Impacts of climate change, dried soil at the edge of a drying up watering hole, Gran Chaco, Salta province, Argentina, South America
Solfataras, fumaroles, mud pots, sulfur and other minerals, a woman on the viewing platform at the back, high-temperature geothermal area or Hverarond or Hverir, Namafjall mountains, Myvatn area, Norourland eystra, Iceland, Europe
Cracks in clay soil form mosaic-like structure, geothermal field, Namafjall, Myvatn, Krafla volcanic system, Iceland, Europe
Cracked mud in a dried up water hole, Painted Desert, Hopi Reservation, Navajo Nation Reservation, Arizona, Southwest, United States of America, USA, North America
Imprint of a cottonwood leaf in cracked mud along the banks of the recently flooded Freemont River, Hanksville, Utah.
Black Rock Desert in Nevada. Arid cracked crusty surface of the salt flat playa. Wheatgrass plants with a dense network of roots in shallow soil with bright fresh green leaves and stalks.
Black Rock Desert in Nevada. Arid cracked crusty surface of the salt flat playa. Wheatgrass plants with a dense network of roots in shallow soil with bright fresh green leaves and stalks.
An African jacana, Actophilornis africanus, walks in dry cracked mud, Sabi Sands, Greater Kruger National Park, South Africa
Clay loaded with iron oxides and dried out, Rio Tinto, Andalusia, Spain *** Local Caption *** R?o Tinto ("Red River") is very acidic (Ph 2) and has a deep reddish hue due to iron dissolved in water. The acidity of the watercourse is linked to the drainage of pyrite, which is very present in the subsoil. Extremophilic and endemic bacteria and algae colonize the river bed, forming a fragile biofilm that evokes the hot springs of Yellowstone Park in the USA.