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  • July 21, 2019 - Running Zebras, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, Africa (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_343.jpg
  • March 24, 2019 - Students of Primary School are crossing the risky zebra mark  in Sylhet, Bangladesh. After the mass movement started again in the streets demanding a safety traffic system,  student died in two different accident while bus ran them over while they were crossing road and died on spot.  Then awareness is not rising. The zebra crossing does not slow down the drivers. (Credit Image: © Md Rafayat Haque Khan/ZUMA Wire)
    20190324_zap_r143_001.jpg
  • , South Africa - 12/20/2013 - Zebra (Equus sp.) Waterberg, South Africa(Photo by Shannon Wild/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20031412.jpg
  • April 25, 2017 - Qingdao, Qingdao, China - Qingdao, CHINA-April 25 2017: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY. CHINA OUT)..The newborn zebra attracts many visitors' attention at a zoo in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, April 25th, 2017. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170425_zaa_s145_055.jpg
  • Jessica Rea during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom.
    36784359.jpg
  • Vogue Williams during Ladies Day of the 2019 Invested Derby Festival at Epsom Racecourse, Epsom.
    43230162.jpg
  • Jessica Rea during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Friday June 1, 2018. See PA story RACING Epsom. Photo credit should read: Steve Parsons/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only - any intended commercial use is subject to prior Epsom Downs Racecourse approval. No Private Sales.
    36784342.jpg
  • Jessica Rea during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Friday June 1, 2018. See PA story RACING Epsom. Photo credit should read: Steve Parsons/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only - any intended commercial use is subject to prior Epsom Downs Racecourse approval. No Private Sales.
    36784333.jpg
  • Aldine Honey models a striped top over a black bikini, one of the Sportaville creations for summer 1962.
    30203341.jpg
  • Vogue Williams during Ladies Day of the 2019 Invested Derby Festival at Epsom Racecourse, Epsom.
    43230006.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Mountain Zebras, Mountain Zebra Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20150929_zaa_d20_499.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Mountain Zebras, Mountain Zebra Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    20150929_zaa_d20_499.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Mountain Zebras, Mountain Zebra Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    20150929_zaa_d20_499.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - Common Zebras, Kruger National Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20150706_zaa_d20_1236.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Burchell''s Zebras, mare with foal, Pilanesberg Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20150929_zaa_d20_508.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Burchell''s Zebras, mare with foal, Pilanesberg Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    20150929_zaa_d20_508.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - Common Zebras, Kruger National Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150706_zaa_d20_1236.jpg
  • Sept. 29, 2015 - Burchell''s Zebras, mare with foal, Pilanesberg Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Sator, Whj/DPA via ZUMA Press)
    20150929_zaa_d20_508.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - Common Zebras, Kruger National Park, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150706_zaa_d20_1236.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_040.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_038.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_037.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_032.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_039.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_033.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_042.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_035.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_036.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_034.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_041.jpg
  • Scotland's Euan Aitkin goes over for a try against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150496.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Hellewell goes over for a try against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150486.JPG
  • Scotland's Adam Walker is tackled by New Zealand's Manu Ma'u (left) and New Zealand's Adam Blair, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150318.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Hellewell is tackled by New Zealand's Solomone Kata (left) and Thomas Leuluai, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29149944.JPG
  • Scotland's Danny Brough kicks a conversion to tie the scores against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150575.JPG
  • Scotland's Euan Aitkin goes over for a try against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150504.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Hellewell goes over for a try against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150487.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Hellewell goes over for a try against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150484.JPG
  • Scotland's Danny Brough in action against New Zealand, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150317.JPG
  • Scotland's Danny Addy is held up at the line by New Zealand during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150315.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Hellewell is tackled by New Zealand's Manu Ma'u, during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150031.JPG
  • Scotland's Luke Douglas is tackled by New Zealand's Adam Blair (left) and Jesse Bromwich during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150029.JPG
  • Scotland's Ben Kavanagh is tackled by New Zealand's Adam Blair during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150025.JPG
  • Scotland's Adam Walker is tackled by New Zealand's Issac Luke (left) and Greg Eastwood during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29149942.JPG
  • Scotland's Luke Douglas is tackled by New Zealand's Greg Eastwood and Adam Blair during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington.
    29150027.JPG
  • March 29, 2019 - London, UK - Technicians present ''Zebra Crossing 2'', 2007, by El Anatsui (Est. GBP 550,000-750,000). Preview of Sotheby's upcoming Modern and Contemporary African Art sale.  Works from artists across the African diaspora will be offered for sale on 2 April. (Credit Image: © Stephen Chung/London News Pictures via ZUMA Wire)
    20190329_zaf_l94_024.jpg
  • Scotland's Adam Walker is tackled by New Zealand's Issac Luke (floor) and Joseph Tapine during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Friday November 11, 2016. See PA story RUGBYL New Zealand. Photo credit should read: Martin Rickett/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only, No commercial use without prior permission
    29150693.JPG
  • Scotland's Adam Walker is tackled by New Zealand's Issac Luke (left) and Joseph Tapine during the 4 Nations match at the Zebra Claims Stadium, Workington. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Friday November 11, 2016. See PA story RUGBYL New Zealand. Photo credit should read: Martin Rickett/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Editorial use only, No commercial use without prior permission
    29150692.JPG
  • PORT ELIZABETH. 23.3.16. Two elephant bulls tussle at a water hole at the Addo Elephant National Park.  The Park, proclaimed in 1931 when only 11 elephants remained is now the third largest national park in South Africa with a finely-tuned ecosystem that is sanctuary to over 600 elephant, lion, buffalo, black rhino, spotted hyena, leopard, kudu and a variety of antelope and zebra species, as well as the unique Addo flightless dung beetle. Picture: Ian Landsberg/African News Agency(ANA)
    35324.jpg
  • Shared Equity ridden by jockey Jack Garritty on his way to winning the Investec Zebra Handicap during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom.
    36791413.jpg
  • April 28, 2017 - Hong Kong, CHINA - Disqualified pro-HK independence lawmakers of the YOUNGSPIRATION, Baggio Leung ( L ) and Yau Wai-ching ( C ) cross the zebra after leaving the court today, charged with unlawful assembly and unlawful forced entry at LEGICO last November. 2017 Apr-28.Hong Kong.ZUMA/Liau Chung Ren (Credit Image: © Liau Chung Ren via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170428_zap_l137_004.jpg
  • April 28, 2017 - Hong Kong, CHINA - Disqualified lawmakers of pro-independence political party YOUNGSPIRATION, Yau-Wai-ching ( R ) and Baggio Leung ( L ) cross the zebra after leaving the court today charged with unlawful assembly and unlawful forced entry at LEGICO last November. 2017, Apr-28. Hong Kong. ZUMA/Liau Chung Ren (Credit Image: © Liau Chung Ren via ZUMA Wire)
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  • The Duke of Sussex, Jon Bon Jovi and members of the Invictus Games Choir after they walked on the famous zebra crossing outside the Abbey Road Studios in London. PA Photo. Picture date: Friday February 28, 2020. They are recording a special single in aid of the Invictus Games Foundation at the studios. See PA story ROYAL Sussex. Photo credit should read: Victoria Jones/PA Wire
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  • The Duke of Sussex, Jon Bon Jovi and members of the Invictus Games Choir walk on the famous zebra crossing outside the Abbey Road Studios in London. PA Photo. Picture date: Friday February 28, 2020. They are recording a special single in aid of the Invictus Games Foundation at the studios. See PA story ROYAL Sussex. Photo credit should read: Victoria Jones/PA Wire
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  • Shared Equity ridden by Jack Garritty (far left, orange cap) wins the Investec Zebra Handicap ahead of Swift Approval ridden by Oisin Murphy (no.8) during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom.
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  • Shared Equity ridden by Jack Garritty (far left, orange cap) wins the Investec Zebra Handicap ahead of Swift Approval ridden by Oisin Murphy (no.8) during ladies day of the 2018 Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse, Epsom.
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  • Grass sculpture of a zebra during the Cape Town Flower Show held at the Castle of Good Hope between the 27th and the 30th October 2016.<br />
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Photo by Ron Gaunt/ RealTime Images
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