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阅读:4246回复:21
国家地理]精美图片 (五十三)
1326. J. Michael Fay of the Wildlife Conservation Society holds a chameleon. Fay endured a yearlong trek across African forests from Congo to Gabon, surveying the region’s still pristine landscape.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, “Megatransect,“ October 2000, National Geographic magazine) <IMG src="http://lava.nationalgeographic.com/pod/pictures/lg_wallpaper/MM6664_421.jpg"> |
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1楼#
发布于:2005-05-17 19:39
<P>可惜都打不开!</P>
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2楼#
发布于:2005-05-16 17:46
<img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em01.gif" /><img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em02.gif" />
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3楼#
发布于:2005-05-15 16:55
<img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em01.gif" /><img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em02.gif" /><img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em04.gif" /><img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em07.gif" />
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4楼#
发布于:2005-03-22 16:18
新兵,看不懂!<img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em02.gif" /><img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em02.gif" />
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5楼#
发布于:2005-03-21 10:53
<P>看不懂呀!</P>
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6楼#
发布于:2005-03-16 20:45
<img src="images/post/smile/dvbbs/em02.gif" />
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7楼#
发布于:2005-03-16 13:37
1341. "Veteran researcher John Hoogland examines a young Utah male [prairie dog] at Bryce Canyon National Park. Hoogland dyes his subjects for identification. With 25 years in the field, the biologist was the first to document infanticide and cannibalism among prairie dogs."
桭rom "The Vanishing Prairie Dog," April 1998, National Geographic magazine <img src="http://lava.nationalgeographic.com/pod/pictures/lg_wallpaper/06383_50014.jpg"> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 width="100%" bgColor=#f5f9fa border=0><TR><TD vAlign=bottom align=right width=100></TD><TD><FONT color=green size=-1> </FONT></TD></TR></TABLE> |
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8楼#
发布于:2005-03-16 13:36
1340. A deserted road deepens the stillness of a New Mexico desert. Such scenes belie the fact that the state is filled with mountains.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in "Santa Fe Trail," March, 1991 National Geographic magazine) <img src="http://lava.nationalgeographic.com/pod/pictures/lg_wallpaper/04106_33.jpg"> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 width="100%" bgColor=#f5f9fa border=0><TR><TD vAlign=bottom align=right width=100></TD><TD><FONT color=green size=-1> </FONT></TD></TR></TABLE> |
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9楼#
发布于:2005-03-16 13:36
1339. Reindeer boots encompass almost half of this young Nenets boy‘s body. The animal is integral to his people‘s existence—as written by Andrei Golovnev in Talking Cultures: "Man and deer become almost related. ... The first thing a newborn baby touches outside the womb is the deerskin in which it is wrapped by the midwife. A dead man is also wrapped in deerskins. And between these first and last encounters, a person lives with the deer [and] thanks to the deer."
(Text adapted from "Nenets: Surviving on the Siberian Tundra," March 1998, National Geographic magazine) <img src="http://lava.nationalgeographic.com/pod/pictures/lg_wallpaper/06376_20.jpg"> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 width="100%" bgColor=#f5f9fa border=0><TR><TD vAlign=bottom align=right width=100></TD><TD><FONT color=green size=-1> </FONT></TD></TR></TABLE> |
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