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  • These incredible photos show the San Alfonso del Mar resort in Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. The outdoor pool is located halfway up the country’s Pacific Coast in the city of Algarrobo and is filled with a staggering 66 million gallons of crystal clear seawater. Spanning an area of 20 acres — and equivalent in size to 6,000 average size home swimming pools — the San Alfonso pool, designed by water innovation company Crystal Lagoons, was until recently the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest swimming pool. But in December 2015 a sister project by Crystal Lagoons in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, took over the title with the completion of a 30 acre pool, the first phase of plans for a total of 12 lagoons that will span 250 acres and the centerpiece of the USD $5.5 billion, 1,8500-acre Citystars project with residential apartments, hotels and shopping. Still, Sharm el Sheikh’s older sister pool in Chile, at 3,323ft long with a maximum depth of 11.5ft, is still quite the sight to behold and will turn 11-years-old next month, after opening back in December 2006. The San Alfonso pool, situated right next to the Pacific Ocean, uses a computer-controlled filtration system to suck water from the sea at one end and pump it back out at the other. The sun warms the pool to 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit) — nine degrees Celsius (48 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the ocean. And being the size it is, swimming it not the only thing on the agenda — the gigantic size makes it possible to sail boats and carry out all kinds of fun water sports activities. 14 Nov 2017 Pictured: The San Alfonso del Mar resort in Algarrobo, Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. Photo credit: Crystal Lagoons/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA116761_004.jpg
  • These incredible photos show the San Alfonso del Mar resort in Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. The outdoor pool is located halfway up the country’s Pacific Coast in the city of Algarrobo and is filled with a staggering 66 million gallons of crystal clear seawater. Spanning an area of 20 acres — and equivalent in size to 6,000 average size home swimming pools — the San Alfonso pool, designed by water innovation company Crystal Lagoons, was until recently the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest swimming pool. But in December 2015 a sister project by Crystal Lagoons in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, took over the title with the completion of a 30 acre pool, the first phase of plans for a total of 12 lagoons that will span 250 acres and the centerpiece of the USD $5.5 billion, 1,8500-acre Citystars project with residential apartments, hotels and shopping. Still, Sharm el Sheikh’s older sister pool in Chile, at 3,323ft long with a maximum depth of 11.5ft, is still quite the sight to behold and will turn 11-years-old next month, after opening back in December 2006. The San Alfonso pool, situated right next to the Pacific Ocean, uses a computer-controlled filtration system to suck water from the sea at one end and pump it back out at the other. The sun warms the pool to 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit) — nine degrees Celsius (48 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the ocean. And being the size it is, swimming it not the only thing on the agenda — the gigantic size makes it possible to sail boats and carry out all kinds of fun water sports activities. 14 Nov 2017 Pictured: The San Alfonso del Mar resort in Algarrobo, Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. Photo credit: Crystal Lagoons/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA116761_013.jpg
  • June 15, 2017 - Minneapolis, Minn, USA - United States - Hiawatha Golf Course could close if it is forced by the Minnesota DNR to reduce the amount of water it pumps off the grounds. ]  Shari L. Gross • sgross@startribune.com  Golfers are worried of the prospects of the Hiawatha Golf Course closure. The Park Board has unveiled its final two options to remedy the course. The options are to continue pumping 262 million gallons of ground water annually and to reduce pumping to 94 million gallons, a choice that is ''strongly'' favored by the DNR, but will not allow golf to continue. Photos from Thursday, June 15, 2017. (Credit Image: © Shari L. Gross/Minneapolis Star Tribune via ZUMA Wire)
    20170615_zaf_m42_001.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
  • May 23, 2017 - Damage to the Applegate Square sign can be seen as California Highway Patrol, Atwater Fire Department and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, Merced County, respond to the scene of a tanker truck fire near Applegate Road and Highway 99 in Atwater, Calif., on Tuesday, May, 23, 2017. According to CHP Officer Eric Zuniga, the driver of the tanker truck has been found dead. The cause of the crash and the explosion is still under investigation. According to Mark Lawson, division chief with Calfire-Merced County, the tanker truck was carrying about 9,000 gallons of gasoline. (Credit Image: © Andrew Kuhn/The Merced Sun Star via ZUMA)
    20170523_zan_m155_001.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
  • 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_032.jpg
  • May 5, 2017 - inconnu - Snack lovers can now get their teeth into a new brand of corn chips - made with insects.Triangular-shaped Chirps, which come in three flavours, are made using flour milled from cricketsThe all-female team behind the brand hope serving up bugs this way will male eating insects more socially acceptable.The advantage is that insects can be bred with almost zero impact on the environment yet produce more protein per calorie than beef.It takes one cricket to make each chip.The three flavour varieties are cheddar cheese, BBQ, and sea salt.The company was set up by American graduates Rose Wang and Laura D’Asaro.Wang was a Harvard student when she travelled to China where she ate her first bug—a scorpion.It had been fried and skewered on a stick like a kebab. Wang’s fellow travel mates dared her to try it.She took the challenge and to her surprise, declared it delicious.When she returned to the USA she and her roommate D’Asaro started cooking with crickets they bought from a local pet shop. They were soon joined in their culinary experiments by another Harvard student, Meryl Natow, and the trio formed Six Foods.The company is now manufacturing Chirps and hope the product will be the first in a long line of bug-based snacks.They said although most Westerners shudder at the prospect of eating an insect, around two billion people regularly eat bugs as part of their diet.Many insects, crickets included, contain all nine essential amino acids and more magnesium than beef. Insect protein is also sustainable, especially in comparison to traditional meat sources. It takes one gallon of water to produce one pound of insect protein. Almost two thousand gallons of water, by contrast, are needed to produced a half kilo of beef The girls discovered there is a booming cricket farming industry in the US crickets for fish and reptile feed. Scaling up to human consumption was no problem because crickets have a six-week life cycleNot all in
    RTI20170505_zaf_v01_009.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_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_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_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_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_034.jpg
  • May 27, 2017 - Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. -  Built in 1887 at the Chestnut Hill Resevoir to supply the city of Boston with its fresh water, the Metropolitan Waterworks pumped millions of gallons of water daily to Boston and surrounding cities until the 1970's, when it was taken offline.  The Waterworks Museum features the original three coal-powered, steam-driven pumping engines in its Great Engines Hall.  The museum is open year round and offers free admission. www.waterworksmuseum.org(Credit Image: © Brian Cahn via ZUMA Wire)
    20170527_zaf_ce6_001.jpg
  • June 10,2017. Fontana CA. The worlds longest pizza makes it into the Guinness Book of World Records as the 1.3 mile(6,820 ft) long pizza event took place at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana California Saturday..  The cooking of the pizza started at 11am and finish at 4pm outside the race track. The making of the pizza started Friday at 7pm with the pizza dough being made, cook and laid out along a 1.3 mile lone table. The making of the pizza consist of 530 gallons of tomato sauce, 20,000 pounds of dough, 15,000 pounds of cheese, 1.3 mile long table, 3 mobile pizza ovens, hundreds of pizza boxes and many pizza chefs and volunteers. The total time from starting at 7pm Friday to the finish line Saturday at 4pm was 18hrs. The free  pizza was then cut up to be taking to many homeless/senior shelters and to the public that came out to see it happen.   Photo by Gene Blevins/LA DailyNews/ZumaPress (Credit Image: © Gene Blevins via ZUMA Wire)
    20170610_zaf_bl1_001.jpg
  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 641 -  Hurricane Harvey - Launched Sept. 6, 2017 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - Hurricane Harvey could be the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history with a potential price tag of $190 billion, according to a preliminary estimate from private weather firm AccuWeather. Hurricane Harvey dumped 33 trillion gallons of water in the U.S. Its blistering winds destroyed buildings, boats and homes standing in its path. At least 33 people have been killed in eastern Texas since the storm hit. Parts of Texas have been hit by more than 51in of rainfall since Hurricane Harvey landed on 25 August, setting new rainfall records for the contiguous-US. Large areas of Houston, the fourth most populous city in the US, remain under water. More than 10,000 rescues have been made so far, with neighbors and strangers stepping in to help in unprecedented numbers. Almost 325,000 people have registered with Federal Emergency Management Agency for disaster assistance. No one knows how many people are in shelters, just that more are expected. (Credit Image: ? Kin Man Hui/San Antonio Express-News/zReportage.com via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 18, 2020, Yogyakarta, Indonesia: A traffic control volunteer wears a unique face shield from used water gallon in Yogyakarta, to prevent the spread of coronavirus COVID-19. Indonesian government recommended that people distance themselves from others to slow the spread of the disease of the new coronavirus. Indonesia has so far confirmed 520 deaths, 5.923 positive cases and 607 recovered from coronavirus. (Credit Image: © Rizqullah Hamiid/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20200418_zaa_n230_045.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_222.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_211.jpg
  • June 27, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20170627_zaf_p34_162.jpg
  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle - Jean Claude Rouget (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - Milord Thomas - Jacques Ricou - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - Milord Thomas - Jacques Ricou - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_212.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_209.jpg
  • September 23, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 3 - Borice - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20170923_zaf_p34_057.jpg
  • June 27, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20170627_zaf_p34_153.jpg
  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_252.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon - Francois Nicolle - Jean Claude Rouget (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 4 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_243.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
    20171028_zaf_p34_221.jpg
  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • October 28, 2017 - Compiegne, France, France - Course 3 - Angel s Share - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 5 - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • June 27, 2017 - Paris, France - Course 5 - The Stomp - David Gallon (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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  • September 23, 2017 - Auteuil, France, France - Course 3 - Borice - David Gallon - Brut Imperial - Jonathan Plouganou (Credit Image: © Panoramic via ZUMA Press)
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