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  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932993_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043f)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932992_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043l)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932991_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043k)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932990_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043h)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932987_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043e)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932986_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043n)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932985_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043m)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932984_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043i)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932981_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043b)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932980_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043a)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    DUKAS_20135531_REX
    Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    Manadatory Credit: Photo by Blair Roberts / Rex Features (1424347B)
    An olive baboon (Papio anubis) that wreaked havoc with a camera trap, leaving it tilted at a 45-degree angle.
    Peek-A-Boo: The World Through The Lens Of A Kenyan Camera Trap
    You're wandering the plains of Kenya and you spot a mysterious metal box. You wouldn't be able to stop yourself having a quick peek, would you?

    That was seemingly the reaction of all creatures great and small when ecology student Blair Roberts placed camera traps in the wildlife-rich region.

    The 26-year-old wanted to study the feeding patterns of Thomson gazelle, but found her equipment captured some amazing - and hilarious - sights.

    A cheeky Patas monkey, already an unusual-looking species, appears almost alien-like as it moves so near to the camera that cannot focus.

    Similarly, in a side-splitting trio of images, an olive baboon takes such a close peek its nose nearly touches the lens.

    In another picture, a juvenile olive baboon appears to cast a dismissive glance sideways at the camera as it follows it mother.

    Other highlights include a Jungle Book-style herd of elephants sauntering by, a fearsome rhino looks about to charge at the camera, and, at one point, a pair of inquisitive cattle herders stopping to peer into the lens.

    There are also cameo appearances from impala, zebra, oryx and, seeming slightly shy, a giraffe and ostrich that only poke their heads into the frame.

    Night-vision images reveal buffalo, hyena and Jackson's hartebeest - along with an African elephant shortly before it knocked the camera over and bent the support pole to a 45 degree angle.

    Blair, from Louisville, Kentucky, uses the images as part of dissertation research in her fourth year as a PhD student in Princeton University's Ecology and Evolutionary Biology program.

    She has set up ten heat- and motion- triggered cameras in steel cases on fou...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VVFQBXWKF

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    DUKAS_20135525_REX
    Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    Manadatory Credit: Photo by Blair Roberts / Rex Features (1424347AG)

    Peek-A-Boo: The World Through The Lens Of A Kenyan Camera Trap
    You're wandering the plains of Kenya and you spot a mysterious metal box. You wouldn't be able to stop yourself having a quick peek, would you?

    That was seemingly the reaction of all creatures great and small when ecology student Blair Roberts placed camera traps in the wildlife-rich region.

    The 26-year-old wanted to study the feeding patterns of Thomson gazelle, but found her equipment captured some amazing - and hilarious - sights.

    A cheeky Patas monkey, already an unusual-looking species, appears almost alien-like as it moves so near to the camera that cannot focus.

    Similarly, in a side-splitting trio of images, an olive baboon takes such a close peek its nose nearly touches the lens.

    In another picture, a juvenile olive baboon appears to cast a dismissive glance sideways at the camera as it follows it mother.

    Other highlights include a Jungle Book-style herd of elephants sauntering by, a fearsome rhino looks about to charge at the camera, and, at one point, a pair of inquisitive cattle herders stopping to peer into the lens.

    There are also cameo appearances from impala, zebra, oryx and, seeming slightly shy, a giraffe and ostrich that only poke their heads into the frame.

    Night-vision images reveal buffalo, hyena and Jackson's hartebeest - along with an African elephant shortly before it knocked the camera over and bent the support pole to a 45 degree angle.

    Blair, from Louisville, Kentucky, uses the images as part of dissertation research in her fourth year as a PhD student in Princeton University's Ecology and Evolutionary Biology program.

    She has set up ten heat- and motion- triggered cameras in steel cases on four plains at Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Laikipia, Kenya. When activated they take three photos in quick success...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VVFQBXWKF

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    DUKAS_20135518_REX
    Camera trap photographs by Blair Roberts, Kenya - 2011
    Manadatory Credit: Photo by Blair Roberts / Rex Features (1424347A)
    An olive baboon (Papio anubis) that wreaked havoc with a camera trap, leaving it tilted at a 45-degree angle.
    Peek-A-Boo: The World Through The Lens Of A Kenyan Camera Trap
    You're wandering the plains of Kenya and you spot a mysterious metal box. You wouldn't be able to stop yourself having a quick peek, would you?

    That was seemingly the reaction of all creatures great and small when ecology student Blair Roberts placed camera traps in the wildlife-rich region.

    The 26-year-old wanted to study the feeding patterns of Thomson gazelle, but found her equipment captured some amazing - and hilarious - sights.

    A cheeky Patas monkey, already an unusual-looking species, appears almost alien-like as it moves so near to the camera that cannot focus.

    Similarly, in a side-splitting trio of images, an olive baboon takes such a close peek its nose nearly touches the lens.

    In another picture, a juvenile olive baboon appears to cast a dismissive glance sideways at the camera as it follows it mother.

    Other highlights include a Jungle Book-style herd of elephants sauntering by, a fearsome rhino looks about to charge at the camera, and, at one point, a pair of inquisitive cattle herders stopping to peer into the lens.

    There are also cameo appearances from impala, zebra, oryx and, seeming slightly shy, a giraffe and ostrich that only poke their heads into the frame.

    Night-vision images reveal buffalo, hyena and Jackson's hartebeest - along with an African elephant shortly before it knocked the camera over and bent the support pole to a 45 degree angle.

    Blair, from Louisville, Kentucky, uses the images as part of dissertation research in her fourth year as a PhD student in Princeton University's Ecology and Evolutionary Biology program.

    She has set up ten heat- and motion- triggered cameras in steel cases on fou...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VVFQBXWKF

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    DUKAS_41932982_REX
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cliff Hide/LNP/REX (3978043c)
    The three cooling towers of Didcot A power station, each 113 meters tall, being demolished using 160kg of high explosion. It took just 15 seconds.
    Didcot Power Station demolition, Oxfordshire, Britain - 27 Jul 2014

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX