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  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: THIS HONEY BADGER IS DEFINITELY NOT SWEET – AMAZINGLY ANGRY ANIMAL CHALLENGES A HUGE ANTELOPE AND DOESN’T BACK DOWN DESPITE BEING SENT FLYING There’s nothing sweet about this honey badger, the amazingly angry animal which challenges anything that comes close – even horned antelopes 20 TIMES bigger than it is. Wildlife photographer Dirk Theron, 45, captured some stunning photos of the spaniel-sized badger tussling with a huge oryx antelope. As these pictures show, incredibly the badger challenged the much-larger animal to a fight at a waterhole, even though an oryx comes equipped with impaling metre-long horns. Despite being hurled through the air like a rag doll the honey badger kept coming back for more, biting at the antelopes ankles, before eventually the bemused herbivore left the scene. Lions have been known to walk around honey badgers rather than getting close, such is their reputation for ferocity, which is matched only by their northern cousin, the wolverine. And on the next day the same honey badger was photographed by Dirk, this time chasing away a jackal. Dirk said this particular badger wasn’t sick or injured, it just didn’t like other animals getting too close to it at a waterhole. The images were taken in Etosha National Park, Namibia, and have recently been featured in an African wildlife blog. Dirk said: “It was our first day in Etosha and this waterhole is one of my favourites because of the angle of the afternoon sun. “We were sitting there for a while with not much going on and we were actually thinking of going back to camp, which somebody excitedly said the words ‘honey badger’. “You don’t often get to show people a honey badger in the wild, few people believe you when you try and explain how ferocious and dangerous these guys are. “Well, this one as about to do a show and tell for us. It all happened so quick and was over in a few short minutes. You can spend years in the wild and never see anything like th
    MEGA172159_010.jpg
  • 25042018 (Durban)Thapelo Morena tackles with Mxolisi Kunene at a game Mamelodi Sundowns look to edge closer to the Absa Premiership title when lock horns with Maritzburg United at Harry Gwala Stadiumm Pietermaritzburg on Wednesday night.Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/ANA
    Sundowns vs Maritzburg 274.jpg
  • 25042018 (Durban)Fans at the Mamelodi Sundowns look to edge closer to the Absa Premiership title when lock horns with Maritzburg United at Harry Gwala Stadiumm Pietermaritzburg on Wednesday night.Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/ANA
    Sundowns vs Maritzburg 176.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
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  • July 21, 2019 - African Buffalo  (Credit Image: © Carson Ganci/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Buffalo By River Bank (Credit Image: © Richard Wear/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • , Kenya - 3/21/2017 - (Photo by Shannon Wild/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
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  • June 3, 2017 - Soria, Soria, Spain - A bull looks at camera during the celebration of 'El desencajonamiento' in Soria, north of Spain. (Credit Image: © Jorge Sanz/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • (FILE) Stan Lee Dies At 95. Stan Lee, the legendary writer, editor and publisher of Marvel Comics whose fantabulous but flawed creations made him a real-life superhero to comic book lovers everywhere, has died. He was 95. Lee, who began in the business in 1939 and created or co-created Black Panther, Spider-Man, the X-Men, the Mighty Thor, Iron Man, the Fantastic Four, the Incredible Hulk, Daredevil and Ant-Man, among countless other characters, died early Monday morning at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, a family representative told The Hollywood Reporter. HOLLYWOOD, LOS ANGELES, CA, USA - JUNE 29: American comic book writer Stan Lee arrives at the Los Angeles Premiere Of Marvel Studios 'Ant-Man' held at the Dolby Theatre on June 29, 2015 in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States. 29 Jun 2015 Pictured: Stan Lee. Photo credit: Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • June 5, 2017 - Guwahati, India - Indian one horn rhinoceros, wild buffalo and domestic cows grazing together at Pabitora wildlife sanctuary in Morigaon district of Assam. (Credit Image: © Rajib Jyoti Sarma/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • February 5, 2018 - Shenyang, Shenyang, China - Shenyang,CHINA-5th February 2018: A goat with four horns can be seen in Shenyang, northeast China's Liaoning Province. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
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  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_004.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_006.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_008.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_003.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_005.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_002.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_007.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
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  • May 1, 2019 - Chuchuyimlang, Nagaland, India - An Ao Naga man blow a Buffalo horn at the Moatsü festival, post seed sowing festival at Chuchuyimlang, under Mokokchung district of India north eastern state of Nagaland on Wednesday, 01 May 2019. Moatsü, the premier festival of the Ao Nagas, is celebrated every year in the month of May after the sowing season to please the Gods of Nature and invoke their blessing for a bumper harvest. (Credit Image: © Caisii Mao/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • December 10, 2016 - Los Angeles, California, United States - December 10th 2016 - Los Angeles California USA - Executive ALAN HORN at the World Premiere for ''Rogue One Star Wars'' held at the Pantages Theater, Hollywood, Los Angeles  CA (Credit Image: © Paul Fenton via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 10, 2016 - Los Angeles, California, United States - December 10th 2016 - Los Angeles California USA - Executive ALAN HORN at the World Premiere for ''Rogue One Star Wars'' held at the Pantages Theater, Hollywood, Los Angeles  CA (Credit Image: © Paul Fenton via ZUMA Wire)
    20161210_zaf_f05_008.JPG
  • November 10, 2018 - Madrid, Madrid, Spain - German karateka Jonathan Horne seen celebrating after competing for the Gold Medal with Iranian karateka Sajad Ganjzadeh during the Kumite male +84kg final competition of the 24th Karate World Championships at the WiZink center in Madrid (Credit Image: © Manu Reino/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20181110_zaa_s197_079.jpg
  • November 10, 2018 - Madrid, Madrid, Spain - German karateka Jonathan Horne seen fighting with Iranian karateka Sajad Ganjzadeh to compete for the Gold Medal  during the Kumite male +84kg final competition of the 24th Karate World Championships at the WiZink centre in Madrid. (Credit Image: © Manu Reino/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
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  • This adorable calf has made history after becoming the first ever Indian rhino to be born using artificial insemination. Akuti, a seven-year-old Greater One Horned Indian Rhinoceros, gave birth at approximately 12.30am on Tuesday April 23. According to delighted zoo staff, it is the first ever birth of the species by induced ovulation and artificial insemination. Amazingly, the youngster appears to be in excellent health and these adorable images capture the scientific marvel taking its first ever steps as it wobbles around its enclosure. According to zoo officials, natural breeding wasn't working, so an expert team of animal reproductive specialists from the South East Zoo Alliance for Reproduction and Conservation, which focuses on endangered species, were brought in to help the birth along. The crew artificially collected semen from the father, Suru, on Jan. 8, 2018. The following day they artificially inseminated the mother. Once the team of experts had confirmed that Akuti was pregnant, she was trained to receive regular ultrasound examinations. This helped the staff monitor the development of the baby. Because the exact date of conception was known, they were able to accurately estimate the birth date. Zoo Spokesperson Ron Magill said: “With the artificial insemination, we had to first collect the semen from the male. Once that was done, we had to immobilize the female so that there would be no danger to the veterinarians who then carefully used an instrument that is inserted vaginally and placed up against the cervix where the semen is then deposited,” he said. “The challenge is that it has to be timed precisely to her ovulation which was also induced. As it turned out, our timing was perfect.”. 25 Apr 2019 Pictured: Historic Indian rhino born using artificial insemination at Zoo Miami. Photo credit: Ron Magill/ Zoo Miami / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • April 4, 2019 - Maputo, Mozambique - U.S. service members assigned to Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) and a member of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) build pallets of humanitarian aid to later be transported on a C-130J Hercules in Maputo, Mozambique, April 4, 2019. CJTF-HOA is leading U.S. Department of Defense Cyclone Idai relief efforts in support of USAID Disaster Assistance Response Team. The task force is helping meet requirements identified by USAID assessment teams and humanitarian organizations working in the region by providing logistics support and manpower to USAID at the request of the Government of the Republic of Mozambique. (Credit Image: © U.S. Air Force/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Bloody Foreland, County Donegal, Ireland (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Apr 4, 2015 - South Africa - The white rhinoceros or square-lipped rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum) is the largest and most numerous species of rhinoceros that exists. It has a wide mouth used for grazing and is the most social of all rhino species. (Credit Image: © Shannon Benson/VW Pics/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Apr 4, 2015 - South Africa - The white rhinoceros or square-lipped rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum) is the largest and most numerous species of rhinoceros that exists. It has a wide mouth used for grazing and is the most social of all rhino species. (Credit Image: © Shannon Benson/VW Pics/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • A young Colombia fan shows his support ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2018, round of 16 match at the Spartak Stadium, Moscow.
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  • , Kenya - 5/11/2016 - (Photo by Shannon Wild/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
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  • A Brazil fan shows his support ahead of the match
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  • Senegal fan celebrates after getting Sadio Mane's shirt after the final whistle
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  • July 21, 2019 - Deer In Field (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Football fans blowing horns during the SportPesa Trophy match at Goodison Park, Liverpool. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday November 6, 2018. See PA story SOCCER Everton. Photo credit should read: Richard Sellers/PA Wire
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  • Football fans blowing horns during the SportPesa Trophy match at Goodison Park, Liverpool. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday November 6, 2018. See PA story SOCCER Everton. Photo credit should read: Richard Sellers/PA Wire
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  • People pile into and onto cars through the city, hanging out their windows and sunroofs chanting, singing, holding flags and peace signs and blowing plastic horns
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • An astronaut aboard the International Space Station (ISS) put his or her earth-observation training to work in recognizing an unusual river that vanishes in a sand field well before it reaches the sea. The Hamra River (As Saquia al Hamra in Arabic) ends about 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean in a dark blue lake. The river has cut into the landscape, making low cliffs on both sides. The river has its source in the mountains 300 kilometers (185 miles) inland, and it provides a persistent water supply for El Aaiún, the biggest city in Western Sahara. One of the most sparsely populated countries in the world, Western Sahara has a population of nearly half a million people; nearly 40 percent of them live in El Aaiún.<br />
The photograph was taken with the most powerful lens aboard the space station, and city blocks are easily detected in the gray cityscape. Even the white landing-marker lines on the airfield runways are visible, showing that the astronaut perfectly synchronized the camera's view-finder with the moving target. This allowed for one the best ground resolutions that can be achieved from the ISS: close to 3 meters per pixel.<br />
Small horn-shaped dunes are visible at the top left of the top image. The horns of these crescent dunes point south in the direction of dune movement. Sand from the dunes falls down the cliffs, making a spiky shoreline at the west end of the lake, and the dune field effectively prevents the river from reaching the sea. The dunes also restrict the westward expansion of the town. But scattered developments occupy an ancient delta of the river (top right) on more stable ground, where darker patches still indicate prior courses of the river.<br />
Related Image<br />
NASA Earth Observatory (2014, June 30) Desert Coast - Morocco, Western Sahara.<br />
Astronaut photograph ISS046-E-46013 was acquired on February 21, 2016, with a Nikon D4 digital camera using an 1150 millimeter lens, and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the
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  • March 20, 2017 - Reno, Nevada, U.S - Reno Bighorns fans show off their Big Horns during the NBA D-League Basketball game between the Reno Bighorns and the Texas Legends at the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nevada. (Credit Image: © Jeff Mulvihill via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 20, 2017 - Reno, Nevada, U.S - Reno Bighorn fans sporting their Big Horns during the NBA D-League Basketball game between the Reno Bighorns and the Texas Legends at the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nevada. (Credit Image: © Jeff Mulvihill via ZUMA Wire)
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  • May 27, 2018 - Mons, BELGIUM - Mons Mayor Elio Di Rupo and a man wearing devils' horns, pose for a picture at the Ducasse - Doudou folkloric festival in Mons, Sunday 27 May 2018. The Doudou feast compromises two parts, a procession with the shrine of Waltrude and the fight between Saint George and the dragon. The Doudou was recognized in 2005 by UNESCO as one of the masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. ..BELGA PHOTO LAURIE DIEFFEMBACQ (Credit Image: © Laurie Dieffembacq/Belga via ZUMA Press)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Queens Park Rangers and Bristol City players lock horns after Bristol City score a goal
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 12, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_124.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_125.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_122.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_123.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_110.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_109.JPG
  • December 13, 2016 - Rawalpindi, punjab, Pakistan - Villagers watch sheep fighting each other to annual sheep fighting festival in. The people and farmers   round up their finest fighting sheep and gathered among friends to cheer on the creatures as they violently rammed into each other until their horns fell off. The ‚ÄúSmall-Tail Han Sheep‚Äù known for their head-butting abilities, battled it out in front of hundreds of onlookers who were able to distinguish the animals by their drawn-on marks. The sheep were then divided according to age and weight in the single-elimination match. (Credit Image: © Zubair Abbasi/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161213_zaa_p133_106.JPG
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