Results
2 results found
Tilt Shift lens effect image of the River Thames from the top of Riverwalk House, London, England, United Kingdom, Europe
Women waiting for village jeep after their morning shift working with cows, Binawas, Rajasthan, India, Asia
Ukraine orthodox and catholic priest, who share the church builing at different shifts, greet other. Zolochov
Gear shift lever on bow, Fujikawa Maru shipwreck, Truk lagoon, Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia, Caroline Islands, Micronesia, Pacific Ocean, Pacific
Chinstrap penguin (Pygoscelis antarctica) chick head detail at colony on Useful Island near the Antarctic Peninsula. There are an estimated 2 million breeding pairs of chinstrap penguins in the Antarctic peninsula region alone, perhaps as many as 7.5 million breeding pairs in all of Antarctica. Their name derives from the narrow black band under their heads which makes it appear as if they are wearing black helmets, making them one of the most easily identified types of penguin. Other names for them are "Ringed Penguins", "Bearded Penguins", and "Stonecracker Penguins" due to their harsh call. They grow to 68 cm (27 in). The average adult weight of a Chinstrap Penguin is 4.5 kg (10 lbs). Weight can range from 3 to 6 kg (6.6-13.2 lbs), with males being slightly larger and weight varying based on where the penguin is in the breeding cycle. Their diet consists of krill, shrimp, and fish. On land they build circular nests from stones, and lay two eggs, which are incubated by both the male and the female for shifts of five to ten days. They can also breed on icebergs, though they prefer non-icy conditions. The chicks hatch after about 35 days, and have fluffy gray backs and white fronts. The chicks stay in the nest for 20?30 days before they go to join a creche. At around 50?60 days old, they moult, gaining their adult plumage and go to sea. The Chinstrap Penguin was first described by German naturalist Forster in 1781. Its specific epithet was often seen as antarctica, however a 2002 review determined the genus Pygoscelis was masculine, and hence the correct binomial name is Pygoscelis antarcticus.
Fishermen shifting boat onto the volcanic beach, Punta de Fuencaliente, La Palma, Canary Islands, Atlantic Ocean, Spain
DEU, Germany, Essen: Checking of passports of arrested persons. Office work at the police station, paperwork, writing at the computer, making phone calls. Daily police life. Officer from a city police station.
DEU, Germany, Essen: Daily police life. Officer from a city police station. Radio room, operating control system.
DEU, Germany, Essen: Traffic speed control in a speeding zone of 30 km/h near a school, with a laser measure gun. Daily police life. Officer from a city police station.
Excursion boat in front of the beach bar in the Spreebogen Park and the German Chancellery, miniature faking, smallgantics, tilt-shift effect, Spreebogen, Regierungsviertel district, Berlin, Germany, Europe, PublicGround
Miniature view, toy view, tilt-shift-effect, people relaxing at the lake of the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden Museum, Archives of the United States Building at back, Smithsonian Institution, National Mall, Washington DC, District of Columbia, U
Ski touring person directly under the sun with ski sticks yellow jacket in a winter landscape wirh snow and blue sky at the Scheinbergspitze close to castle Linderhof in Germany
Miniature view, toy view, tilt-shift-effect, tourists on the lookout at Mather Point, Isis Temple at back Grand Canyon National Park, South Rim, Arizona, United States of America, USA
Decontaminate pools along the beach at Grand Terre Island that the clean up crews wash their boots off in at the end of each day. These were left for the night at the end of a shift at 2PM.