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  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface017.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface010.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface009.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface008.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface006.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface018.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface015.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface014.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface013.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface012.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface011.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface007.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface005.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface003.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface002.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface016.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface004.jpg
  • Undulating soft waves water surface.
    Mike Kemp_20171003_water surface001.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. People run through the flowing water running onto Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_F.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. People run through the flowing water running onto Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_E.jpg
  • Tashlikh is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah). In Stamford Hill the nearest flowing water is river Lea, Hackney, London.
    05-tachlich_3796.jpg
  • Tashlikh is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah). In Stamford Hill the nearest flowing water is river Lea, Hackney, London.
    07-tach_1042.jpg
  • Tashlikh is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah). In Stamford Hill the nearest flowing water is river Lea, Hackney, London.
    05-tachlich_3800.jpg
  • Tiger Leaping Gorge or Hu Tiao Xiao, in amongst the foothills of the Himalayan mountains near Daju, Yunnan, China. The Jinsha Jiang river cuts through the soft rocks creating dramatic steep gorges. At one point in the centre of the river a hard piece of granite which eroded at a much slower pace to the surrounding rock, rises out of the river pushing the fast flowing water up in a dramatic white water rapids. Tiger Leaping Gorge is a popular tourist destination where many Chinese travel to see the landscape named after their most honoured animal.
    2005-07-06 Lijiang 068.jpg
  • Tiger Leaping Gorge or Hu Tiao Xiao, in amongst the foothills of the Himalayan mountains near Daju, Yunnan, China. The Jinsha Jiang river cuts through the soft rocks creating dramatic steep gorges. At one point in the centre of the river a hard piece of granite which eroded at a much slower pace to the surrounding rock, rises out of the river pushing the fast flowing water up in a dramatic white water rapids. Tiger Leaping Gorge is a popular tourist destination where many Chinese travel to see the landscape named after their most honoured animal.
    2005-07-06 Lijiang 063_alamy.jpg
  • Tiger Leaping Gorge or Hu Tiao Xiao, in amongst the foothills of the Himalayan mountains near Daju, Yunnan, China. The Jinsha Jiang river cuts through the soft rocks creating dramatic steep gorges. At one point in the centre of the river a hard piece of granite which eroded at a much slower pace to the surrounding rock, rises out of the river pushing the fast flowing water up in a dramatic white water rapids. Tiger Leaping Gorge is a popular tourist destination where many Chinese travel to see the landscape named after their most honoured animal.
    2005-07-06 Lijiang 066.jpg
  • Tiger Leaping Gorge or Hu Tiao Xiao, in amongst the foothills of the Himalayan mountains near Daju, Yunnan, China. The Jinsha Jiang river cuts through the soft rocks creating dramatic steep gorges. At one point in the centre of the river a hard piece of granite which eroded at a much slower pace to the surrounding rock, rises out of the river pushing the fast flowing water up in a dramatic white water rapids. Tiger Leaping Gorge is a popular tourist destination where many Chinese travel to see the landscape named after their most honoured animal.
    2005-07-06 Lijiang 075_alamy.jpg
  • Men praying and casting away their sins into the river Lea, Hackney, London for Tashlich. Tashlich is a Jewish practice that is performed during Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year). Men and women gather near a large body of flowing water and symbolically ‘cast off’ the previous year’s sins by throwing pieces of bread into the water while reading a prayer (the last verses from the prophet Micah).
    06-tach_4210.jpg
  • Sheffield train station square, city centre, Yorkshire, UK
    _MG_4361_1.jpg
  • Sheffield train station square, city centre, Yorkshire, UK
    _MG_4327_1.jpg
  • Sheffield train station square, city centre, Yorkshire, UK
    _MG_4328_1.jpg
  • Sheffield train station square, city centre, Yorkshire, UK
    _MG_4319_1.jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves008...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves006...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves004...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves009...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves005...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves001...jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves010.jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves007.jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves003.jpg
  • photo by Mike Kemp
    Mike Kemp_20170912_crashing waves002.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_R.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain on Piccadilly.
    20130302burst water main london_P.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_S.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 2nd March 2013. Burst water main causes flooding disruption in central London. Water flowing down a drain.
    20130302burst water main london_Q.jpg
  • Scales Beck flowing stream with drains water from Scales Tarn on the east side of Blencathra into the River Glenderamackin at the valley bottom, Lake District, Cumbria, UK.
    UK-Tourism-Lake-District-9173.jpg
  • Fisherman fishing near the waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_010.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_007.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_002.jpg
  • A man rests and sits on a large stone in a flowing river on 21st September 2018 in Umling, Ri Bhoi, Meghalaya, India.
    India-Meghalaya-State-8902.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_009.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_008.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_006.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_004.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_003.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_005.jpg
  • Waterfall flowing down the gorge at Canyon terms, Clue of Terminet into a pool near Termes, France. Termes is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.
    20180516_termes gorge_001.jpg
  • Next to a beach bather, water pours from an outlet pipe on a tourist beach on Coloane island Cheoc Van beach, Macau, China. With his face towards the course sand, the bather lies with his head towards a large wall, whose large stone blocks accommodate the pipe at the bottom. Apart from a pair of brief swimming trunks and a sun hat, he lies with ankles crossed, as if in paradise. But this seemingly industrial landscape is far from the idyllic place other tourists might wish to frequent. We do not know how filthy or indeed how pure, this water that pours out from the ground is, but the suspicion is that the pollution may affect human health. The once-Portuguese colony of Macau is now administered by China as a Special Economic Region (SER) and the official languages are Portuguese and Chinese.
    beach_pollution01-10-08-1994_1.jpg
  • Underwater carvings at Kbal Spean, about 50km morth of Siem Reap. In the western region of the Kulen Mountains, this area was once used by the Khmer as a hill retreat. In the 11th century sacred linga and Hindu gods were carved into the bedrock, with the idea that the water which passed over them was blessed before flowing to Angkor. Important carvings have, as recently as 2004 been looted, although now the area is protected, and the missing carvings replaced.
    2006-11-07_Kbal Spean_F_1.jpg
  • Underwater carvings at Kbal Spean, about 50km morth of Siem Reap. In the western region of the Kulen Mountains, this area was once used by the Khmer as a hill retreat. In the 11th century sacred linga and Hindu gods were carved into the bedrock, with the idea that the water which passed over them was blessed before flowing to Angkor. Important carvings have, as recently as 2004 been looted, although now the area is protected, and the missing carvings replaced.
    2006-11-07_Kbal Spean_B_1.jpg
  • Underwater carvings at Kbal Spean, about 50km morth of Siem Reap. In the western region of the Kulen Mountains, this area was once used by the Khmer as a hill retreat. In the 11th century sacred linga and Hindu gods were carved into the bedrock, with the idea that the water which passed over them was blessed before flowing to Angkor. Important carvings have, as recently as 2004 been looted, although now the area is protected, and the missing carvings replaced.
    2006-11-07_Kbal Spean_H_1.jpg
  • A family punts down the River Thames near the village of Shillingford, Oxfordshire England. Lazily they glide down the calm rural waters in a beautiful and tranquil setting, on an English summer afternoon. A young man stands on the boat's stern dragging a pole through the rippled water to propel the vessel upstream. There is golden light across the narrow stretch of the river, yellow flowers are on the bank and a faint breeze fills the triangular sail which is reflected in the clear water that flows a length of 215 miles (346 km) from Gloucestershire to London.
    RB_005-18-07-2001.jpg
  • Underwater carvings at Kbal Spean, about 50km morth of Siem Reap. In the western region of the Kulen Mountains, this area was once used by the Khmer as a hill retreat. In the 11th century sacred linga and Hindu gods were carved into the bedrock, with the idea that the water which passed over them was blessed before flowing to Angkor. Important carvings have, as recently as 2004 been looted, although now the area is protected, and the missing carvings replaced.
    2006-11-07_Kbal Spean_I_1.jpg
  • Bathers swim in the natural waters of the River Orbieu flowing through rocky gorge, on 24th May, 2017, in Ribaute, Languedoc-Rousillon, south of France.
    rebaute_france-04-24-05-2017.jpg
  • Bathers swim in the natural waters of the River Orbieu flowing through rocky gorge, on 24th May, 2017, in Ribaute, Languedoc-Rousillon, south of France.
    rebaute_france-02-24-05-2017.jpg
  • Ageing 80s technology of the Thames Barrier on the River Thames near Woolwich in east London. As daylight fades to become a purple hue, we see the waters of the Thames flowing on the tide. Operational in 1982, the Thames Barrier is one of the largest movable flood barriers in the world, managed by the UK's Environment Agency. The barrier spans 520 metres across the River Thames near Woolwich, and it protects 125 square kilometres of central London from flooding caused by tidal surges.  The barrier has closed over 80 times since the year 2000 with ‘at least 800,000 homes and businesses have protected from tidal surges.
    thames_barrier-12-04-1989_1.jpg
  • Broken ice on the River Daugava on the 15th February 2019 in Riga in Latvia. The Daugava is a river rising in the Valdai Hills, flowing through Russia, Belarus, and Latvia and into the Gulf of Riga. The total length of the river is 1,020 km.
    D5-Latvia-06597.jpg
  • Palm trees in the Backwaters of Ayamenam, Kerala.The Kerala backwaters are a chain of brackish lagoons and lakes lying parallel to the Arabian Sea coast (known as the Malabar Coast) of Kerala state in southern India. The network includes five large lakes linked by canals, both manmade and natural, fed by 38 rivers, and extending virtually half the length of Kerala state. The backwaters were formed by the action of waves and shore currents creating low barrier islands across the mouths of the many rivers flowing down from the Western Ghats range..The Kerala Backwaters are a network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and inlets, a labyrinthine system formed by more than 900 km of waterways, and sometimes compared to the American Bayou.[1] In the midst of this landscape there are a number of towns and cities, which serve as the starting and end points of backwater cruises
    sfe_990507_0032.jpg
  • Broken ice on the River Daugava on the 15th February 2019 in Riga in Latvia. The Daugava or Western Dvina is a river rising in the Valdai Hills, flowing through Russia, Belarus, and Latvia and into the Gulf of Riga. The total length of the river is 1,020 km.
    D5-Latvia-06598.jpg
  • A boat on the Backwaters of Ayamenam, Kerala.The Kerala backwaters are a chain of brackish lagoons and lakes lying parallel to the Arabian Sea coast (known as the Malabar Coast) of Kerala state in southern India. The network includes five large lakes linked by canals, both manmade and natural, fed by 38 rivers, and extending virtually half the length of Kerala state. The backwaters were formed by the action of waves and shore currents creating low barrier islands across the mouths of the many rivers flowing down from the Western Ghats range..The Kerala Backwaters are a network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and inlets, a labyrinthine system formed by more than 900 km of waterways, and sometimes compared to the American Bayou.[1] In the midst of this landscape there are a number of towns and cities, which serve as the starting and end points of backwater cruises
    sfe_990507_0035.jpg
  • A duckfarmer punts his way downstream with his flock, Ayamenam, Kerala, India..The Kerala backwaters are a chain of brackish lagoons and lakes lying parallel to the Arabian Sea coast (known as the Malabar Coast) of Kerala state in southern India. The network includes five large lakes linked by canals, both manmade and natural, fed by 38 rivers, and extending virtually half the length of Kerala state. The backwaters were formed by the action of waves and shore currents creating low barrier islands across the mouths of the many rivers flowing down from the Western Ghats range..The Kerala Backwaters are a network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and inlets, a labyrinthine system formed by more than 900 km of waterways, and sometimes compared to the American Bayou.[1] In the midst of this landscape there are a number of towns and cities, which serve as the starting and end points of backwater cruises
    sfe_990507_0013.jpg
  • A man walks accross a bridge over the backwaters in Ayamenam in Kerala<br />
<br />
The Kerala backwaters are a chain of brackish lagoons and lakes lying parallel to the Arabian Sea coast (known as the Malabar Coast) of Kerala state in southern India. The network includes five large lakes linked by canals, both manmade and natural, fed by 38 rivers, and extending virtually half the length of Kerala state. The backwaters were formed by the action of waves and shore currents creating low barrier islands across the mouths of the many rivers flowing down from the Western Ghats range.<br />
The Kerala Backwaters are a network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and inlets, a labyrinthine system formed by more than 900 km of waterways, and sometimes compared to the American Bayou.[1] In the midst of this landscape there are a number of towns and cities, which serve as the starting and end points of backwater cruises
    sfe_990507_0012.jpg
  • Traditional houseboats on the backwaters as Kerala, India<br />
<br />
The Kerala backwaters are a chain of brackish lagoons and lakes lying parallel to the Arabian Sea coast (known as the Malabar Coast) of Kerala state in southern India. The network includes five large lakes linked by canals, both manmade and natural, fed by 38 rivers, and extending virtually half the length of Kerala state. The backwaters were formed by the action of waves and shore currents creating low barrier islands across the mouths of the many rivers flowing down from the Western Ghats range.<br />
The Kerala Backwaters are a network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and inlets, a labyrinthine system formed by more than 900 km of waterways, and sometimes compared to the American Bayou.[1] In the midst of this landscape there are a number of towns and cities, which serve as the starting and end points of backwater cruises
    sfe_990507_0021.jpg
  • A lone bather wallows lazily in the calm pool waters at the Grand-Hôtel du Cap-Ferrat (formerly the Bel Air Hotel), Alpes Maritimes, France. Basking on his back, the man lies with arms outstretched, the warm buoyant water making him weightless. he has found inner-peace and there is restful tranquility here, where surface-tension allows the bather to unwind completely in this idyllic place on the French Cote d'Azur riviera. Behind his head unoccupied sun loungers are facing the Mediterranean Sea, its clear horizon empty except for a lone yacht that sails along the ocean coast. The colour of both sea and pool are the same on this overcast day that allows us to experience a more muted tone to the scene, also allowing us to see the contiunation of natural waters, as if they run from one to the other.
    cote_dazur01-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Three teenage boys bait their lines in the calm of the River Wandle, one of London's lost rivers that still meanders through inner-city London on its course from Carshalton Pond to the Thames. The three lads are reflected in the ripples of this once-polluted water which was once flushed with the toxins of industry such as tanning factories and breweries. After expensive clean-ups by local authorities, kids like these are once again able to catch trout in the way boys like them would do hundreds of years before the industrial revolutiion fouled many a water course. It is a perfect later-summer afternoon and the sun is shining on waterside reeds and grasses making this a scene of idyllic boyhood and undusturbed lazy dreams.
    river_wandle01.jpg
  • It is dawn in Calcutta, West Bengal, India and on the West bank of the Hooghly River the sun is rising from across the Howrah Bridge. A man has waded out into waist-deep water and stands in the polluted river saying his prayers and offering thanks to his Hindu Gods. He has found inner-peace, a tranquillity surrounded by the chaotic pace of Indian life in this city. The engineering of the bridge stretches across the water as the humanity cross to their businesses and markets. The bridge is one of three on the Hooghly River and is a famous symbol of Kolkata and West Bengal. Bearing the daily weight of approximately 150,000 vehicles and 4,000,000 pedestrians. It is one of the longest bridges of its type in the world. The Hooghly River is an approximately 260 km long distributary of the Ganges River.
    RB_058-18-11-1996.jpg
  • Lying on her back with eyes closed, a young girl stretches her arms out allowing her father to support her weight in an empty swimming pool in Miami Florida. With complete trust, she lets herself go and yields to her own natural  buoyancy as she floats amid this seemingly wide ocean of chlorinated water belonging to a hotel on Ocean Drive. We see her bright red costume clearly against the  complimentary prime colour green in a vibrant display from the spectrum. It is a scene of love and confidence, of youth and health.
    miami_pool02-18-05-1996.jpg
  • It is morning in Kolkata (Calcutta), West Bengal, India and on the West bank of the Hooghly River the banks are busy with bathing men with the Howrah Bridge beyond. The bathers are either drying themselves after washing in the river, or are undressing to do so. It is a scene of inner-peace, a tranquillity surrounded by the chaotic pace of Indian life in this city. The engineering of the bridge stretches across the water towards the city beyond. The bridge is one of three on the Hooghly River and is a famous symbol of Kolkata and West Bengal. Bearing the daily weight of approximately 150,000 vehicles and 4,000,000 pedestrians. It is one of the longest bridges of its type in the world. The Hooghly River is an approximately 260 km long distributary of the Ganges River.
    kolkata02-18-11-1996.jpg
  • Thames Water Utilities sewer cleaning team inspects the Fleet River's Victorian-built storm sewer of Blackfriars, beneath the streets of the City of London. Discarded fats from restaurants congeal in sewer networks leading to blocked pipework. Sewer men are shovel the deposits and bring them in vats to the surface. In the early 19th century the River Thames was practically an open sewer, with disastrous consequences for public health in London, including numerous cholera epidemics with the The Great Stink of 1858 a turning point. Intercepting sewers constructed between 1859 and 1865 were fed by 450 miles (720 km) of main sewers that in turn conveyed the contents of some 13,000 miles (21,000 km) of smaller local sewers using 318m bricks, 880,000 cubic yards of concrete and mortar and excavation of over 3.5m tonnes of earth.
    sewermen-19-06-1994_1_1.jpg
  • Thames Water Utilities sewer cleaning team inspects the Fleet River's Victorian-built storm sewer of Blackfriars, beneath the streets of the City of London. Discarded fats from restaurants congeal in sewer networks leading to blocked pipework. Sewer men are shovelling the deposits and bring them in vats to the surface. In the early 19th century the River Thames was practically an open sewer, with disastrous consequences for public health in London, including numerous cholera epidemics with The Great Stink of 1858 a turning point. Intercepting sewers constructed between 1859 and 1865 were fed by 450 miles (720 km) of main sewers that in turn conveyed the contents of some 13,000 miles (21,000 km) of smaller local sewers using 318m bricks, 880,000 cubic yards of concrete and mortar and excavation of over 3.5m tonnes of earth.
    sewer_team01-19-06-1994_1_1.jpg
  • A dawn bather covers his face with red cloth as sun rises over Hooghler River, KolIkata. It is dawn in Calcutta, West Bengal, India and on the West bank of the Hooghly River the sun is rising from across the Howrah Bridge. Six bathers are either drying themselves after washing in the river, or are undressing to do so. It is a scene of inner-peace, a tranquillity surrounded by the chaotic pace of Indian life in this city. The engineering of the bridge stretches across the water towards the city beyond. The bridge is one of three on the Hooghly River and is a famous symbol of Kolkata and West Bengal. Bearing the daily weight of approximately 150,000 vehicles and 4,000,000 pedestrians. It is one of the longest bridges of its type in the world. The Hooghly River is an approximately 260 km long distributary of the Ganges River.
    howrah_river01-18-11-1996_1.jpg
  • It is dawn in Calcutta, West Bengal, India and on the West bank of the Hooghly River the sun is rising from across the Howrah Bridge. Six bathers are either drying themselves after washing in the river, or are undressing to do so. It is a scene of inner-peace, a tranquillity surrounded by the chaotic pace of Indian life in this city. The engineering of the bridge stretches across the water towards the city beyond. The bridge is one of three on the Hooghly River and is a famous symbol of Kolkata and West Bengal. Bearing the daily weight of approximately 150,000 vehicles and 4,000,000 pedestrians. It is one of the longest bridges of its type in the world. The Hooghly River is an approximately 260 km long distributary of the Ganges River.
    RB_061-18-11-1996.jpg
  • Sunshine through the riverside trees of the Derwent just outside the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-11-29-09-2017.jpg
  • The waterfall at Bombaim, Sao Tome. Sao Tome and Principe, are two islands of volcanic origin lying off the coast of Africa. Settled by Portuguese convicts in the late 1400s and later a centre for slaving, their independence movement culminated in a peaceful transition to self government from Portugal in 1975.
    SFE_130420_624.jpg
  • The beautiful blue water in the volcanic cavern of Los Jameos Del Agua in El Malpais de la Corona near the village of Haria, Lanzarote, Spain. It was formed by the lava flow from the eruption of the volcano, La Corona, which advanced while the surface solidified.
    04-cave_9615.jpg
  • Seen from one boat to another, a privately-owned motorboat ferry dependent on tourist trade crosses the River Nile at Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. Plying the great African river is a cheap fare state-run ferry used by commuters and locals but these motorboats serve tourists and therefore one of the many victims of the tourism downturn. According to the country's Ministry of Tourism, European visitors to Egypt is down by up to 80% in 2016 from the suspension of flights after the downing of the Russian airliner in Oct 2015. Euro-tourism accounts for 27% of the total flow and in total, tourism accounts for 11.3% of Egypt's GDP.
    egypt555-10-03-2016_1.jpg
  • A privately-owned motorboat ferry flying the German flag and dependent on all tourist trade crosses the River Nile in front of a sunbather at Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. Plying the great African river is a cheap fare state-run ferry used by commuters and locals but these motorboats serve tourists and therefore one of the many victims of the tourism downturn. According to the country's Ministry of Tourism, European visitors to Egypt is down by up to 80% in 2016 from the suspension of flights after the downing of the Russian airliner in Oct 2015. Euro-tourism accounts for 27% of the total flow and in total, tourism accounts for 11.3% of Egypt's GDP.
    egypt305-05-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_073.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_071.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_069.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_063.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_059.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_055.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_015.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_014.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_011.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_008.jpg
  • Bathers in the steamy waters created by the Geothermal Power Station Svartsengi. The Blue Lagoon. The water is vented from the ground near a lava flow that generates electricity via the turbines in the plant.  It is then passed into the lagoon where bathers enjoy temperatures of 38 degrees Centigrade.
    140209_iceland_005.jpg
  • Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming, at the northern entrance to Yellowstone National Park. The main attraction at Mammoth Hot Springs is the terraces. Heat, water, limestone, and rock fracture combine to create the them. Travertine is deposited as white rock. The Mammoth Hot springs are constantly changing. As formations grow, water is forced to flow in different directions. The constant changes in water and mineral deposits create a living sculpture. Mammoth Hot Springs is divided into two sections, the lower terraces, and the Upper terrace Loop
    2007_08_07_Mammoth Hot Springs_C.jpg
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