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  • Vancouver, Stanley park, totems
    DUKAS_123915472_RHA
    Vancouver, Stanley park, totems
    Totems, Stanley Park, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, North America
    Peter Groenendijk

     

  • NEWS - Protest in Washington gegen die geplante Pipeline in Dakota
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    NEWS - Protest in Washington gegen die geplante Pipeline in Dakota
    Protesters stand in solidarity with the "Native Nations Rise" march on Washington, D.C. against the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Portland, Ore., on March 10, 2017. This week a federal judge signed an order refusing to halt construction of the controversial pipeline which will carry crude oil under Lake Oahe near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation reservoir. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19783047
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Traditional Inca first nation stone altar on the Island of the Sun on Lake Titicaca, Bolivia. South America
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    Traditional Inca first nation stone altar on the Island of the Sun on Lake Titicaca, Bolivia. South America
    Traditional Inca first nation stone altar on the Island of the Sun on Lake Titicaca, Bolivia, South America
    Julio Etchart

     

  • World's largest tar sands deposits spark environmental crisis
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    World's largest tar sands deposits spark environmental crisis
    May 11, 2007, Shell Albian, Alberta, Canada: Alberta's tar sands are currently estimated to contain a crude bitumen resource of 315-billion barrels, with remaining established reserves of almost 174-billion barrels, thus ranking Canada's oil resources as the second-largest in the world in terms of size. 119,4000 cubic-meters of synthetic crude oil per day were produced in 2006, with projections of that figure doubling within the next five years. The industry has brought wealth and sparked an economic boom in the region, but at a price. A new environmental disaster has been born, with contaminated fish and water filling area lakes. The Native-American tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development. ///CANADA ALBERTA MAY07 - View of a de-logged area beside the Shell Albian Sands tailings bond embankment, with one birch tree standing north of Fort McMurray.. Credit: Jiri Rezac / WWF / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    DUKAS/POLARIS