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  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1183.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1225.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1205.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1163.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A1060.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016. Merfolk actors are getting ready in the Museum cafe. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0985.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016. Merfolk actors are getting ready in the Museum cafe. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A1017.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016. Merfolk actors are getting ready in the Museum cafe. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0931.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0205.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0172.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016. An actor pretending to be a BP security officer is eaten by the kraken. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0097.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1990.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1967.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1844.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1891.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1792.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1789.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1706.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1643.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1675.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1554.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1541.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1538.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". Merfolk getting ready to perfom. The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1523.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1544.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1284.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster. The merfolk all advocate more oil explorationa dn more climate change to raise the sea levels and make their life better.
    AB9A1232.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0137.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-BP stage a splash mob art intervention at the British Museum in protest against the continued BP sponsorship of the exhibition Sunken Cities 25th of September 2016.  BP pirates calling for more oil exploration. A flock of merfolk and BP pirates roamed the museum as well as a kraken, a giant sea monster.
    AB9A0014.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1977.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1735.jpg
  • Bp-or-not-Bp stage a splash mob dressed as merfolk at the British Museum in protest against the continued sponsorship by the oil company Bp, in particular against  the sponsorhsip of the exhibition 'Sunken Cities". The merfolk sang and performed around the museum with placards rejoycing BP and the rising sea levels because as merfolk they will benefit from climate change. The public were invited to add their thoughts on future sunken cities around the world and to participate in the ongoing debate on oil and climate change. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    AB9A1723.jpg
  • Bronze Sphynx guarding Cleopatra’s Needle, made in Egypt for the Pharaoh Thotmes III in 1460 BC and brought to London from Alexandria the royal city of Cleopatra in 1878 photographed on the empty Embankment during the coronavirus pandemic on the 10th May 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Britain wanted something big and noticeable to commemorate the British victory in Egypt over Napoleon, sixty-three years earlier. At low tide you can step to the platform on the River side and place flower heads on the platform as an offering to the Thames Isis Goddess and wait. The rising water will splash up the steps then gradually over the platform from each side. When the two washes meet in the middle they slap together and form dual ripples which carry the flowers away. This huge granite structure was engineered precisely to do this and hidden in plain sight for those that can see.
    _E6A1196.jpg
  • Bronze Sphynx guarding Cleopatra’s Needle, made in Egypt for the Pharaoh Thotmes III in 1460 BC and brought to London from Alexandria the royal city of Cleopatra in 1878 photographed on the empty Embankment during the coronavirus pandemic on the 10th May 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Britain wanted something big and noticeable to commemorate the British victory in Egypt over Napoleon, sixty-three years earlier. At low tide you can step to the platform on the River side and place flower heads on the platform as an offering to the Thames Isis Goddess and wait. The rising water will splash up the steps then gradually over the platform from each side. When the two washes meet in the middle they slap together and form dual ripples which carry the flowers away. This huge granite structure was engineered precisely to do this and hidden in plain sight for those that can see.
    _E6A1191.jpg
  • Bronze Sphynx guarding Cleopatra’s Needle, made in Egypt for the Pharaoh Thotmes III in 1460 BC and brought to London from Alexandria the royal city of Cleopatra in 1878 photographed on the empty Embankment during the coronavirus pandemic on the 10th May 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Britain wanted something big and noticeable to commemorate the British victory in Egypt over Napoleon, sixty-three years earlier. At low tide you can step to the platform on the River side and place flower heads on the platform as an offering to the Thames Isis Goddess and wait. The rising water will splash up the steps then gradually over the platform from each side. When the two washes meet in the middle they slap together and form dual ripples which carry the flowers away. This huge granite structure was engineered precisely to do this and hidden in plain sight for those that can see.
    _E6A1194.jpg
  • Young boy Gaucho cowboy Brazilian riding a horse through water, rounding up cattle, splash, dramtic, afternoon light. Working Gaucho Fazenda in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
    _MG_2137_1.jpg
  • Discarded or forgotten wet pink slipper after rain in a south London street. The once-fluffy shoe is seen from above, a detail of this item of footwear that was left at a local bus stop. In a landscape of otherwise grey industrial concrete and paving stones, the shocking pink is a bright splash of colour.
    pink_slipper01-17-12-2014_1.jpg
  • A discarded or forgotten pink slipper in a south London street. The fluffy shoe is seen from above, a detail of this item of footwear that was left at a local bus stop. In a landscape of otherwise grey industrial concrete and paving stones, the shocking pink is a bright splash of colour.
    pink_slipper01-16-12-2014_1.jpg
  • Female wrestler throwing water at audience member, splash. Lucha Libre wrestling origniated in Mexico, but is popular in other latin Amercian countries, including in La Paz / El Alto, Bolivia. Male and female fighters participate in the theatrical staged fights to an adoring crowd of locals and foreigners alike.
    _MG_4692_1.jpg
  • A house-proud housewife trims her lawn with a pair of scissors in new housing on a terraced Liverpool street. Stooping down to ground level, the lady snips and preens individual blades of grass on an almost perfectly manicured lawn. Her home is new, surrounded by the early 20th century and Victorian terraced housing that populates this part of north-western Britain. There are few cars and two other people cross the road without fear of approaching vehicles – the economy here is largely depressed. And yet, the female gardener has taken the trouble to mow her garden and then trim her esteemed plot. She wears an orange suit too, a splash of colour in an otherwise drab street.
    scissors_grass01-14-06-1991.jpg
  • Pedestrian and cyclist on rental Boris Bike in a Soho side-street, patterned with purple. During a bust lunchtime in London's Soho many pedestrians and cyclists pass-by a splash of purple that plays across a side street off Charing Cross Road. Produced by reflective coloured panels on an adjacent building - and after a period of light rain in the capital, the vivid rays of colour are a welcome oasis of hues. Motorcycles are parked with mirrors showing the street beyond. A lady walks across the landscape with a cigarette in hand and a male cyclist pedals past on a "Boris bike" - one of the rental bicycles that can be hired for 30-minute journeys across the capital.
    purple_street04-06-10-2010 12-43-43.jpg
  • A man stands sheltering from April rain under his umbrella near and a pseudo-artistic plant stand feature in central London. The splash of colour and nature looks incongruous and eccentric on this central London street near Trafalgar Square and seasonal rain is falling on the capital's pavements.
    art_tree02-27-04-2012_1.jpg
  • The Washburn Expedition in 1870 named Old Faithful for its nearly regular schedule of eruptions. It is the grand old geyser of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, because of its frequent and predictable eruptions. The intervals between eruptions average between 45-90 minutes and the average duration is about four minutes. To predict the next eruption, its first continuous surge is timed until the final splash.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_Z.jpg
  • The Washburn Expedition in 1870 named Old Faithful for its nearly regular schedule of eruptions. It is the grand old geyser of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, because of its frequent and predictable eruptions. The intervals between eruptions average between 45-90 minutes and the average duration is about four minutes. To predict the next eruption, its first continuous surge is timed until the final splash.
    2007_08_07_Lower Geyser Basin_AA.jpg
  • A group of young boys play in the calm waters of the Indian Ocean on Meedu Island, in the Republic of the Maldives. The shallows are a safe playground for these kids who swim and splash about in the clear shallows next to two small dhoni boats often used to fish using traditional hand and line, an important source of income for remote communities in this island nation. The sea is perfectly clear blue and the sand coral-white, in jeopardy to rising sea levels as global warming makes sea level locations like this vulnerable to flooding. The Maldives comprise of twenty-six atolls, featuring 1,192 coral islands of which 80 are holiday resorts with 200 inhabited by indigenous communities. This Islamic nation of 298 sq km (115 sq miles), lie seven hundred kilometres (435 miles) south-west of Sri Lanka.
    maldives207-13-11-2007.jpg
  • A family walk along the surf with their reflections in wet sand at the Welsh seaside town of Llandudno. Holding a very tired toddler, the mother walks alongside the father and a small girl who splashes in shallow water. Their figures are seen in the reflected wet sand at low tide.
    beach_family-18-07-1993_1.jpg
  • Shoppers carry their purchases in yellow Selfridges bags in London's West End. The bags are one of the capital's most striking symbols of British retail and are seen across the city as splashes of vibrant colour on the otherwise drab pavements and streets. The economic recovers appears to have begun in earnest and retail therapy has attracted these Londoners to the West End, away from the larger, warmer shopping Malls on the outskirts of town. Selfridges was founded by Harry Gordon Selfridge. The flagship store in London's Oxford Street is the second largest shop in the UK (after Harrods) and was opened on 15 March 1909.
    selfridges_shoppers1-06-September-20...jpg
  • A lady protects herself from a mid-day summer summer sun with a brightly coloured parasol brolley. Oblivious to the viewer, she balances her lunch snack on her lap with toes pointing inwards, exposed to the hot solar rays. Meanwhile, she holds on tight to her eager pet poodle dog who is straining on its leash, wanting to go for a walk along the largely unpopulated promenade in this Devon resort, otherwise known as the English Riviera. But splashes of white paint (from the painted beach huts) have been left on the pavement. It is a horrible place to sit in the sun and her partner has left her alone to sit on her sun lounger, leaving the second chair vacant.
    england_beach02-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
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