Robert Harding

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832-401082 - Lake Titisee in the morning with clouds over the lake and the village, lupines in the foreground, Titisee-Neustadt, Upper Black Forest, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, Europe
832-399314 - Traditional Turkish pizza pide freshly baked with ground beef and vegetables served on black stone background with assorted Middle Eastern meze from above, cuisine of Turkey
832-399313 - Various Turkish dishes: meat kebab with tabbouleh salad, falafel, hummus, olives, pistachios and Middle Eastern meze on wooden table top view with copy space. Ethnic arab food, cuisine of Turkey
832-399311 - Various Turkish dishes: meat kebab with tabbouleh salad, falafel, hummus, olives, pistachios and Middle Eastern meze on wooden table top view with copy space. Ethnic arab food, cuisine of Turkey
832-399306 - Various Turkish dishes: meat kebab with tabbouleh salad, falafel, hummus, olives, pistachios and other Middle Eastern meze on wooden table top view. Ethnic arab food, cuisine of Turkey
832-399292 - Bowl of healthy salad in female hands from above and green detox smoothie in a bottle on wooden background, top view. Woman eating tasty vegan meal, raw food diet and clean eating concept, copy space
832-399293 - Green healthy salad with spinach, brussels sprouts, avocado in bowl, green detox smoothie in a bottle on gray stone background, top view. Raw food diet and clean eating, vegan healthy meal, copy space
860-287450 - Tara Oceans Expeditions - May 2011. Tara with deployed plancton nets. On "station", the boat is drifting without engine or sails. Tara Oceans, a unique expedition: Tara Oceans is the very first attempt to make a global study of marine plankton, a form of sea life that includes organisms as small as viruses and bacterias, and as big as medusas. Our goal is to better understand planktonic ecosystems by exploring the countless species, learning about interactions among them and with their environment. Marine plankton is the only ecosystem that is almost continuous over the surface of the Earth. Studying plankton is like taking the pulse of our planet. Recently, scientists have discovered the great importance of plankton for the climate: populations of plankton are affected very rapidly by variations in climate. But in turn they can influence the climate by modifying the absorption of carbon. In a context of rapid physico-chemical changes, for example the acidification observed today in the world's oceans, it is urgent to understand and predict the evolution of these particular ecosystems. Finally, plankton is an astonishing way of going back in time ? a prime source of fossils. Over the eons, plankton has created several hundred meters of sediment on the ocean floors. This allows us to go back in time, to the first oceans on Earth, and better understand the history of our biosphere. More than 12 fields of research are involved in the project, which will bring together an international team of oceanographers, ecologists, biologists, geneticists, and physicists from prestigious laboratories headed by Eric Karsenti of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory. Galapagos
832-380358 - Electric fence of Rhino Sanctuary on red dirt road, tamarind (Tamarindus indica) with weaver birds (Ploceidae) nests in back, Tsavo West National Park, Taita-Taveta County, Kenya, Africa