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DUK10111838_002
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_016
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_014
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_013
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_011
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_010
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_009
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_008
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_007
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_006
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_005
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_004
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10111838_003
FEATURE - Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Evolution der Vierbeiner: Forscher lassen 300 Millionen Jahre altes Fossil mithilfe Robotertechnik laufen / 160119 *** A giant lizard that walked the Earth around 300 million years ago has been recreated by scientists - using Hollywood style techniques.
The weird looking plant-eater was among the first animals to make its home on land, long before the dinosaurs.
Now it has been digitalised, animated and converted into a life-sized model called OroBOT.
The first study of its kind could lead to dinosaurs and Ice Age beasts including the woolly mammoth being brought back to life in a similar way.
Like humans Orobates pabsti is a tetrapod, sharing the same common ancestor as lizards, snakes, tortoises, crocodiles, birds and mammals.
The five foot long animal weighed about nine pounds. It had a long body and tail with short legs and a small skull. It has also been likened to a crocodile.
Corresponding author Dr John Nyakatura, a biomechanical engineer, said: "Being almost 300 million years old the extinct Orobates is a key candidate for understanding how land vertebrates evolved.
"It represents the lineage leading to modern amniotes, animals that became independent from water and then developed within eggs on land."
Orobates links amphibians on one hand with reptiles and mammals on the other, he said.
His international team used animation techniques similar to those used to create the trolls and orcs in The Lord of the Rings films - and the dragons in Game of Thrones.
The difference is Orobates really lived and its robotic version indicates prehistoric tetrapods learnt to walk more efficiently earlier than previously thought.
It suggests the development locomotion on land preceded the evolution and diversification of reptiles, birds and mammals.
The study published in Nature scanned an exquisitely preserved fossil of Orobates in 3-d to produce a digitlaised model of its skeleton.
Its complete remains w
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076897_012
PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
Kronprinzessin Mary (DK), Prinz Christian (DK), Kronprinz Frederik (DK), sind beim WM-Qualifikationsspiel, Fussballspiel, zwischen Dänemark und Irland im Stadion Parken, Kopenhagen, Dänemark, 11. November 2017 *** Local Caption *** 01670449
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076897_015
PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
Kronprinzessin Mary (DK), Prinz Christian (DK), Kronprinz Frederik (DK), sind beim WM-Qualifikationsspiel, Fussballspiel, zwischen Dänemark und Irland im Stadion Parken, Kopenhagen, Dänemark, 11. November 2017 *** Local Caption *** 01670448
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076897_011
PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
Kronprinzessin Mary (DK), Prinz Christian (DK), Kronprinz Frederik (DK), sind beim WM-Qualifikationsspiel, Fussballspiel, zwischen Dänemark und Irland im Stadion Parken, Kopenhagen, Dänemark, 11. November 2017 *** Local Caption *** 01670450
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076897_014
PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
Prinz Felix (DK), Prinz Joachim (DK), sind beim WM-Qualifikationsspiel, Fussballspiel, zwischen Dänemark und Irland im Stadion Parken, Kopenhagen, Dänemark, 11. November 2017 *** Local Caption *** 01670443
(c) Dukas -
DUK10109906_035
NEWS - Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (Archivbilder)
Saarlands Ministerpräsidentin Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (CDU) auf dem Weg in ihr Dienstzimmer in der Staatskanzlei in Saarbrücken am Donnerstag (29.9.2016) / 290916 *** *** Local Caption *** 23186276
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_41673794_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
DUKAS_41673786_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
DUKAS_41673785_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
DUKAS_41673783_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
DUKAS_41673781_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
DUKAS_41673777_ACP
MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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MilaKunis und AshtonKutcher
Sonderkonditionen! Mindesthonorar! Exklusiv: Mila Kunis geht mit ihrem ständig wachsenden Babybauch seitwärts die Stufen runter nach dem Shopping mit Ashton Kutcher bei Change your life in Studio City / 150714
***Exclusive: Mila Kunis shows off her ever growing baby bump while walking down a flight of stairs sideways after a shopping spree with fiance Ashton Kutcher in Studio City, California on July 15, 2014*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Wetten dass aus Offenburg
Markus Lanz bei der ZDF Sendung Wetten, dass...? in der Messehalle in Offenburg / 050414 *** The german TV show Wetten, dass..? (Wanna bet?) in Offenburg, Germany, April 05, 2014 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Wetten dass
Markus Lanz geht von der bühne bei der ZDF Livesendung Wetten dass in der Messehalle in Karlsruhe / 250114 (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS -
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Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz in Amsterdam
Sonderkonditionen: Mindesthonorar!
Exklusiv: Rafael van der Vaart und Sabia Boulahrouz bummeln Hand in Hand durch die noble Einkaufsstrasse P.C. Hooftstraat im Stadtteil Oud-Zuid in Amsterdam / 111113
*** Minimum fee required! Exclusive: Rafael van der Vaart and pregnant girlfriend Sabia Boulahrouz shopping on the PC hooftstraat in Amsterdam, November 11, 2013 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Heino
Sportlich: Heino beim morgentlichen Training in Bad Münstereifel
/ 171012 (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
Bundespräsident Christian Wulff beim Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger und Repräsentanten des öffentlichen Lebens im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
/ 120112
***New Year's Reception of German president Christian Wulff at Bellevue Castle in Berlin, Germany, January 12th 2012*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
Bundespräsident Christian Wulff beim Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger und Repräsentanten des öffentlichen Lebens im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
/ 120112
***New Year's Reception of German president Christian Wulff at Bellevue Castle in Berlin, Germany, January 12th 2012*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
Bundespräsident Christian Wulff beim Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger und Repräsentanten des öffentlichen Lebens im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
/ 120112
***New Year's Reception of German president Christian Wulff at Bellevue Castle in Berlin, Germany, January 12th 2012*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
Bundespräsident Christian Wulff und Ehefrau Bettina beim Neujahrsempfang für verdiente Bürger und Repräsentanten des öffentlichen Lebens im Schloss Bellevue in Berlin
/ 120112
***New Year's Reception of German president Christian Wulff at Bellevue Castle in Berlin, Germany, January 12th 2012*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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Ali Larter schubst ihren Sohn Theodore in einer Babyschaukel an
Ali Larter mit Sohn Theodore Hayes MacArthur im Coldwater Park in L.A.
/ 030112
*** Actress Ali Larter takes her son Theodore MacArthur to the Coldwater Park in Los Angeles, CA 010312 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)
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