Robert Harding

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1358-368 - A boat moored off the Nonsuch Island, Bermuda, Nature Reserve or Living Museum. The boat belongs to the local Aquarium and Zoo and takes organised parties to see the Reserve.
1350-3824 - Namtso lake or Nam tso lake in Tibet China. Nam Tso Lake is the second largest lake in Tibet, and one of the most famous places on the "Roof of the World". The lake itself is located at an altitude of 4,718 m, and has an area of 1,920 km². This lake is the largest of the lakes in the Tibet Autonomous Region, although it is not the largest on the Qinghai Tibet Plateau, a title that belongs to Lake Qinghai, more than twice the area of Namtso, which is more than 1,000 km, in the northeast, in Qinghai province.
746-88395 - The peaks of the GEisler mountain range in valley Villnoess. The church Sankt Johann in Ranui (St. John in Ranui). The Geisler mountain range is one of the most famous areas for hikers and climbers in the Dolomites. This part of the dolomites is part of the nature park Puez-Geisler and belongs to the UNESCO world heritage Dolomites. Europe, Central Europe, Italy, South Tyrol, April 2012
990-126 - The white bodies of a group of Beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) breaking the surface of the calm water. These beluga whales that live in the St. Lawrence, Canada, year-round belong to the furthest southerly population of this arctic whale species.
857-70192 - The Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristata) belongs to the "Blue" or American Jays. They are aggresive, adaptable and omnivorous. They have been colonizing new habitat for many decades. They can make a large variety of sounds and can even learn to mimic human speech.
979-4423 - Adult Southern Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome) in the Falkland Islands. This is the smallest yellow-crested, black-and-white penguin in the genus Eudyptes. It reaches a length of 45-58 cm (18-23 in) and typically weighs 2-3.4 kg (4.4-7.5 lb), although there are records of exceptionally large rockhoppers weighing 5 kg (11 lbs). Their common name refers to the fact that unlike many other penguins which negotiate obstacles by sliding on their bellies or by awkward climbing using their flipper-like wings as aid, Rockhoppers will try to jump over boulders and across cracks. This behavior is by no means unique to this species however - at least the other "crested" penguins of the genus Eudyptes hop around rocks too. Southern Rockhopper Penguins have a global population of roughly 1 million pairs, perhaps a bit more. About two-thirds of the global population belongs to E. c. chrysocome which breeds on the Falkland Islands and on islands off Argentina and southern Chile. The Southern Rockhopper Penguin is classified as Vulnerable species by the IUCN.
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