SOURCE : http://bigpicture.ru
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Monday, March 25, 2013
Shoreline ประมวลภาพผู้คน ณ ฝั่งมหาสมุทร
SOURCE : http://www.boston.com
The shoreline -- of the sea, lakes, and rivers -- is a dynamic interface of civilization and the natural world. It exerts a powerful draw on us. That transition space holds beauty and carries risk, the zone where we at once embrace and battle the environment in which we exist. The shoreline provides food, recreation, breeding grounds, commerce, peace, and even primal fear. Two thirds of the world's largest cities lie in low-elevation coastal areas, vulnerable to sea rise even as population trends show us increasingly dwelling in urban areas. Gathered here are images exploring our attraction to the water's edge. -- Lane Turner
Christian Tio of the Philippines freestyles during day three of the KTA Bintan at Argo Beach Resort on February 23, 2013 in Bintan Island, Indonesia. (Xaume Olleros/Getty Images)
A loggerhead turtle hatchling makes it's way to the surf at South Litchfield Beach along the coast of South Carolina on August 17, 2012. Turtle volunteers walk the area's beaches along South Carolina's coast daily during nesting season keeping tabs on the endangered species. (Randall Hill/Reuters) #
Fishermen unload a catch on the shores of Banyuwangi on the eastern Java island on October 18, 2012. Indonesia belongs to the six-country coral triangle, the Amazon of the marine world and global center of marine bio-diversity. The coral triangle spans over the countries of Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Timor Leste and the Solomon Islands. (Aman Rochman/AFP/Getty Images) #
A man dressed as a friar jumps from a 13-meter high cliff during the "Jump of the Friar", along Herradura Beach in Lima on November 16, 2012. The jump commemorates a local legend of a friar who leapt from the same rock to commit suicide over his love of a woman some two hundred years ago. (Mariana Bazo/Reuters) #
Sand fills the streets in the wake of superstorm Sandy along the central Jersey Shore on October 31, 2013. The total economic damage from Superstorm Sandy could run as high as $50 billion, which would make it the second-costliest storm in US history after Hurricane Katrina. (Mike Groll/Associated Press) #
Crews scrape off more than 400 pounds of organic material, including species native to Japan but not found in the United States, from a dock that washed ashore near Forks, Wash. on January 3, 2013. The dock is considered likely debris from the March 2011 tsunami in Japan. (Olympic National Park/Associated Press)#
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