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  • July 21, 2019 - Avebury Prehistoric Stone Circle, Wiltshire, England (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_221.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Prehistoric White Horse Carved Into Hillside, Oxfordshire, England (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_222.jpg
  • San Cristobal, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - The Pomier Caves are a series of 55 caves north of San Cristobal in the Dominican Republic.  They contain over 6000 drawings, pictographs, and petroglyphs of the Pre-Columbian Taino, Caribe, and Igneri cutlures.  It is the largest oncentration of ancient rock art in all the Caribbean Basin.  Some of the paintings are up to 2000 years old.  Cave Number 1 contains 590 painted figures of animals, birds, fish, reptiles and people.  The paint was a mixture of charcoal and animal fat.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964073.jpg
  • November 10, 2018 - Malaga, MALAGA, Spain - A large replica of a dinosaur is seen during the DINO Expo XXL..This exhibition is divided into two periods (Dinosaurs age and Ice age), having more than 100 different animated dinosaurs replicas of 12 metres of measure, with mechanism of movement and sound. The project with figures of dinosaurs that are replicas to real scale, have the purpose to make the known details of the dinosaurs age when they settle on the earth. (Credit Image: © Jesus Merida/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20181110_zaa_s197_045.jpg
  • San Cristobal, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - The Pomier Caves are a series of 55 caves north of San Cristobal in the Dominican Republic.  They contain over 6000 drawings, pictographs, and petroglyphs of the Pre-Columbian Taino, Caribe, and Igneri cutlures.  It is the largest oncentration of ancient rock art in all the Caribbean Basin.  Some of the paintings are up to 2000 years old.  Cave Number 1 contains 590 painted figures of animals, birds, fish, reptiles and people.  The paint was a mixture of charcoal and animal fat.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964086.jpg
  • San Cristobal, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - The Pomier Caves are a series of 55 caves north of San Cristobal in the Dominican Republic.  They contain over 6000 drawings, pictographs, and petroglyphs of the Pre-Columbian Taino, Caribe, and Igneri cutlures.  It is the largest oncentration of ancient rock art in all the Caribbean Basin.  Some of the paintings are up to 2000 years old.  Cave Number 1 contains 590 painted figures of animals, birds, fish, reptiles and people.  The paint was a mixture of charcoal and animal fat.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964070.jpg
  • San Cristobal, Dominican Republic - 4/4/2017 - Modern graffiti from in the Pomier Caves alongside ancient indigenous pictographs.  The Pomier Caves are a series of 55 caves north of San Cristobal in the Dominican Republic.  They contain over 6000 drawings, pictographs, and petroglyphs of the Pre-Columbian Taino, Caribe, and Igneri cutlures.  It is the largest oncentration of ancient rock art in all the Caribbean Basin.  Some of the paintings are up to 2000 years old.  Cave Number 1 contains 590 painted figures of animals, birds, fish, reptiles and people.  The paint was a mixture of charcoal and animal fat.(Photo by Jon G. Fuller/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_19964059.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Creevykeel Pre-Historic Burial Site Near Cliffony, Sligo, Ireland (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_311.jpg
  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 681 -  Hadza On The Brink - Launched October 4, 2018 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - The Hadza tribe of Tanzania are one of the last remaining societies in Africa, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the iconic Hadza way of life. Today of roughly 1,300 Hadza living in the dry hills here between salty Lake Eyasi and the Rift Valley highlands, only about 100 to 300 still hunt and gather most of their food. The Hadza's homeland lies on the edge of the Serengeti plains, in the shadow of Ngorongoro Crater. It is also close to Olduvai Gorge, one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world, where homo habilis, one of the earliest members of the genus Homo was discovered to have lived 1.9 million years ago. The Hadza have probably lived in the Yaeda Chini area for millennia. Genetically like the Bushmen of southern Africa they are one of the 'oldest' lineages of humankind. They speak a click language that is unrelated to any other language on earth. Their way of life is being encroached on by pastoralists whose cattle drink their water and graze on their grasslands, with farmers clearing woodland to grow crops, and climate change that dries up rivers and stunts grass. Over the past 50 years, the tribe has lost 90% of its land. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them.  (Credit Image: © Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181002_681_k212_000.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - Tyrannosaurus Rex | Tyrannosaurus Rex 14/06/2018 (Credit Image: © Patrick Lefevre/Belga via ZUMA Press)
    20180614_zaf_bg3_845.jpg
  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 681 -  Hadza On The Brink - Launched October 4, 2018 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - The Hadza tribe of Tanzania are one of the last remaining societies in Africa, that survive purely from hunting and gathering. Very little has changed in the way the Hadza live their lives. But it has become increasingly harder for them to pursue the iconic Hadza way of life. Today of roughly 1,300 Hadza living in the dry hills here between salty Lake Eyasi and the Rift Valley highlands, only about 100 to 300 still hunt and gather most of their food. The Hadza's homeland lies on the edge of the Serengeti plains, in the shadow of Ngorongoro Crater. It is also close to Olduvai Gorge, one of the most important prehistoric sites in the world, where homo habilis, one of the earliest members of the genus Homo was discovered to have lived 1.9 million years ago. The Hadza have probably lived in the Yaeda Chini area for millennia. Genetically like the Bushmen of southern Africa they are one of the 'oldest' lineages of humankind. They speak a click language that is unrelated to any other language on earth. Their way of life is being encroached on by pastoralists whose cattle drink their water and graze on their grasslands, with farmers clearing woodland to grow crops, and climate change that dries up rivers and stunts grass. Over the past 50 years, the tribe has lost 90% of its land. Either the Hadza will find a way to secure their land-rights to have access to unpolluted water springs and wild animals, or the Hadzabe lifestyle will disappear, with the majority of them ending up as poor and uneducated individuals within a Westernized society that is completely foreign to them.  (Credit Image: ? Stefan Kleinowitz/ZUMA Wire)
    20181002_681_k212_000.jpg