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  • July 21, 2019 - Spotted Deer, Harrogate, Yorkshire, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_076.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Lioness With Cubs (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_332.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Lions At Night (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_331.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Grizzly Bear Cub (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_059.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Thick-Billed Murre  (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_067.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Elk In The Wild (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_074.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Deer With Antlers (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_077.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Thick-Billed Murre  (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_066.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_126.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Baby Seal And Adult Seal (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_112.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Duck Splashing In The Water (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_063.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Crocodile In Water (Credit Image: © Caley Tse/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_389.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Squirrel On Grass (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_159.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal In Grass (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_119.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Lying On Ground (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_110.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Immature Bald Eagle  (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_058.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Deer With Antlers, Harrogate, Yorkshire, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_075.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - African Elephant (Loxodonta) And Cattle Egrets  (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_344.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Herd Of Deer(Cervidae) In Field (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_327.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Covering Face (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_113.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Bird Flying Into The Sunset (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_271.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Squirrel On Grass (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_158.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Buffalo In Snowy Woods (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_420.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Lying On Grass (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_116.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Duck Swimming In The Water (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_062.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Flying Pelican (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_064.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Flying Pelican (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_065.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Rhinoceros, South Africa (Credit Image: © Kristy-Anne Glubish/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_041.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Sleeping (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_117.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Pine Warbler  (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_068.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Cheetah (Acinonyx Jubatus), Running, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, Africa (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_342.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seals Lying On Beach (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_096.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Running Zebras, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, Africa (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_343.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Deer In Field (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_136.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Yawning Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus Amphibius) At Serengeti National Park, Tanzania (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_341.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Sleeping (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_101.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - African Buffalo  (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_340.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Buffalo By River Bank (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_259.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Lying On Beach (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_099.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal In Water (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_120.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Seal Lying On Beach (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_115.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Close Up Of Seal (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_100.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Goose Flying Over Water (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_177.jpg
  • October 9, 2018 - PEKANBARU, INDONESIA - OCTOBER 9, 2018: Officers seen carrying baby sun bears (helarctos malayanus) at transit clinic of Indonesian Center for Natural Resources Conservation (BBKSDA) in Pekanbaru, Riau Province, Indonesia on October 9, 2018. Indonesian Center for Natural Resources Conservation takes care of baby sun bears separated from its mother because of change forest as original habitat of wild animals that become industrial plantations and oil palm plantations. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna/ZUMA Wire)
    20181009_zap_s221_002.jpg
  • SOUTH AFRICA - Cape Town - 12 October 2020- The wildebeest, also called the gnu, is an antelope in the genus Connochaetes. It belongs to the family Bovidae, which includes antelopes, cattle, goats, sheep, and other even-toed horned ungulates.This goup of beest is on a farm near Stellenbosch  .Photograph; Phando Jikelo/African News Agency(ANA)
    Wild-beast-3966.jpg
  • June 16, 2017 - Pekanbaru, Indonesia - Two frog toads in a mating position on June 17, 2017 in Pekanbaru, Indonesia  (Credit Image: © Afrianto Silalahi/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170616_zaa_n230_530.jpg
  • April 12, 2018 - Wuwei, Gansu, China - Gansu endangered animal protection center, the paradise of endangered wild animal protected many rare animals like Wild Bactrian Camel,Saiga antelope, platt wild horse, golden monkey etc. in Wuwei, Gansu, China on 12 April 2018. (Credit Image: © TPG via ZUMA Press)
    20180412_zaa_t49_005.jpg
  • October 3, 2018 - Lake Eyasi, Ngorongoro district, Tanzania - Manu (14)The Hadza are one of the last remaining societies, which remain in the world, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the Hadza way of life. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them. The hunter gatherer Hadza way of live is under threat. (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181003_zap_k212_009.jpg
  • October 3, 2018 - Lake Eyasi, Ngorongoro district, Tanzania - Giaga (50), Manu (14), Osama (15) and Madenye (46) sit and rest on a dead tree.The Hadza are one of the last remaining societies, which remain in the world, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the Hadza way of life. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them. The hunter gatherer Hadza way of live is under threat. (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181003_zap_k212_016.jpg
  • October 3, 2018 - Lake Eyasi, Ngorongoro district, Tanzania - Manu (14) shoots an arrow.The Hadza are one of the last remaining societies, which remain in the world, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the Hadza way of life. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them. The hunter gatherer Hadza way of live is under threat. (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181003_zap_k212_022.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_056.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_059.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_058.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_057.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_055.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_054.jpg
  • San (also called Bushmen) are an ethnic group of South West Africa. They live in the Kalahari Desert across the borders of Botswana, Namibia, Angola and South Africa. Most of the 100,000 San people live in Botswana (around 55,000) but about 25,000 live in Namibia..The San have a foraging lifestyle based on the hunting of wild animals (usually with bows and poison arrows and spears) and the gathering of veld food. The fact they are hunter gatherers accounts for their nomadic way of life. Their lifestyle is particularly adapted to the hard conditions of the Kalahari Desert. They know where waterholes are located and carry water in ostrich eggshells. They drink water from roots and tubers they find by digging the ground. The San are intelligent trackers and know the habits of their prey. they hunt game of all size : mice, buffalos, antelopes, and even giraffes sometimes. They also eat various types of insects especially during the dry season.. Sans are part of the Khoisan language peoples (including the herding tribe of the Khoikhoi) who speak a language based on click sounds (consonants), made with specific moves of the tongue.
.Naming.Their is a debate about these people should be called as the term of San didn't used to be used by San people themselves as they didn't use to apprehend themselves as unified ethnic group. Indeed there is a various array of San subgroups. But this issue also arose because the words of San and Bushman (coming from the dutch word Bosjes Man) also have been used by outsiders (european settlers in particular) to refer to them, often with pejorative connotations..The different San language groups of Namibia met in late 1996 and agreed to use the general term San to designate them externally. This word was historically applied by their ethnic relatives and historic rivals, the Khoikhoi. This term meaning outsider in the Nama language (the language of the Khoikhois), enables the distinction between Bushmen from what the Khoikhoi called t
    20140422_zaf_y60_050.jpg
  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 681 -  Hadza On The Brink - Launched October 4, 2018 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - The Hadza tribe of Tanzania are one of the last remaining societies in Africa, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the iconic Hadza way of life. Today of roughly 1,300 Hadza living in the dry hills here between salty Lake Eyasi and the Rift Valley highlands, only about 100 to 300 still hunt and gather most of their food. The Hadza's homeland lies on the edge of the Serengeti plains, in the shadow of Ngorongoro Crater. It is also close to Olduvai Gorge, one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world, where homo habilis, one of the earliest members of the genus Homo was discovered to have lived 1.9 million years ago. The Hadza have probably lived in the Yaeda Chini area for millennia. Genetically like the Bushmen of southern Africa they are one of the 'oldest' lineages of humankind. They speak a click language that is unrelated to any other language on earth. Their way of life is being encroached on by pastoralists whose cattle drink their water and graze on their grasslands, with farmers clearing woodland to grow crops, and climate change that dries up rivers and stunts grass. Over the past 50 years, the tribe has lost 90% of its land. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them.  (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181002_681_k212_000.jpg
  • October 3, 2018 - Lake Eyasi, Ngorongoro district, Tanzania - Young Hadza boys climb a huge stone rock next to their camp.The Hadza are one of the last remaining societies, which remain in the world, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the Hadza way of life. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them. The hunter gatherer Hadza way of live is under threat. (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181003_zap_k212_001.jpg
  • September 11, 2017 - London, London, United Kingdom - Image ©Licensed to i-Images Picture Agency. 11/09/2017. London, United Kingdom. Joanna Krupa photocall. A Pro-Europe protester walks past  Polish-American model Joanna Krupa  posing bodypainted as a tiger outside Westminster in order to put pressure on the government to introduce a long-overdue bill banning the use of wild animals in travelling circuses.Picture by Andrew Parsons / i-Images (Credit Image: © Andrew Parsons/i-Images via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170911_zaa_ap2_028.jpg
  • Toni Garrn releases a photo on Instagram with the following caption: "Never been outside of a big city this long and it feels SO good!! It\u2019s incredibly necessary to be smelling fresh air, hugging trees, being with wild animals, seeing stars, or even just around the ocean often... nothing makes me feel as grounded and healthy and all are a huge luxury to airplane peeps like me. Sadly ending tomorrow ..these past 4/5 weeks of Ghana, Hamburg, Costa Rica, LA (no big city feels to me) and now Mexico have made me SO grateful to live on this planet \ud83c\udf0d Adios vacations, see you in a couple of months?!\u2708\ufe0f\ud83c\udde8\ud83c\uddf7\ud83c\uddf2\ud83c\uddfd\ud83d\udc12\ud83d\udc83\ud83c\udffb\ud83c\uddec\ud83c\udded (oh and huge shout out to my amazing travel agent Knud who makes anything possible, on a daily basis \ud83d\ude4f\ud83c\udffc)". Photo Credit: Instagram *** No USA Distribution *** For Editorial Use Only *** Not to be Published in Books or Photo Books ***  Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency’s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.
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  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 681 -  Hadza On The Brink - Launched October 4, 2018 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - The Hadza tribe of Tanzania are one of the last remaining societies in Africa, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the iconic Hadza way of life. Today of roughly 1,300 Hadza living in the dry hills here between salty Lake Eyasi and the Rift Valley highlands, only about 100 to 300 still hunt and gather most of their food. The Hadza's homeland lies on the edge of the Serengeti plains, in the shadow of Ngorongoro Crater. It is also close to Olduvai Gorge, one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world, where homo habilis, one of the earliest members of the genus Homo was discovered to have lived 1.9 million years ago. The Hadza have probably lived in the Yaeda Chini area for millennia. Genetically like the Bushmen of southern Africa they are one of the 'oldest' lineages of humankind. They speak a click language that is unrelated to any other language on earth. Their way of life is being encroached on by pastoralists whose cattle drink their water and graze on their grasslands, with farmers clearing woodland to grow crops, and climate change that dries up rivers and stunts grass. Over the past 50 years, the tribe has lost 90% of its land. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them.  (Credit Image: ? Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Pamela Anderson urges Prime Minister Theresa May to ban wild-animal circuses during a PETA Photocall in London, England on October 12, 2016. Photo by Aurore Marechal/ABACAPRESS.COM
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