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  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: A migrant was found hidden in the engine compartment. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_005.jpg
  • A lioness has killed the father of her three cups at an American zoo. The incident happened in front of one of their three-year-old cubs in the outdoor yard of the enclosure at Indianapolis zoo. In a statement released today the zoo confirmed the incident happened last week and revealed the 10-year-old male lion died after the female lion Zuri got involved in a confrontation with him. The statement from the zoo explained: ‘Zoo personnel made every effort to separate the lions, but Zuri held Nyack by the neck until he stopped moving.’ A necropsy on Nyack later revealed he died of suffocation from injuries to the neck. The lion pair lived together at the Indianapolis Zoo for eight years and had three cubs. Staff logs noted no previous examples of aggression between Zuri and Nyack, zoo officials said. Zoo staff are now investigating the incident, which happened on Monday 15 October before the zoo opened. ‘We know many people loved visiting Nyack. He was a magnificent male lion and left his legacy in his three cubs,’ the zoo said in a statement. 22 Oct 2018 Pictured: A 10-year-old male lion (Nyack) was killed by the mother (Zuri) of his three cubs at Indianapolis zoo on 15 October, 2018, it has emerged. LOCAL CAPTION: Deceased lion Nyack. Photo credit: Indianapolis Zoo/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA295437_001.jpg
  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: A migrant was found hidden in the engine compartment. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_004.jpg
  • A lioness has killed the father of her three cups at an American zoo. The incident happened in front of one of their three-year-old cubs in the outdoor yard of the enclosure at Indianapolis zoo. In a statement released today the zoo confirmed the incident happened last week and revealed the 10-year-old male lion died after the female lion Zuri got involved in a confrontation with him. The statement from the zoo explained: ‘Zoo personnel made every effort to separate the lions, but Zuri held Nyack by the neck until he stopped moving.’ A necropsy on Nyack later revealed he died of suffocation from injuries to the neck. The lion pair lived together at the Indianapolis Zoo for eight years and had three cubs. Staff logs noted no previous examples of aggression between Zuri and Nyack, zoo officials said. Zoo staff are now investigating the incident, which happened on Monday 15 October before the zoo opened. ‘We know many people loved visiting Nyack. He was a magnificent male lion and left his legacy in his three cubs,’ the zoo said in a statement. 22 Oct 2018 Pictured: A 10-year-old male lion (Nyack) was killed by the mother (Zuri) of his three cubs at Indianapolis zoo on 15 October, 2018, it has emerged. LOCAL CAPTION: Deceased lion Nyack. Photo credit: Indianapolis Zoo/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA295437_002.jpg
  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: A migrant was found hidden in the engine compartment. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_002.jpg
  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: Refugee in car glove box. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_001.jpg
  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: A migrant was found hidden in the engine compartment. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_003.jpg
  • These shocking images show a refugee stuffed inside a car glove box while trying to get to Europe. Incredible pictures show a man in his twenties hiding behind the vehicle's dashboard at the border in Beni-Enzar, Morocco. Other images show another refugee hidden in a compartment in an engine. The car was stopped by border police trying to enter Spain. Spanish Guard officers said three vehicles carrying stowaways were stopped in the space of three hours and found a total of four Moroccan migrants hidden in four vehicles trying to get to Melilla. Several men had to be treated at hospital after showing signs of suffocation, disorientation and pain. Three Moroccan males, aged 19, 30 and 31 were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of people smuggling, Spain's Guardia Civil said. 28 May 2019 Pictured: A migrant was found hidden in the engine compartment. Photo credit: Courtesy of Guardia Civil/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA431178_006.jpg
  • A lioness has killed the father of her three cups at an American zoo. The incident happened in front of one of their three-year-old cubs in the outdoor yard of the enclosure at Indianapolis zoo. In a statement released today the zoo confirmed the incident happened last week and revealed the 10-year-old male lion died after the female lion Zuri got involved in a confrontation with him. The statement from the zoo explained: ‘Zoo personnel made every effort to separate the lions, but Zuri held Nyack by the neck until he stopped moving.’ A necropsy on Nyack later revealed he died of suffocation from injuries to the neck. The lion pair lived together at the Indianapolis Zoo for eight years and had three cubs. Staff logs noted no previous examples of aggression between Zuri and Nyack, zoo officials said. Zoo staff are now investigating the incident, which happened on Monday 15 October before the zoo opened. ‘We know many people loved visiting Nyack. He was a magnificent male lion and left his legacy in his three cubs,’ the zoo said in a statement. 22 Oct 2018 Pictured: A 10-year-old male lion (Nyack) was killed by the mother (Zuri) of his three cubs at Indianapolis zoo on 15 October, 2018, it has emerged. LOCAL CAPTION: Killer lion Zuri. Photo credit: Indianapolis Zoo/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA295437_003.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_040.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_033.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_034.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_038.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_035.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_037.jpg
  • September 6, 2017 - Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina - A major fire broke out in a tenement of La Boca neighborhood. Three firefighters were suffocated and all the residents (low income people) of the housing complex were evacuated for more than 13 fire crews. (Credit Image: © Claudio Santisteban via ZUMA Wire)
    20170906_zbp_s180_001.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_042.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_036.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_039.jpg
  • October 1, 2018 - A number of Palestinians are injured after violent confrontations break out between Palestinian demonstrators and the Israeli Security Forces on Monday 1th October 2018 on the west of Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces were involved in repressing the 10th Sea March which began from the Gaza port and continued to the north of the Gaza Strip near Beit Lahia and with demonstrators calling for the lift of the Israeli siege on Gaza. A number of participants were wounded by live bullets and suffocated by tear gas fired by the Israeli forces. Some Palestinians protesters hurled rocks along the Gaza sea barrier on the border with Israel. According to Israeli sources dozens of Palestinians were also injured as a Gaza flotilla attempting to break the sea blockade and enter Israeli waters was intercepted by the Israeli navy who opened fire on them (Credit Image: © Ahmad Hasaballah/IMAGESLIVE via ZUMA Wire)
    20181001_zap_d99_009.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_032.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
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  • Jun 12, 2017 - Space - Most summers, jewel-toned hues appear in the Black Sea. The turquoise swirls are not the brushstrokes of a painting; they indicate the presence of phytoplankton, which trace the flow of water currents and eddies. On May 29, 2017, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite captured the data for this image of an ongoing phytoplankton bloom in the Black Sea. The image is a mosaic, composed from multiple satellite passes over the region. Phytoplankton are floating, microscopic organisms that make their own food from sunlight and dissolved nutrients. Here, ample water flow from rivers like the Danube and Dnieper carries nutrients to the Black Sea. In general, phytoplankton support fish, shellfish, and other marine organisms. But large, frequent blooms can lead to eutrophication, the loss of oxygen from the water and end up suffocating marine life. One type of phytoplankton commonly found in the Black Sea are coccolithophores, microscopic plankton that are plated with white calcium carbonate. When aggregated in large numbers, these reflective plates are easily visible from space as bright, milky water. (Credit Image: © Norman Kuring/NASA via ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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