Robert Harding

Exclusive only  
Color search  
Orientation
Release
License
People
Age Group
Ethnicity
Image size
more filters

Recent searches

Loading...
860-292071 - Suricate (Suricata suricatta). Also called Meerkat. Female with three playful young at their burrow. On the lookout. Kalahari Desert, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, South Africa.
860-292069 - Suricate (Suricata suricatta). Also called Meerkat. Female with two young at their burrow. One young is suckling. On the lookout. Kalahari Desert, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, South Africa.
1348-2931 - Faure near Stellenbosch, Western cape, South Africa. Indian Runner ducks being herded. They are used in the vines to control snails and pests and on parade for tourists.
1348-2930 - Faure near Stellenbosch, Western cape, South Africa. Indian Runner ducks being herded. They are used in the vines to control snails and pests and on parade for tourists.
1348-2932 - Faure near Stellenbosch, Western cape, South Africa. Indian Runner ducks being herded. They are used in the vines to control snails and pests and on parade for tourists.
1113-105937 - Young woman poses with Inyambo (sacred) cows with huge horns and their keepers in the garden of the Royal Palace Museum of Mutara III Rudahigwa from 1931, Nyanza, Southern Province, Rwanda, Africa
860-287988 - Split image of guide with snowmobile waiting the divers, only in springtime, when the hard winter slowly subsides, are the ice-cold waters suitable for divers who can dive around a iceberg that floats in crystal-clear water, Tasiilaq, East Greenland
860-287991 - Split image of scuba divers before to dive under the ice, only in springtime, when the hard winter slowly subsides, are the ice-cold waters suitable for divers who can dive around a iceberg that floats in crystal-clear water, Tasiilaq, East Greenland
857-91048 - August 18, 08 A Coho salmon is caught off the coast of Prince of Whales Island Alaska. Trolling for salmon is considered the "high-end" fishery because the way they catch is not harmful to the fish, in fact any by-catch or non-keeper salmon can be tossed back with little damage to the fish. So since the fish are in such good shape when caught, on individual hooks on long lines, they can be brought in and prepared or dressed (gutted and bled) and then iced within minutes and then within hours are on the troll tender that fillets and vacume pacs and then flash freezes them, so that most of the fresh caught fish for pricier consumption is troller caught, United States of America
1113-93380 - Hikers and dog of Ignacio, keeper of Refugio Vega de Ario, transport of supplies, western Picos de Europa, Parque Nacional de los Picos de Europa, Picos de Europa, Province of Asturias, Principality of Asturias, Northern Spain, Spain, Europe
1116-11271 - Thanksgiving plaques on a shrine at the Difunta Correa Sanctuary, Vallecito, San Juan, Argentina. La Difunta Correa is the most popular of Argentina's folk saints. She was a woman whose husband was forcibly recruited around the year 1840, during the Argentine civil wars. Becoming sick, he was then abandoned by partisans. In an attempt to reach her sick husband, Deolinda took her baby and followed the tracks of the partisans through the desert of San Juan Province. When her supplies ran out, she died. Her body was found days later by gauchos, however they found the baby still alive, feeding from the deceased woman's miraculously ever-full breast. Once the folk tale became known, her devout followers believe her to perform miracles and intercede for the living. Cattle keepers and truck drivers create small altars throughout Argentina and leave bottles of water as votive offerings.
1116-11272 - Thanksgiving plaques on a shrine at the Difunta Correa Sanctuary, Vallecito, San Juan, Argentina. La Difunta Correa is the most popular of Argentina's folk saints. She was a woman whose husband was forcibly recruited around the year 1840, during the Argentine civil wars. Becoming sick, he was then abandoned by partisans. In an attempt to reach her sick husband, Deolinda took her baby and followed the tracks of the partisans through the desert of San Juan Province. When her supplies ran out, she died. Her body was found days later by gauchos, however they found the baby still alive, feeding from the deceased woman's miraculously ever-full breast. Once the folk tale became known, her devout followers believe her to perform miracles and intercede for the living. Cattle keepers and truck drivers create small altars throughout Argentina and leave bottles of water as votive offerings.
832-51 - Beekeeper showing honeycomb, beekeeping in the Amazon rain forest is part of agricultural activity in a settlement of formerly landless peasants, land reform, Entre Rios Province, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America