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  • NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    DUK10075760_007
    NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    October 24, 2017 - Val Susa, Piedmont, Italy - Celle, Italy-October 24,2017: Forest Fire in Val Susa in Celle near Caprie, Italy (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    DUK10075760_006
    NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    October 24, 2017 - Val Susa, Piedmont, Italy - Celle, Italy-October 24,2017: Forest Fire in Val Susa in Celle near Caprie, Italy (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    DUK10075760_005
    NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    October 24, 2017 - Val Susa, Piedmont, Italy - Celle, Italy-October 24,2017: Forest Fire in Val Susa in Celle near Caprie, Italy (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    DUK10075760_004
    NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    October 24, 2017 - Val Susa, Piedmont, Italy - Celle, Italy-October 24,2017: Forest Fire in Val Susa in Celle near Caprie, Italy (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    DUK10075760_003
    NEWS - Italien: Trockenheit und hohe Temperaturen führen zu Waldbränden
    October 24, 2017 - Val Susa, Piedmont, Italy - Celle, Italy-October 24,2017: Forest Fire in Val Susa in Celle near Caprie, Italy (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
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    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076b)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX DUKAS

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811865_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076d)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX DUKAS

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811864_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076a)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX DUKAS

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811862_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076f)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Carnival Spirit Liner, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811861_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076c)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Carnival Spirit Liner, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811859_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076g)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX DUKAS

     

  • Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    DUKAS_34811858_REX
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Tom Dwyer (3217076e)
    Bushfire smoke over Circular Quay, Sydney Harbour, Sydney Opera House
    Bushfires in New South Wales, Australia,17 Oct 2013

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Prince William and Prince Harry visit Australia House to sign the book of condolence, London, Britain - 24 Feb 2009
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    Prince William and Prince Harry visit Australia House to sign the book of condolence, London, Britain - 24 Feb 2009
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 854879g )
    Prince Harry wearing a yellow ribbon as a mark of respect after the Australian bush fires., Princes William and Harry were at the Australian High Commission in London today to sign the official book of condolence for the victims of the Australian bush fires. During their visit the Princes were presented with yellow ribbons, which have been worn in recent days in Australia as a mark of solidarity with those affected, by Australian High Commissioner John Dauth. The books of remembrance were started by their grandfather the Duke of Edinburgh last week. Recently, Princess Anne has been in Australia representing her mother the Queen, who is the country?s head of state. Anne was in attendance at Sunday's national remembrance ceremony in Melbourne and also visited the areas affected by the fires. The Queen has also made a private donation to a fundraising appeal helping the victims.
    Harry's New Party Animal
    HARRY'S NEW PARTY ANIMAL

    Just a few weeks after being dumped by girlfriend Chelsy Davy, Prince Harry has been spotted taking another blonde home to Clarence House.

    At 27, Astrid Harbord is three years older than the third in line to the British throne and has a reputation as being a hardcore party animal - something which should fit in with hedonistic Harry's lifestyle.

    The couple were seen leaving Raffles night club on Chelsea's King's Road before arriving back at Clarence House in the early hours - even after several hours there was no still sign of Astrid having left.

    Astrid is no stranger to the royal circles, having been seen out on several occasions with other friends of the Princes, namely Guy Pelly, Jamie Murray Wells and, most significantly, Prince William's girlfriend Kate Middleton.

    Kate and Astrid were sat wincing together on ringside seats at the Boodles Boxing Ball last year and Astrid wore her best 1980s outfi...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HVZBHGABB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
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    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Eighteen year old Jarryd Robertson of Kinglake, Victoria, shifts through the remains of his house, on February 13, 2009. Jarryd was to start University in Melbourne in the last week of February but has lost everything in the bushfires which have devastated Victoria. His father had a lucky escape when he hid between two bushes as the fire burnt his house and two pets less than a meter away. Jarryd has lost many of his friends in the fire. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858230_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Eighteen year old Jarryd Robertson of Kinglake, Victoria, shifts through the remains of his house February 13, 2009. Jarryd was to start University in Melbourne in the last week of February but has lost everything in the bushfires which have devastated Victoria. His father had a lucky escape when he hid between two bushes as the fire burnt his house and two pets less than a meter away. Jarryd has lost many of his friends in the fire. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
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    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    A burnt out house with only the chimney still standing at Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858057_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    A rescued sculpture in the wreckage of Greg Bebbington's fire devastated home at Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. Greg Bebbington's prized Harley Davidson motorcycle stands beside the burnt out remains of his house but when the fire came through his town he returned to rescue his dog and his daughter's goat and jokes he chose the goat over the bike to keep his daughter happy. Bebbington, who lost his 21 year old son in a car accident in 2008 is determined to rebuild his house as he considers it a simple matter of bricks and mortar and that maintaining the community of Kinglake is the most important thing. There have been about 30 casualties in the town of Kinglake. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858047_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Greg Bebbington stands in the wreckage of his fire devastated home at Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. Greg Bebbington's prized Harley Davidson motorcycle stands beside the burnt out remains of his house but when the fire came through his town he returned to rescue his dog and his daughter's goat and jokes he chose the goat over the bike to keep his daughter happy. Bebbington, who lost his 21 year old son in a car accident in 2008 is determined to rebuild his house as he considers it a simple matter of bricks and mortar and that maintaining the community of Kinglake is the most important thing. There have been about 30 casualties in the town of Kinglake. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08857743_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Rover Scouts assist in the relief effort to get food to those affected by bushfires at Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08857651_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    An Australian flag flies over the wreckage of a house in Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08857605_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    A floral tribute stands in a destroyed house where eight people died in Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08857449_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    An eerie sun sets due to bushfire smoke over burnt out bushland on the road between Humevale and Kinglake, Victoria, on February 13, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858140_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Country Fire Authority volunteers, refill a truck with water at the CFA staging area in Whittlesea, 35 kilometres from Melbourne Victoria, on February 12, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858338_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Burnt out cars at a property between Humevale and Kinglake, Victoria, on February 11, 2009. Metal from the engine of the cars is seen in a molten stream. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858255_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Jenni Manley returns to see neighbors after evacuating from the fire destroyed town of Kinglake, Victoria, on February 11, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858236_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Jenni Manley recalls the terror of not knowing whether her husband, who stayed to fight the fires was alive in bushfires at Kinglake, Victoria, on February 11, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858187_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Homeless residents of Kinglake, Victoria, pick through donations from the bush fire relief effort in Kinglake, Victoria, on February 11, 2009. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    DUKAS_08858164_WPN
    Australia Bushfire in Kinglake
    Eighteen year old Jarryd Robertson of Kinglake, Victoria, explains how bushfires literally evaporated the water from his house swimming pool and disintegrated the wooden decking surrounding it, on February 11, 2009. Jarryd was to start University in Melbourne in the last week of February but has lost everything in the bushfires which have devastated Victoria. His father had a lucky escape when he hid between two bushes as the fire burnt his house and two pets less than a meter away. Jarryd has lost many of his friends in the fire. The state of Victoria, Australia was devastated by bushfires that killed an estimated 300 people, destroyed over 2000 houses and homes and burnt out hundreds of thousands acres of bush and farmland. Temperatures in the inferno are believed to have been as hot as 1400 degrees Celsius and wind speeds to be in excess of 200kms an hour. Scientists believe the energy release from the fire to have been equivalent to that of 500 nuclear bombs the size of the one that flattened Hiroshima. Survivors tell tales of facing 'a tidal wave of flame', 'a holocaust', of being in the center of 'the perfect fire storm.' (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • INDIAN WOMAN NUDE BOILING MANIOK PULP IN A NATIVE PATTERY AT THE VILLAGE SQUARE, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
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    INDIAN WOMAN NUDE BOILING MANIOK PULP IN A NATIVE PATTERY AT THE VILLAGE SQUARE, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
    The water in which the manioc has been washed has to be detoxified by hours of boiling and decanting, until it produces a thick, sweet drink called mingau. Meanwhile, the manioc pulp is shaped into loaves and dried in the sun. The loaves are placed in a storage-tower in the middle of the house, for future consumption. From the manioc flour the women bake thin, flat cakes in a traditional clay pan.
    Manioc, the daily bread of the Xinguanos, is a starch-rich tuber of the spurge (euphorbia) family. Only after complicated preparation is the poisonous vegetable edible. Harvest time is in June. The tubers are dug out with picks, then peeled and dried in the sun. When they are bleached, they are grated into a tub, soaked in water and boiled several times. The pulp is strained through a sieve, shaped into loaves and dried out again. Now the manioc is ready to be stored for future use: the loaves are ground into flour and baked by the Indian women into pancake-like beijus. Today aluminium containers have replaced the huge, artistically decorated clay pots.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • HARVEST AT THE MANIOK PLANTATION, INDIAN WOMEN NUDE RETURN TO THEIR SETTLEMENT WITH LARGE BASKETS ON THEIR HATS, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
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    HARVEST AT THE MANIOK PLANTATION, INDIAN WOMEN NUDE RETURN TO THEIR SETTLEMENT WITH LARGE BASKETS ON THEIR HATS, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
    Afukaka and her daughter Auna. The women carry as much as 50 kilos of manioc on their heads for 5 kilometres back to the village. The peeled tubers are grated into the aluminium cooking-pot, a gift from the government. The raw manioc pulp is rinsed to remove some of the highly toxic hydrocyanic acid. However, the complicated process of preparation into an edible food is far from over.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • MEN CLEARING THE JUNGLE FOR AGRICULTURE BY SLASHING AND BURNING IN THE DRY SEASON, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
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    MEN CLEARING THE JUNGLE FOR AGRICULTURE BY SLASHING AND BURNING IN THE DRY SEASON, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
    AfitIsarro and Alato. Towards evening, when the forest is dry from the heat of the day, the Kuikuru men burn a small clearing in the jungle. Here a manioc field is to be planted. Clearance by fire is only intended for those areas where the Indians have previously planted fire-resistant trees. The young, cultivated plants need trees to give them shade.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • INDIAN WOMAN NUDE COLLECTION MANIOK ROOTS AT PLANTATION HARVEST, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
    DUKAS_07307496_FRI
    INDIAN WOMAN NUDE COLLECTION MANIOK ROOTS AT PLANTATION HARVEST, XINGU INDIAN RESERVATION, BRAZIL
    Afukaka and her daughter Auna. Using hardwood digging-tools, the women recover the life-giving manioc fruit from the sandy soil of the primeval forest. The yield is around 5 tons per hectare (2 tons per acre) a record performance. As agronomists, the Kuikuru are up to 25 times more effective than Brazilian ranchers on the same land area. The harvest is the women¹s assignment, while the tough job of clearing the jungle falls to the men.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)

    DUKAS/FRIEDEL

     

  • Australia - 2000
    DUKAS_10553449_REX
    Australia - 2000
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Wildtrack Media / Rex Features ( 939362ad )
    Willy willy and bushfires, Northern teritory Australia
    Australia - 2000

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Mono Negative
    DUKAS_119995363_TOP
    Mono Negative
    Bare Stones and burnt out bushes are all that were left in the path of the disastrous mountain fire which raged above Cape town on the slopes of Table Mountain from Thursday night till Saturday morning, when it was still smouldering on Devil's Peak. The fire, the greatest in the history of Cape town, was fought by thousands of municipal, military and volunteer beaters, with all available fine engines safeguarding houses on the mountain slopes. It started in three separate places and is thought to have been deliberately started.
    In the upper background of the picture can be seen the Upper Cableway Station on the top of Table Mountain, where the occupants were enveloped in dense clouds of smoke and thought to be in great danger at one stage.

    28 January 1950 (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)

    TopFoto