• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 562 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • August 27, 2017 - Mexico City, Mexico City, MX - The yearly Mexico City Marathon is held in Mexico City and it is organized by the Mexican Athletic Association and is the largest running-event in the country. (Credit Image: © Joel Alvarez via ZUMA Wire)
    20170827_zap_a136_001.jpg
  • August 3, 2017 - New York City, New York, United States of America - During a public “Ivory Crush” organized by the Department of Environmental Commission (DEC), the Wildlife Conservation Society, Tiffany & Co., and environmental groups, such as 96 Elephants (the estimated number of elephants slaughtered daily), some two tons of confiscated Ivory, with a value of $8.5 million USD was crushed in NYC’s Central Park.  In 2014, New York State passed a law making the trade of Ivory items a class D felony, except in certain cases with state approval.  Despite this, New York City is the nation's largest port of entry for illegal wildlife goods, according to state officials..Investigative Lieutenant Jesse Paluch of the NYS DEC Department of Environmental Crimes Investigations adds that what was crushed today “was the culmination of three years of investigations and the execution of 12 search warrants”.  He further adds “we want to show that the ivory on the animal is priceless, but worthless in this form as a consumer good”.  Mary Dixon of WCS says “we would like to send a message to poachers and anyone involved in the illegal ivory trade that we will no longer tolerate this”.  WCS works in 60 countries worldwide and works to stop animal trafficking.  Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac was among the guests in attendance. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar via ZUMA Wire)
    20170803_zbp_b160_001.jpg
  • November 2, 2018 - New York City, New York, US - Thousands of marathon fans joined runners from around the world in Central Park for an Olympic-style opening ceremony on 2 November 2018. The largest marathon in the world, will be take place on Sunday, 4 November 2018 through the streets of City’s five (5) boroughs. (Credit Image: © G. Ronald Lopez/ZUMA Wire)
    20181102_zap_l135_001.jpg
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_057.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_048.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_056.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_047.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_045.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_040.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_039.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_038.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_032.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_020.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_014.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_015.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_013.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_004.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_003.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_057.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_056.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_047.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_045.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_039.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_038.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_037.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_032.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_031.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_020.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_013.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_015.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_014.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_008.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_004.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_003.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_037.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_048.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_040.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - New York City, New York, US - Anti-Donald Trump protests continued for a fifth day in New York City. Dubbed the ‚ÄòHere to Stay‚Äô Rally and March saw some of the largest crowds yet to protest the apprentice President-elect Donald Trump, to date. The early afternoon demonstration gathered for the rally at the Trump International Hotel and Tower on Central Park West, drawing large numbers of immigrants and supportive New Yonkers, then marched to the US President-elect home and headquarters on Fifth Avenue, where the demonstration continued. (Credit Image: © 2016 G. Ronald Lopez via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zap_l135_011.JPG
  • FRANCE OUT - Pope Francis eats with the Vatican's blue-collar workers at their cafeteria at the Vatican on July 25, 2014. The Vatican is the planet's smallest State. Within this tiny political entity, the world's largest and most influential Church's executive powers affect the lives of at least one billion Catholics throughout the world. In fact, the Vatican is the only State in the world subservient to a religion. The pontifical palace, Swiss Guards, in-house newspaper, railroad station and hundreds of employees, executives, manual laborers and craftsmen, are all part of life in the Vatican, to which we have been invited for a special visit. Some 2,000 employees cross over the Santa Anna gate each morning at around 7 am, the gateway guarded both by the Swiss Guards and the vigilenzia (Vatican police force). Not all of them work at the Vatican by vocation, but many admit that a deep personal connection to the Pope has motivated their choice of work. Photo by Eric Vandeville/ABACAPRESS.COM  | 582152_029 Vatican City Vatican Vatican (or Holy See)
    RTIABACA_582152_029.jpg
  • A world record breaking elephant sculpture stopped people in their tracks on a suburban street as passers-by stopped for a closer look. The almost four-metre-tall beast — mounted outside a printing company in Birmingham, UK — is destined to set a new record as the biggest animal sculpture created by a 3D printing machine. The technological marvel is perfectly life like, though larger than most elephants in the wild and as a permanent sculpture, is set to become a new landmark for the UK’s second. largest city. The animal is mounted high on the wall of creative print company, Andesign, and is shown smashing through the building's brickwork out onto the street. Unveiled by Sutton Coldfield MP Andrew Mitchell, a crowd of 100 gathered to see the spectacular pachyderm revealed to the public for the first time. Mr Mitchell said of the sculpture: ‘This is a properly astonishing spectacle and a measure of the great ingenuity that typifies British industry and the very clever creative people who work here. Isn't it incredible what has been achieved with a print machine ? ‘In fact, it's so lifelike that my dog is completely terrified to come out of the car or anywhere near the thing.’ The African elephant was created by the world's biggest and fastest 3D printing machine, which can duplicate absolutely any object imaginable in the tiniest detail by printing line upon line of a special resin. The as yet unnamed elephant was created over five days of continuous printing and is the biggest animal ever created by a printing machine. Delighted bosses at Andesign await confirmation from the Guinness Book of Records but are refusing to rest on their laurels with even bigger and better projects now lined up. ‘The elephant has been a tremendous experience and incredible hard work,’ said Andesign MD Garry Hassell. ‘But the sky is the limit for us now and we'll keep looking to create more and more incredible things. ‘You never know, we even might try to print a blue
    MEGA294428_004.jpg
  • A world record breaking elephant sculpture stopped people in their tracks on a suburban street as passers-by stopped for a closer look. The almost four-metre-tall beast — mounted outside a printing company in Birmingham, UK — is destined to set a new record as the biggest animal sculpture created by a 3D printing machine. The technological marvel is perfectly life like, though larger than most elephants in the wild and as a permanent sculpture, is set to become a new landmark for the UK’s second. largest city. The animal is mounted high on the wall of creative print company, Andesign, and is shown smashing through the building's brickwork out onto the street. Unveiled by Sutton Coldfield MP Andrew Mitchell, a crowd of 100 gathered to see the spectacular pachyderm revealed to the public for the first time. Mr Mitchell said of the sculpture: ‘This is a properly astonishing spectacle and a measure of the great ingenuity that typifies British industry and the very clever creative people who work here. Isn't it incredible what has been achieved with a print machine ? ‘In fact, it's so lifelike that my dog is completely terrified to come out of the car or anywhere near the thing.’ The African elephant was created by the world's biggest and fastest 3D printing machine, which can duplicate absolutely any object imaginable in the tiniest detail by printing line upon line of a special resin. The as yet unnamed elephant was created over five days of continuous printing and is the biggest animal ever created by a printing machine. Delighted bosses at Andesign await confirmation from the Guinness Book of Records but are refusing to rest on their laurels with even bigger and better projects now lined up. ‘The elephant has been a tremendous experience and incredible hard work,’ said Andesign MD Garry Hassell. ‘But the sky is the limit for us now and we'll keep looking to create more and more incredible things. ‘You never know, we even might try to print a blue
    MEGA294428_002.jpg
  • A world record breaking elephant sculpture stopped people in their tracks on a suburban street as passers-by stopped for a closer look. The almost four-metre-tall beast — mounted outside a printing company in Birmingham, UK — is destined to set a new record as the biggest animal sculpture created by a 3D printing machine. The technological marvel is perfectly life like, though larger than most elephants in the wild and as a permanent sculpture, is set to become a new landmark for the UK’s second. largest city. The animal is mounted high on the wall of creative print company, Andesign, and is shown smashing through the building's brickwork out onto the street. Unveiled by Sutton Coldfield MP Andrew Mitchell, a crowd of 100 gathered to see the spectacular pachyderm revealed to the public for the first time. Mr Mitchell said of the sculpture: ‘This is a properly astonishing spectacle and a measure of the great ingenuity that typifies British industry and the very clever creative people who work here. Isn't it incredible what has been achieved with a print machine ? ‘In fact, it's so lifelike that my dog is completely terrified to come out of the car or anywhere near the thing.’ The African elephant was created by the world's biggest and fastest 3D printing machine, which can duplicate absolutely any object imaginable in the tiniest detail by printing line upon line of a special resin. The as yet unnamed elephant was created over five days of continuous printing and is the biggest animal ever created by a printing machine. Delighted bosses at Andesign await confirmation from the Guinness Book of Records but are refusing to rest on their laurels with even bigger and better projects now lined up. ‘The elephant has been a tremendous experience and incredible hard work,’ said Andesign MD Garry Hassell. ‘But the sky is the limit for us now and we'll keep looking to create more and more incredible things. ‘You never know, we even might try to print a blue
    MEGA294428_005.jpg
  • A world record breaking elephant sculpture stopped people in their tracks on a suburban street as passers-by stopped for a closer look. The almost four-metre-tall beast — mounted outside a printing company in Birmingham, UK — is destined to set a new record as the biggest animal sculpture created by a 3D printing machine. The technological marvel is perfectly life like, though larger than most elephants in the wild and as a permanent sculpture, is set to become a new landmark for the UK’s second. largest city. The animal is mounted high on the wall of creative print company, Andesign, and is shown smashing through the building's brickwork out onto the street. Unveiled by Sutton Coldfield MP Andrew Mitchell, a crowd of 100 gathered to see the spectacular pachyderm revealed to the public for the first time. Mr Mitchell said of the sculpture: ‘This is a properly astonishing spectacle and a measure of the great ingenuity that typifies British industry and the very clever creative people who work here. Isn't it incredible what has been achieved with a print machine ? ‘In fact, it's so lifelike that my dog is completely terrified to come out of the car or anywhere near the thing.’ The African elephant was created by the world's biggest and fastest 3D printing machine, which can duplicate absolutely any object imaginable in the tiniest detail by printing line upon line of a special resin. The as yet unnamed elephant was created over five days of continuous printing and is the biggest animal ever created by a printing machine. Delighted bosses at Andesign await confirmation from the Guinness Book of Records but are refusing to rest on their laurels with even bigger and better projects now lined up. ‘The elephant has been a tremendous experience and incredible hard work,’ said Andesign MD Garry Hassell. ‘But the sky is the limit for us now and we'll keep looking to create more and more incredible things. ‘You never know, we even might try to print a blue
    MEGA294428_003.jpg
  • A world record breaking elephant sculpture stopped people in their tracks on a suburban street as passers-by stopped for a closer look. The almost four-metre-tall beast — mounted outside a printing company in Birmingham, UK — is destined to set a new record as the biggest animal sculpture created by a 3D printing machine. The technological marvel is perfectly life like, though larger than most elephants in the wild and as a permanent sculpture, is set to become a new landmark for the UK’s second. largest city. The animal is mounted high on the wall of creative print company, Andesign, and is shown smashing through the building's brickwork out onto the street. Unveiled by Sutton Coldfield MP Andrew Mitchell, a crowd of 100 gathered to see the spectacular pachyderm revealed to the public for the first time. Mr Mitchell said of the sculpture: ‘This is a properly astonishing spectacle and a measure of the great ingenuity that typifies British industry and the very clever creative people who work here. Isn't it incredible what has been achieved with a print machine ? ‘In fact, it's so lifelike that my dog is completely terrified to come out of the car or anywhere near the thing.’ The African elephant was created by the world's biggest and fastest 3D printing machine, which can duplicate absolutely any object imaginable in the tiniest detail by printing line upon line of a special resin. The as yet unnamed elephant was created over five days of continuous printing and is the biggest animal ever created by a printing machine. Delighted bosses at Andesign await confirmation from the Guinness Book of Records but are refusing to rest on their laurels with even bigger and better projects now lined up. ‘The elephant has been a tremendous experience and incredible hard work,’ said Andesign MD Garry Hassell. ‘But the sky is the limit for us now and we'll keep looking to create more and more incredible things. ‘You never know, we even might try to print a blue
    MEGA294428_001.jpg
  • These incredible photos show the San Alfonso del Mar resort in Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. The outdoor pool is located halfway up the country’s Pacific Coast in the city of Algarrobo and is filled with a staggering 66 million gallons of crystal clear seawater. Spanning an area of 20 acres — and equivalent in size to 6,000 average size home swimming pools — the San Alfonso pool, designed by water innovation company Crystal Lagoons, was until recently the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest swimming pool. But in December 2015 a sister project by Crystal Lagoons in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, took over the title with the completion of a 30 acre pool, the first phase of plans for a total of 12 lagoons that will span 250 acres and the centerpiece of the USD $5.5 billion, 1,8500-acre Citystars project with residential apartments, hotels and shopping. Still, Sharm el Sheikh’s older sister pool in Chile, at 3,323ft long with a maximum depth of 11.5ft, is still quite the sight to behold and will turn 11-years-old next month, after opening back in December 2006. The San Alfonso pool, situated right next to the Pacific Ocean, uses a computer-controlled filtration system to suck water from the sea at one end and pump it back out at the other. The sun warms the pool to 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit) — nine degrees Celsius (48 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the ocean. And being the size it is, swimming it not the only thing on the agenda — the gigantic size makes it possible to sail boats and carry out all kinds of fun water sports activities. 14 Nov 2017 Pictured: The San Alfonso del Mar resort in Algarrobo, Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. Photo credit: Crystal Lagoons/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA116761_004.jpg
  • These incredible photos show the San Alfonso del Mar resort in Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. The outdoor pool is located halfway up the country’s Pacific Coast in the city of Algarrobo and is filled with a staggering 66 million gallons of crystal clear seawater. Spanning an area of 20 acres — and equivalent in size to 6,000 average size home swimming pools — the San Alfonso pool, designed by water innovation company Crystal Lagoons, was until recently the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest swimming pool. But in December 2015 a sister project by Crystal Lagoons in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, took over the title with the completion of a 30 acre pool, the first phase of plans for a total of 12 lagoons that will span 250 acres and the centerpiece of the USD $5.5 billion, 1,8500-acre Citystars project with residential apartments, hotels and shopping. Still, Sharm el Sheikh’s older sister pool in Chile, at 3,323ft long with a maximum depth of 11.5ft, is still quite the sight to behold and will turn 11-years-old next month, after opening back in December 2006. The San Alfonso pool, situated right next to the Pacific Ocean, uses a computer-controlled filtration system to suck water from the sea at one end and pump it back out at the other. The sun warms the pool to 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit) — nine degrees Celsius (48 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the ocean. And being the size it is, swimming it not the only thing on the agenda — the gigantic size makes it possible to sail boats and carry out all kinds of fun water sports activities. 14 Nov 2017 Pictured: The San Alfonso del Mar resort in Algarrobo, Chile — home to the second largest swimming pool in the world. Photo credit: Crystal Lagoons/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA116761_013.jpg
  • March 27, 2019 - Mumbai, India - A girl talks on a mobile phone in front of a logo of State Bank of India (SBI) in Mumbai, India on 27 March 2019. As the India's largest bank State Bank of India has a network of more than 43,000 automated teller machine (ATM) in India, which is largest network of ATMs offered by any other bank in the country. (Credit Image: © Himanshu Bhatt/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190327_zaa_n230_231.jpg
  • Oct 30, 2008 - Christchurch, South Island, New Zealand - The spectacular Christchurch Art Gallery is located in the heart of the scenic Cultural Precinct, a few minutes' walk from Cathedral Square. It has one of New Zealand's largest art collections, including a superb selection of works by Canterbury artists and a range of local and international exhibitions. Christchurch is the largest city in the South Island of  New Zealand, and the country's second - largest urban area. (Credit Image: © Arnold Drapkin/ZUMA Press)
    20081030_ptf_d84_801.jpg
  • May 27, 2017 - Bruges, Belgium - Bruges, Belgium, on 27th May 2017. During one of the warmest days of the year, Bruges was the destination chosen by thousands of tourists from all around the world. This is the capital and largest city of the province of West Flanders in the Flemish region of Belgium, in the northwest of the country. With Bruges being a huge tourist destination, tourists have a lot of choices to enjoy the city, like horse-drawn carriage tours, canal tours by boat, or just walk around the historic city center. (Credit Image: © Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170527_zaa_n230_616.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: You ORCA look behind you, this incredible photo shows a diver seemingly just yards from a feeding killer whale. Norwegian teacher Svein Aasjord, 44, his wife, and three boys, live in a fjord called Kaldfjord, in northern Norway close to the city of Tromsø - 217 miles north of the Arctic Circle. As well as living in one of the stunning coastal inlets Norway is famous for, the Aasjord family also live in one which is a popular hunting channel for whales feeding on herring. Each winter millions and millions of herring feed along the Norwegian coast in rich cold-water currents. Heading north to meet them is one the largest gatherings of orca and humpback whales on earth ready to feast on the bounty. In open water the whales stand little chance against the fast-moving shoals of herring, but by herding the tiny fish into fjords the whales create hundreds of ‘bait balls’ trapping the fish at the surface before going in for the kill. Sometimes the Aasjord family’s local Kaldfjord can be literally full of herring and large numbers of orca and humpbacks hunting them. The action has been so close to the house that Svein has been able to take photographs from inside his own property. These stunning photographs are just some Svein has been able to take over the years, including some breath-taking shots of his friends SWIMMING with the hunting orcas. Svein said: “All the people that have seen that picture tell me ‘he’s going to die in the next moment’. “I shouted to my friend ‘look over here’, because I wanted him to be looking at me when one of the big males was behind him. The whale of course was not up for the diver at all, he was just up for air. “The diver is a friend of mine, he and his girlfriend are experienced divers, they are not professional divers but they dive all the time. “We shut off the engine, as I am very strict when it comes to not disturbing the whales because they are feeding and I don’t want to interfere with their live
    MEGA180732_008.jpg
  • December 16, 2018 - December 17, 2018 - Allahabad, India - Aritists started paininting on various public places and walls on the ocassion of  Kumbh Mela, one of the largest religious gathering on earth and is held every 12 years at Prayagraj, formerly known as Allahabad. The city is going with various makeovers with beautiful paintings and murals to showcase rich cultural and religious heritage in the city. (Credit Image: © Sauvik Acharyya/ZUMA Wire)
    20181216_zap_a176_001.jpg
  • August 13, 2017 - Gdansk, Poland - People looking for goods at a flea market during 757th edition of St. Dominic’s Fair are seen in Gdansk, Poland on 13 August 2017  More than one thousand 1000 traders, artists and collectors participate in the Fair occupying with their stands several streets in the centre of the in the historical city centre. St. Dominic’s Fair is the largest open-air trade and cultural event in Poland and one of the largest such events in Europe. It has enjoyed over seven hundred fifty years of tradition; it was established by the Pope Alexander IV in 1260. (Credit Image: © Michal Fludra/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170813_zaa_n230_025.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban -  04 August 2020 -   Thick dark grey pollution smog  over the city of Durban. The heavily industrialised Durban is home to the largest concentration of petrochemical industries in the country. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency(ANA).
    Durban-Smog-4779.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban -  04 August 2020 -   Thick dark grey pollution smog  over the city of Durban. The heavily industrialised Durban is home to the largest concentration of petrochemical industries in the country. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency(ANA).
    Durban-Smog-4584.jpg
  • August 7, 2017 - Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil - Brazilian President MICHEL TEMER takes part in the signing ceremony to transfer a part of the Campo de Marte Airport for the Sao Paulo City Hall which intends to build a park with about 400 thousand square meters that should be the third largest in the city. (Credit Image: © Paulo Lopes via ZUMA Wire)
    20170807_zaf_l146_001.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban -  04 August 2020 -   Thick dark grey pollution smog  over the city of Durban. The heavily industrialised Durban is home to the largest concentration of petrochemical industries in the country. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency(ANA).
    Durban-Smog-4749.jpg
  • (170727) -- MEXICO CITY, July 27, 2017 (Xinhua) -- A boy shows a Mexican traditional sandwich named "Torta" during the "Torta Fair" in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, July 26, 2017. According to local press, during the event which is held from July 26 to 30, people made a "torta" of 67 meters long and 820 kilograms in weight, trying to break the world record of the largest torta. (Xinhua/Francisco Canedo) (zy) (Photo by Xinhua/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_20735572.jpg
  • (170727) -- MEXICO CITY, July 27, 2017 (Xinhua) -- A person takes part in the elaboration of a giant Mexican traditional sandwich named "Torta" during the "Torta Fair" in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, July 26, 2017. According to local press, during the event which is held from July 26 to 30, people made a "torta" of 67 meters long and 820 kilograms in weight, trying to break the world record of the largest torta. (Xinhua/Francisco Canedo) (zy) (Photo by Xinhua/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_20735577.jpg
  • (170727) -- MEXICO CITY, July 27, 2017 (Xinhua) -- People take part in the elaboration of a giant Mexican traditional sandwich named "Torta" during the "Torta Fair" in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, July 26, 2017. According to local press, during the event which is held from July 26 to 30, people made a "torta" of 67 meters long and 820 kilograms in weight, trying to break the world record of the largest torta. (Xinhua/Francisco Canedo) (zy) (Photo by Xinhua/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_20735581.jpg
  • (170727) -- MEXICO CITY, July 27, 2017 (Xinhua) -- People take part in the elaboration of a giant Mexican traditional sandwich named "Torta" during the "Torta Fair" in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, July 26, 2017. According to local press, during the event which is held from July 26 to 30, people made a "torta" of 67 meters long and 820 kilograms in weight, trying to break the world record of the largest torta. (Xinhua/Francisco Canedo) (zy) (Photo by Xinhua/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_20735574.jpg
  • (170727) -- MEXICO CITY, July 27, 2017 (Xinhua) -- People take part in the elaboration of a giant Mexican traditional sandwich named "Torta" during the "Torta Fair" in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, July 26, 2017. According to local press, during the event which is held from July 26 to 30, people made a "torta" of 67 meters long and 820 kilograms in weight, trying to break the world record of the largest torta. (Xinhua/Francisco Canedo) (zy) (Photo by Xinhua/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_20735582.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_014.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_013.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_012.jpg
  • A woman plays a violin at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_010.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_009.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_008.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_007.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_006.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_005.jpg
  • A warning sign in entrance of Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_004.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_003.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_002.jpg
  • A woman plays a violin at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_001.jpg
  • Harvey Weinstein, a producer of 12-12-12, the largest concert ever staged at Madison Square Garden, hold a media briefing in New York City, NY, USA, on December 7, 2012. Photo by Dennis Van Tine/ABACAPRESS.COM  | 344936_004
    ABACA_344936_004.jpg
  • A seller wears protective mask as safety measure against COVID-19 to offers his products to shoppers at Central de Abasto Market during the daily life amid of Coronavirus outbreak in phase 3. The Central de Abasto is the largest and most important market in Mexico and food provider which has increased its security measures due to recent positive cases among sellers . on April 27, 2020 in Mexico City, Mexico. Photo by Ricardo Castelan Cruz/Eyepix/ABACAPRESS.COM
    728766_011.jpg
  • April 11, 2018 - Bogor, West Java, Indonesia - Kampung thematic Agro Eduwisata Organik located in Kampung Ciharashas RT. 05 RW. 01, Mulyaharja Village, Bogor City, West Java, provide basic education on organic farming in theory and practice to elementary school students. These students are taught about rice cultivation that includes plows with traditional and modern way, seed selection, rice planting, organic fertilizer making, vegetable pesticide manufacture, preparing compost fertilizer, making biogas from cow dung. Learning activities with these farmers, to create an independent and creative farmer regeneration from an early age while maintaining environmental conservation through organic farming, Wednesday  (Credit Image: © Andi Muh Ridwan/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20180411_zaa_p133_186.jpg
  • November 12, 2016 - Los Angeles, California, United States - Demonstrators marched through the streets of Los Angeles in protest of President-Elect, Donald Trump. Los Angeles, California November 12, 2016. According to the LAPD an estimated crowd of nine thousand people participated, making this the largest anti-Trump protest to date in the city. (Credit Image: © Ronen Tivony/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161112_zaa_n230_454.JPG
  • November 12, 2016 - Los Angeles, California, United States - Demonstrators marched through the streets of Los Angeles in protest of President-Elect, Donald Trump. Los Angeles, California November 12, 2016. According to the LAPD an estimated crowd of nine thousand people participated, making this the largest anti-Trump protest to date in the city. (Credit Image: © Ronen Tivony/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20161112_zaa_n230_453.JPG
Next