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FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jevone Moore/CSM/REX/Shutterstock (9459467gr)
LB Skyridge Blayden Togiai #183 at the Nike Football The Opening Regional Los Angeles on at Chargers Practice Facility. Photo by Jevone Moore
Nike Football The Opening Regional Los Angeles at Chargers Practice Facility, Costa Mesa, USA - 11 Mar 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_003
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138k)
Portrait of Lucy Long, Mrs George Hardinge (1778) by Sir Joshua Reynolds (est GBP 2-3million) (centre) Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million) (left) and Golden Hours (1864) by Frederic, Lord Leighton (est GBP 3-5million) (right)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_001
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138h)
Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_007
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138g)
Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_006
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138f)
Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_010
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138e)
Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10022252_004
NEWS - Fototermin - 250 Jahre Christies in London
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Gourley/REX/Shutterstock (5668138j)
Golden Hours (1864) by Frederic, Lord Leighton (est GBP 3-5million) (centre), Portrait of Lucy Long, Mrs George Hardinge (1778) by Sir Joshua Reynolds (est GBP 2-3million) (left) and Lucian Freud lb and Her Husband (1992) by Lucian Freud (estimate in the region of GBP 18million) (right)
Christies 250th Anniversary Sale photocall, London, Britain - 28 Apr 2016
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_16749782_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205e )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinating...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749774_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205d )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinating...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749762_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205ad )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinatin...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749758_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205a )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinating...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749757_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205ac )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinatin...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_16749753_REX
12LVE Destroyed Apple products project, San Francisco, America - Dec 2010
EXCLUSIVE, Editorial Use Only, No merchandising, advertising or books without permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Tompert/Paul Fairchild / Rex Features ( 1254205ab )
Title
The Man Who Shot, Burned and Ran A Train Over His Apple Products
If an iPod is on your Christmas list look away now - an artist has shot, burned, hammered and sawed his way through a range of Apple products.
Heartless Michael Tompert even ran over a selection of iPods with a TRAIN.
San Francisco-based Michael spent months purchasing the doomed products, which range from 2008's colourful range of iPods to the sought-after 2010 iPad
He hooked up with photographer friend Paul Fairchild to capture the end results of various kill methods.
Methods of destruction varied by product. A MacBook Air was decorated with nine neat bulletholes courtesy of a 9mm Heckler & Koch handgun, while a Magic Mouse was sliced up with a handsaw.
And Michael even took the drastic action of placing seven iPod Nanos on the tracks in the path of a Caltrain Diesel Locomotive.
But it was the iPad that proved the hardest to kill. Described by Michael as "practically indestructible", it shrugged off blows from an 8lb sledgehammer before finally meeting it's maker (Steve Jobs?) after its insides were heated with a soldering torch until it exploded.
Michael got the idea for the project after he bought his two sons an iPod Touch each for Christmas. The boys started to fight over one of the mp3 players which had a certain game installed.
His patience finally snapping, Michael grabbed one of the iPods and smashed it on the ground, to the amazement of his children.
"I had given my kids an iPod Touch so they would be happy and love me. But when the argument started I just grabbed it and smashed it in front of them because it was just a thing.
"It was still going and the screen was all liquid, it was kind of fascinatin...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QCWZMQKNC
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_33731179_REX
VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Michael S. Nolan / SplashdownDirect (1192532a)
Mother polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with two coy (cubs-of-year) on multi-year ice floes in the Barents Sea off the eastern side of Heleysundet in the Svalbard Archipelago, Norway. An adult male weighs around 400?680 kg (880?1,500 lb) while an adult female is about half that size. The IUCN now lists global warming as the most significant threat to the polar bear, primarily because the melting of its sea ice habitat reduces its ability to find sufficient food. The IUCN states, If climatic trends continue polar bears may become extirpated from most of their range within 100 years. On May 14, 2008, the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_33731175_REX
VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Michael S. Nolan / SplashdownDirect (1192889a)
Mother polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with two coy (cubs-of-year) on multi-year ice floes in the Barents Sea off the eastern side of Heleysundet in the Svalbard Archipelago, Norway. An adult male weighs around 400?680 kg (880?1,500 lb) while an adult female is about half that size. The IUCN now lists global warming as the most significant threat to the polar bear, primarily because the melting of its sea ice habitat reduces its ability to find sufficient food. The IUCN states, If climatic trends continue polar bears may become extirpated from most of their range within 100 years. On May 14, 2008, the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_33731168_REX
VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Michael S. Nolan / SplashdownDirect (1192923a)
Mother polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with two coy (cubs-of-year) on multi-year ice floes in the Barents Sea off the eastern side of Heleysundet in the Svalbard Archipelago, Norway. An adult male weighs around 400?680 kg (880?1,500 lb) while an adult female is about half that size. The IUCN now lists global warming as the most significant threat to the polar bear, primarily because the melting of its sea ice habitat reduces its ability to find sufficient food. The IUCN states, If climatic trends continue polar bears may become extirpated from most of their range within 100 years. On May 14, 2008, the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_32147244_REX
VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael S. Nolan / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features (1192626a)
Wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) on the wing at sunset approaching South Georgia Island, Southern Atlantic Ocean. The Wandering Albatross has the largest wingspan of any living bird, with the average wingspan being 3.1 metres (10.2 ft). The longest-winged examples verified have been about 3.7 m (12 ft), but probably erroneous reports of as much as 5.3 m (17.5 ft) are known. As a result of its wingspan, it is capable of remaining in the air without beating its wings for several hours at a time (travelling 22 metres for every meter of drop). The length of the body is about 1.35 m (4.4 ft) with females being slightly smaller than males, and they weigh typically from 6 to 12 kg (13-26 lb). Immature birds have been recorded weighing as much as 16.1 kg (35 lb) during their first flights. The plumage varies with age, but adults have white bodies with black and white wings. Males have whiter wings than females with just the tips and trailing edges of the wings black. They feed on squid, small fish and on animal refuse that floats on the sea, eating to such excess at times that they are unable to fly and rest helplessly on the water.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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VARIOUS
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048466a )
Reflected sunlight on king penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) breeding and nesting colonies on South Georgia Island, Southern Ocean. King penguins are rarely found below 60 degrees south, and almost never on the Antarctic Peninsula. The King Penguin is the second largest species of penguin at about 90 cm (3 ft) tall and weighing 11 to 16 kg (24 to 35 lb), second only to the Emperor Penguin. King penguins eat small fish, mainly lanternfish, and squid and rely less than most Southern Ocean predators on krill and other crustaceans. On foraging trips they repeatedly dive to over 100 meters (350 feet), often over 200 meters (700 feet). This is far deeper than other penguins, other than their closest relative, the larger Emperor penguin. King Penguins breed on the subantarctic islands at the northern reaches of Antarctica, as well as Tierra del Fuego, South Georgia, and other temperate islands of the region. The total population is estimated to be 2.23 million pairs and is increasing. The King Penguin was described in 1778 by English naturalist and illustrator John Frederick Miller, its generic name derived from the Ancient Greek a 'without' pteno- 'able to fly' or 'winged' and dytes/ 'diver'.Its specific epithet patagonicus derived from Patagonia.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1048411a )
King Penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) breeding and nesting colonies on South Georgia Island, Southern Ocean. King penguins are rarely found below 60 degrees south, and almost never on the Antarctic Peninsula. The King Penguin is the second largest species of penguin at about 90 cm (3 ft) tall and weighing 11 to 16 kg (24 to 35 lb), second only to the Emperor Penguin. King penguins eat small fish, mainly lanternfish, and squid and rely less than most Southern Ocean predators on krill and other crustaceans. On foraging trips they repeatedly dive to over 100 meters (350 feet), often over 200 meters (700 feet). This is far deeper than other penguins, other than their closest relative, the larger Emperor penguin. King Penguins breed on the subantarctic islands at the northern reaches of Antarctica, as well as Tierra del Fuego, South Georgia, and other temperate islands of the region. The total population is estimated to be 2.23 million pairs and is increasing. The King Penguin was described in 1778 by English naturalist and illustrator John Frederick Miller, its generic name derived from the Ancient Greek a 'without' pteno- 'able to fly' or 'winged' and dytes/ 'diver'.Its specific epithet patagonicus derived from Patagonia.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1047781a )
kayaking with a leopard seal near Danco Island, Antarctica. The Leopard seal (Hydrurga leptonyx) is the second largest species of seal in the Antarctic (after the Southern Elephant Seal), and is near the top of the Antarctic food chain. It can live twenty-six years, possibly more. Orcas are the only natural predators of leopard seals. Females are generally larger than the males. The bulls are generally 2.5 m (8.2 ft) to 3.2 m (10.5 ft) and weigh between 200 kg (441 lb) and 453.5 kg (1,000 lb), while cows are between 2.4 meters (7.9 feet) and 3.4 meters (11.2 feet) in length and weigh between 225 kg (496 lb) and 591 kg (1,303 lb). In 2003, a leopard seal dragged a snorkeling biologist underwater to her death in what was identified as the first known human fatality from a leopard seal. However, numerous examples of aggressive behavior, stalking, and attacks on humans had been previously documented. The leopard seal has also been known to snap at people's feet through holes in the ice.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1047756a )
King Penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) breeding and nesting colonies on South Georgia Island, Southern Ocean. King penguins are rarely found below 60 degrees south, and almost never on the Antarctic Peninsula. The King Penguin is the second largest species of penguin at about 90 cm (3 ft) tall and weighing 11 to 16 kg (24 to 35 lb), second only to the Emperor Penguin. King penguins eat small fish, mainly lanternfish, and squid and rely less than most Southern Ocean predators on krill and other crustaceans. On foraging trips they repeatedly dive to over 100 meters (350 feet), often over 200 meters (700 feet). This is far deeper than other penguins, other than their closest relative, the larger Emperor penguin. King Penguins breed on the subantarctic islands at the northern reaches of Antarctica, as well as Tierra del Fuego, South Georgia, and other temperate islands of the region. The total population is estimated to be 2.23 million pairs and is increasing. The King Penguin was described in 1778 by English naturalist and illustrator John Frederick Miller, its generic name derived from the Ancient Greek a 'without' pteno- 'able to fly' or 'winged' and dytes/ 'diver'.Its specific epithet patagonicus derived from Patagonia.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Nolan / SpecialistStock / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 1047969a )
Sunrise on the king penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) breeding and nesting colonies at St. Andrews Bay on South Georgia Island, Southern Ocean. King penguins are rarely found below 60 degrees south, and almost never on the Antarctic Peninsula. The King Penguin is the second largest species of penguin at about 90 cm (3 ft) tall and weighing 11 to 16 kg (24 to 35 lb), second only to the Emperor Penguin. King penguins eat small fish, mainly lanternfish, and squid and rely less than most Southern Ocean predators on krill and other crustaceans. On foraging trips they repeatedly dive to over 100 meters (350 feet), often over 200 meters (700 feet). This is far deeper than other penguins, other than their closest relative, the larger Emperor penguin. King Penguins breed on the subantarctic islands at the northern reaches of Antarctica, as well as Tierra del Fuego, South Georgia, and other temperate islands of the region. The total population is estimated to be 2.23 million pairs and is increasing. The King Penguin was described in 1778 by English naturalist and illustrator John Frederick Miller, its generic name derived from the Ancient Greek a 'without' pteno- 'able to fly' or 'winged' and dytes/ 'diver'.Its specific epithet patagonicus derived from Patagonia.
VARIOUS
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX