阿森纳官方球迷会OfficialArsenalCN

注册

 

发新话题 回复该主题

2006国家地理杂志(截止March 19, 2006) [复制链接]

1#

January 1, 2006



Cape Peninsula, South Africa
1996
Steve McCurry


African penguins (also called jackass penguins for their donkeylike braying) face an uphill stuggle to rebuild their population after a century of decline.
In the 1800s the birds' guano—a necessary part of their nesting environment—was stripped away from their nesting grounds to provide fertilizer for farms. As a result many of the penguins were unable to successfully reproduce. Today, the birds face continuing hurdles from oil pollution and a dwindling food supply.



(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Fairest Cape," March 1997, National Geographic Traveler magazine)

January 2, 2006


Gangotri Glacier, India
1983
George F. Mobley


"Sunlight glints on the bearded face of Gangotri Glacier high in the Himalayas at the source of the Ganges River. Many Hindus believe the goddess-river fell from heaven, tamed by the god Shiva, who trapped her Earth-threatening torrent in his matted locks."


—From the National Geographic book Great Rivers of the World, 1984



January 4, 2006

Missouri Breaks, Montana
1996
William Albert Allard


Dark clouds loom over grainfields near the Missouri Breaks. In the big, empty Breaks, "It's nothing to drive 250 miles (402 kilometers) to a game or a dance," says a local resident. "That's how you find things out here."
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Missouri Breaks," May 1999, National Geographic magazine)


 

January 5, 2006


Broughton Islands, New South Wales, Australia
1994
James L. Stanfield


Buzzing Aussie isles, pilots Peter McMillan and Lang Kidby are in the home stretch of their England-to-Australia flight in a replica Vickers Vimy biplane. In 1919 a Vimy made history by flying the same route and winning the Great London-to-Australia Air Derby.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Vimy Flies Again," May 1995, National Geographic magazine)





January 7, 2006


Côte d'Or, Bourgogne, France
1989
James L. Stanfield

A chateau and church crown fertile fields in the Côte-d'Or, a 30-mile (48-kilometer) strip of land in Bourgogne (Burgundy), France.
The Côte-d'Or produces some of France's most venerated wines. Much of the land is divided into myriad tiny plots with different owners, all of whom make their own wine. In many places, vines fill the landscape, growing right up to the houses so as not to waste a handful of the precious soil.



January 9, 2006

Cockington, Devon, England
1997
Bob Krist

Visitors to the Devon town of Cockington enjoy a ride in a horse-drawn carriage past thatched-roof cottages. The bucolic county of Devon—largely farmland, woods, moor, and shore—has long served the British as an antidote to city life.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Heart of Devon," May/June 1998, National Geographic Traveler magazine)




January 11, 2006

Loango National Park, Gabon, Africa
2003
Michael K. Nichols

An armored cricket heavy with eggs stood its ground.

—From "Gabon's Loango National Park: In the land of the surfing hippos," August 2004, National Geographic magazine


January 12, 2006


Tsukiji Fish Market, Tokyo, Japan
1994
James L. Stanfield


"While Tokyo slumbers, Tsukiji hustles as trucks deliver five million pounds (2,267,962 kilograms) of seafood—enough to satisfy the region’s tens of millions of fish-eaters for a single day."
—From "The Great Tokyo Fish Market," November 1995, National Geographic magazine



 


January 16, 2006

Cedar City, Utah
1993
James P. Blair


Cumulus clouds billow over the landscape near Cedar City, Utah. Cedar City averages 45.4 inches (115.3 centimeters) of snowfall annually. Claiming "the greatest snow on earth," Utah attracts close to 500,000 skiers each year, not counting the locals.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Utah: Land of Promise, Kingdom of Stone," January 1996, National Geographic magazine)


January 17, 2006

Lanai, Hawaii
1996
James C. Richardson

A reflecting pool at the luxury hotel Lodge at Koele mirrors the natural beauty of Lanai.
The entire island of Lanai used to be a private pineapple farm. When the island was sold in 1985, the new owners decided to turn it into a tropical getaway. Lying in the rain shadow of two nearby islands, Lanai receives little precipitation. For pineapples, this could cause problems, but for travelers, the dry, cool climate is perfect for cultivating vacations.




 
January 19, 2006


Bagan, Myanmar (Burma)
1971
Wilbur E. Garrett

Some of Bagan's 2,000 temples and shrines reflect the morning light.
This photograph was taken before a 1975 earthquake that damaged many of Bagan's historic buildings, most built between the 11th and 14th centuries. In the years since, the military government of Myanmar has undertaken a controversial restoration effort. To the dismay of many archaeologists and historians, the restoration has been conducted with little regard for historical accuracy.


(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Pagan: On the Road to Mandalay," March 1971, National Geographic magazine)



January 21, 2006

Idaho
2004
Mark Thiessen


"Astronomers hoping to study light from another Earth practice detecting clues to life in Earthshine (sunlight reflected off the Earth). One clue is the gleam of vegetation in infrared light—the 'red edge'—which (here) brightens an infrared image of an Idaho forest."


—From "Search for Other Earths," December 2004, National Geographic magazine

January 22, 2006


Laytown, Ireland
1993
Sam Abell

Competitors in the Laytown Strand Races thunder down the beach. The races have been taking place for over a hundred years. Run at low tide, the event follows a relatively simple course—straight down the beach and back.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Ireland on Fast-Forward," September 1994, National Geographic magazine)



January 23, 2006

Tahuata Islands, Marquesas Islands
1996
Jodi Cobb

Marquesasian oral traditions suggest that the islands of Hiva, the ancient Polynesian name for Marquesas, were either fished from the sea or born of the copulation of ocean and sky.


The Marquesas are among the largest groups of islands in French Polynesia. Jagged mountains and steep cliffs make up most of the landscape.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Charting a New Course: French Polynesia," June 1997, National Geographic magazine)


January 24, 2006

South Georgia Island
1998
Maria Stenzel

Using a piece of vegetation as a makeshift pillow, a pair of elephant seals cuddle on the beach.
Elephant seals cannot move easily on land, because of their girth. The animals spend 90 percent of their time underwater.




January 25, 2006

Marais, Paris, France
2002
William Albert Allard

A couple dances at a nightclub in Marais, Paris.
Established as a grand 17th century Parisian neighborhood, Marais reclaimed its chic character in the 20th century, emerging as a quirky, fashionable place to see and be seen.


(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in “Bohemian Rhapsody," August 2003, National Geographic magazine)



January 29, 2006

New York, NY
1996
Chien-Chi Chang

"Stars and stripes meet dragons at a Chinese New Year parade in Manhattan. Today one in five U.S. residents was born abroad or is a first-generation American."
—From "Special Issue: Best of America, " September 2002, National Geographic magazine

National Geographic's 100 Best Pictures

January 31, 2006

Tana Toradja, Sulawesi
1972
Winfield Parks


Bundled up Sulawesi children sit in front of intricately designed dwellings. The eaves of the roofs curve upward, similar to the sterns of ships, projecting dramatically beyond the ends of the houses. The ark-shaped dwellings so resemble ships that some anthropologists believe that these mountain people may have a seafaring past.

[此贴子已经被过千山于2006-3-24 21:14:15编辑过]

TOP
2#

February 1, 2006

Havana, Cuba
1998
David Alan Harvey


"Amid the construction, the new museums, and the old monuments, Old Havana remains a living community. Local kids still head off for school, take shortcuts through restored plazas, and cavort in the playgrounds until it is time to head home for dinner."

—From the National Geographic book Cuba, 1999


February 2, 2006

Loango National Park, Gabon, Africa
2003
Michael K. Nichols

A hippopotamus surfs the waves off the coast of Gabon.

—From "Gabon's Loango National Park: In the land of the surfing hippos," August 2004, National Geographic magazine



February 3, 2006

Utah
1991
Bruce Dale


Established in 1964, Canyonlands National Park offers a landscape of natural sculptures. Vibrantly colored, eroded sandstone has been crafted into fluid rock formations and sky scraping buttes.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "John Wesley Powell: Visions for the West," April 1994, National Geographic magazine)



February 4, 2006

Bamian, Afghanistan
1946
Maynard Owen Williams


Afghani men gaze on the 175-foot Bamian Buddha, carved 1,500 to 1,700 years ago. For centuries Bamian was a crossroads of Indian, Greek, and Chinese cultures.
This statue and two other giant carved buddhas near it were demolished by the Taliban in 2001 in a campaign to eradicate reminders of the country's pre-Islamic heritage.


(Photograph from "Back to Afghanistan," October 1946, National Geographic magazine)



February 5, 2006

United Kingdom
1992
Sam Abell

Hay bales punctuate a characteristically tree-poor British landscape. Since the late 1940s Great Britain has lost up to half of its ancient woodlands, 95 percent of its flower-rich hay meadows, most of its lowland heaths, and many of its lowland ponds.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Hedgerows," September 1993, National Geographic magazine)


February 8, 2006

Upper Peninsula, Michigan
1996
Jay Dickman

Maple leaves catch the sun in a hammock's-eye view of autumn foliage in the Fox River region of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Hemingway's Many Hearted Fox River," June 1997, National Geographic magazine)



February 9, 2006

Gabon, Africa
2004
Michael K. Nichols

Lightning dances across the sky near the shoreline of Loango National Park. "If the park is done right, visitors should feel like the first people to see this place," said National Geographic photographer Michael Nichols.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Gabon's Loango National Park," August 2004, National Geographic magazine)


February 10, 2006

Z Bar/Spring Hill Ranch, Kansas
1995
Raymond Gehman

Cattle feast on new grass at the Z Bar/Spring Hill Ranch only a month after controlled fires swept across the landscape.
Blazes set by lightning and American Indians once stormed across the U.S. heartland, helping to create the prairie—dry grasslands can turn to scrub when deprived of fire. Now outfits like the Z Bar/Spring Hill Ranch set fires each spring to maintain the prairie grasses.

(Photograph from and text adapted from "The Essential Element of Fire," September 1996, National Geographic magazine)


February 11, 2006

Plymouth, Montserrat
1996
Vincent J. Musi

Pillows of ash from the nearby Soufriere Hills volcano smother Plymouth, Montserrat. Once the vibrant capital of Montserrat and home to 4,000 people, Plymouth is now largely a ghost town.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Montserrat: Under the Volcano," July 1997, National Geographic magazine)

 
February 12, 2006

Tonle Sap lake, Cambodia
1968
Wilbur E. Garrett

A village on stilts rises from Cambodia's Great Lake, the Tonle Sap.
During the monsoon season the flooded Mekong river reverses the flow of the Tonle Sap river, sending it pouring upstream into the Great Lake. The water level of the lake rises as much as 29 feet (9 meters) during this time.

(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "The Mekong: River of Terror and Hope," December 1968, National Geographic magazine)



February 13, 2006

Loango National Park, Gabon, Africa
2003
Michael K. Nichols

"Sun-burnished waters from a lagoon—after its banks suddenly burst—pour across sand flats toward the sea."

—From "Gabon's Loango National Park: In the land of the surfing hippos," August 2004, National Geographic magazine



February 14, 2006

Assateague Island, Virginia or Maryland

James L. Stanfield

A wild pony nuzzles its mother on Assateague Island. These wild horses roam free on the Maryland side of the island and are kept within fenced areas in the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge on the Virginia side.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, the National Geographic book The Wild Ponies of Assateague Island, 1975)


February 17, 2006

Loango National Park, Gabon, Africa
2003
Michael K. Nichols
In a lagoon, watermarks on mangrove roots inscribe a history of depth changes.

(Photograph from "Gabon's Loango National Park: In the Land of Surfing Hippos," August 2004, National Geographic magazine)

Africa—Photos and more


February 18, 2006

Lake Toba, Sumatra, Indonesia
1980
David Alan Harvey

"At home in an ancient volcano, a rice farmer eyes a storm above Lake Toba, cupped in a crater on Indonesia's Sumatra. His upland home rises high and cool above jungles and swamps of the world's sixth largest island."
—From "A Sumatran Journey," March 1981, National Geographic magazine


February 19, 2006

Rocktail Bay, South Africa
2000
Chris Johns

"A woman training to be an izangoma, or traditional healer, gathers muti, or medicine, along the Indian Ocean near South Africa's border with Mozambique."

—From "100 Best Unpublished Pictures," January 2004, National Geographic magazine collector's edition

February 20, 2006

Monterey, California
1971
Bates Littlehales

"Southern Otters, considered extinct by 1900, reappeared near Monterey in 1938. Today federal, state, and international laws protect the furbearers."
(Text from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Return of the Sea Otter," October, 1971, National Geographic magazine)

February 22, 2006

Adirondack Mountains, New York
1996
Maria Stenzel

A September sunrise greets Mount Colden's summit

Lump together Glacier, Olympic, Yellowstone, and Grand Canyon National Parks, and Adirondack Park would still be bigger. A patchwork of property, the park is 57 percent privately owned. New York state, which controls the rest, protects it with an unusual constitutional provision stipulating that this land remain forever wild.”
February 25, 2006

Santiago, Chile, 1969
Photograph by James L. Stanfield
"To shoot a parade on Chile's Independence Day, [photographer] James Stanfield got down and dirty, clicking away as passing boots kicked up a dust storm all around him."

—From "100 Best Unpublished Pictures," January 2004, National Geographic magazine collector's edition



February 27, 2006

McCarthy, Alaska, 1993
Photograph by George F. Mobley
Clouds loom over a vast autumn landscape in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park.
"Here bigness is a trademark. Nine of the 16 highest peaks in the U.S. are found in Wrangell-St. Elias. The park could swallow five Yellowstones. Lands privately owned within its borders total a million acres, most of them set aside in the Alaska Native Claim Settlement Act of 1971. Yet fewer than a hundred people live here year-round."

(Text from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Alaska's Sky-High Wilderness," May 1994, National Geographic magazine)

February 28, 2006

Piazza San Marco, Venice, 1994
Photograph by Sam Abell
"In Venice, Carnival is a vivid, theatrical event, [photographer] Sam Abell says. 'We wanted to show the actual lives of Venetians, not just the face of Carnival, so this image of festival goers was never used' " in the February 1995 National Geographic magazine article on Venice.


—From "100 Best Unpublished Pictures," January 2004, National Geographic magazine collector's edition


 

[此贴子已经被过千山于2006-3-24 21:28:50编辑过]

TOP
3#

March 1, 2006


Rongelap Atoll, Marshall Islands, 1998


Rongelap Atoll, Marshall Islands, 1998

Photograph by Emory Kristof
“Safely behind bars, photographer Bill Curtsinger and his assistant, Eric Hiner, photograph themselves by a remote control as gray reef sharks close in.


“‘They were so aggressive,’ says Curtsinger, ‘that I used my camera as a shield to keep them from sticking their heads in the cage.’”

—From “Testing the Waters of Rongelap,” April 1998, National Geographic magazine


March 4, 2006


Gabon, Africa, 2004
Photograph by Michael K. Nichols
A storm looms over Loango National Park. No permanent structures are allowed on the shoreline, and visitors are encouraged to act as unobtrusively as the wildlife and leave the coast exactly as they found it.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Gabon's Loango National Park," August 2004, National Geographic magazine)


March 5, 2006


Africa, 1998
Photograph by Chris Johns
Although fierce in appearance, the warthog would rather run from predators, like the lion or leopard, than fight. The diet of a warthog consists mainly of grasses, roots, and berries, along with the occasional carrion.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Cheetahs: Ghosts of the Grasslands," December 1999, National Geographic magazine)


March 6, 2006

Fiji Islands, Melanesia,
Photograph by James L. Stanfield
“Evening calm ushers a fishing boat past a reef off Viti Levu, largest of 300-plus islands in this South Pacific success story [Fiji]. Yet tranquil surfaces cannot mask a troubling gulf between native Fijians and citizens of Indian origin.”


—From "The Two Worlds of Fiji," October 1995, National Geographic magazine


March 7, 2006

Vermont, 1997
Photograph by Michael S. Yamashita
A hillside of trees provides a brightly-colored backdrop for a Vermont barn. Amid ancient mountains gentled by time, farm families work the same tilted acres their ancestors did.
This is the foliage season, nature's last hurrah before winter, when the state's lush cover of deciduous trees turns in its flashiest performance.


(Text adapted from "Leaves of Autumn: A Vermont Sampler," Autumn 1984, National Geographic Traveler magazine)


(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Vermont: Suite of Seasons," September 1998, National Geographic magazine)

March 8, 2006

Inishmore Island, Aran Islands, Ireland, 1993
Photograph by Sam Abell
“Rugged as the people who settled here more than 3,000 years ago, the sea-chiseled limestone bluffs of Inishmore rise 300 feet above the Atlantic. Inland, hundreds of miles of stone walls ring thin-soiled fields where islanders toil in a land known for ciúnas gan uaigneas, Gaelic for ‘quietness without loneliness.’”
— Text from "The Aran Islands: Ancient Hearts Modern Minds," April 1996, National Geographic magazine


(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Ireland on Fast-Forward," September 1994, National Geographic magazine)


March 9, 2006

Madhav National Park, India, 1997
Photograph by Michael K. Nichols
Now an endangered species, tigers have a long history. Generally believed to have evolved in southern China more than a million years ago, the big cats eventually spread west to the Caspian Sea, north to Siberia, and south across Indonesia.
(Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Making Room for Wild Tigers," December 1997, National Geographic magazine)

March 10, 2006

Burren, County Clare, Ireland,
Photograph by Sam Abell
An "ad hoc village of caravans, or trailer homes, houses vacationers on Burren, a karst in County Clare. Fearing harm to the area's fragile vegetation, environmentalists have gone to court to block construction of an interpretive center at nearby Mullagh More."


—From "Ireland on Fast Forward," September 2004, National Geographic magazine


March 11, 2006

Castle Gate Area, Utah, 1993
Photograph by James P. Blair
Utah offers more than 500 mineral species, fossils from a variety of life-forms, and many different geologic formations, from high plateaus to deep canyons.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Utah: Land of Promise, Kingdom of Stone," January 1996, National Geographic magazine)


March 12, 2006

Wager Bay, Northwest Territories, Canada, 1996
Photograph by Flip Nicklin
"Eighteenth-century European scientists named [polar bears] Ursus maritimus, meaning 'sea bear,' and that they truly are, spending most of their lives on sea ice."

—Text from "Polar Bears: Stalkers of the High Arctic," January 1998, National Geographic magazine.

(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, same article)

March 13, 2006

Florida, 1998
Photograph by Wes C. Skiles
A native of the Caribbean and the Atlantic from Florida to Brazil, the West Indian manatee has long been slaughtered for its meat and hide. In Florida motorboats now take an increasing toll.
—Text adapted from "A Personal Vision of Vanishing Wildlife," April 1990, National Geographic magazine.


(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in "Unlocking the Labyrinth of North Florida Springs," March 1999, National Geographic magazine)

March 14, 2006

Craftsbury Common, Craftsbury, Vermont, 1997
Photograph by Michael S. Yamashita
"Life is piebald in New England, like the fields in the spring and fall—part warm earth and part ice and snow."
—From "Vermont: Suite of Seasons," September 1998, National Geographic magazine


(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Vermont: Suite of Seasons," September 1998, National Geographic magazine)

March 15, 2006

Monterey Bay, California, 1988
Photograph by Emory Kristof
“Jostling for room, sea anemones, corals, and sponges vividly paint the floor of a kelp forest. ‘These animals are bathed in food,’ explains David Powell, director of husbandry at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. ‘The water is rich enough to supply great numbers of filter feeders, and competition for space is incredible.”

—From "Between Monterey Tides," February 1990, National Geographic magazine


March 16, 2006

Phuket, Thailand, 1994
Photograph by Jodi Cobb
Looking past beach umbrellas at the blue ocean and white sand, it is difficult to believe that the Thai tourist destination of Phuket actually has a mountainous terrain and dense forests.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in "Many Faces of Thailand," February 1996, National Geographic magazine)
RELATED
Photographer Bio: Jodi Cobb



March 17, 2006

Athenry, Ireland, 1993
Photograph by Sam Abell
"A pagan heart and a Christian soul feed the roots of the Irish nature. The Macnas theater group celebrates pre-Christian culture during a festival in Athenry. But Roman Catholicism is decidedly paramount, especially in western precincts like Dingle, where girls step from St. Mary's Church into a blustery Sunday in May following their first Communion."


—From "Ireland on Fast Forward," September 1994, National Geographic magazine

March 18, 2006

Dingle, Ireland,
Photograph by Sam Abell
"Hikers risk joining the dearly departed by braving the dark crags of the southern Dingle coastline, where foolhardy rock climbers and anglers seeking a better fishing spot are sometimes washed out to sea."


—From "Ireland on Fast Forward," September 1994, National Geographic magazine
March 19, 2006

Inishmore Island, Aran Islands, Ireland,
Photograph by Sam Abell
"A net cast in homage marks an Inishmore grave on the windy Aran Islands. The tribute covers a water-filled sphere and its saintly figurine."

—From "Ireland on Fast Forward," September 1994, National Geographic magazine
March 20, 2006


Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, Kodiak Island, Alaska, 1992
Photograph by George F. Mobley
"[The Kodiak] subspecies—among the world’s largest bears—is unique to the Kodiak archipelago. Males may tower ten feet [about three meters] tall and weigh up to 1,500 pounds [680 kilograms]."


—Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Kodiak, Alaska's Island Refuge," November 1993, National Geographic magazine
March 21, 2006

Lago Chungara, Tarapaca Region, Chile,
Photograph by George F. Mobley
Nevados de Payachata, a pair of volcanoes, is included in the 620 volcanoes that can be found in the Andes mountain range. Parinacota is the youngest of the pair and stands 20,827 feet (6,348 meters) high; the oldest, Pomerape, is 20,413 feet(6,222 meters) high.
(Photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in "Chile, Republic on a Shoestring," October 1973, National Geographic magazine)



March 22, 2006

Exact location unknown, Amazon River Basin, 1983
Photograph by James P. Blair
“Botanists have tens of thousands of plant species to catalog, such as the molongò seen in the above photograph. Many plants hold practical promise—for anticancer drugs, contraceptives, insecticides—but all need testing.”
—From the National Geographic book Great Rivers of the World, 1984

 
 
 

[此贴子已经被过千山于2006-3-24 21:37:43编辑过]

TOP
4#

the end

TOP
5#

[em01]收了几张……
煋瞎树....07/15/11...
TOP
6#

。。。。牛

欠三图片马甲太牛了,。。。

TOP
7#

[em50][em50][em50]后面30几张都是刷新不成又单独打开看的[em21]
煋瞎树....07/15/11...
TOP
8#

http://www.arsenalcn.com/bbs/dispbbs.asp?BoardID=30&replyID=101559&id=40618&skin=0

2005年全年的在连接的帖子里,今年的到此为止.国家地理的专题就做到这里了.谢谢Finsen

[此贴子已经被作者于2006-3-24 22:30:49编辑过]

TOP
发新话题 回复该主题