Robert Harding

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1116-50862 - Bear (Ursus arctos) viewing at Hallo Bay Camp. A sow and her two cubs hunt for clams while awaiting the arrival of salmon to local streams; Alaska, United States of America
1116-50863 - Bear (Ursus arctos) viewing at Hallo Bay Camp. A sow and her two cubs hunt for clams while awaiting the arrival of salmon to local streams; Alaska, United States of America
1116-50861 - Bear (Ursus arctos) viewing at Hallo Bay Camp. A sow and her two cubs hunt for clams while awaiting the arrival of salmon to local streams; Alaska, United States of America
1116-50860 - Bear (Ursus arctos) viewing at Hallo Bay Camp. A sow and her two cubs hunt for clams while awaiting the arrival of salmon to local streams; Alaska, United States of America
832-383638 - Polar bears (Ursus maritimus), mother animal and two young cubs, three month old, lying on an iceberg, Unorganized Baffin, Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada, North America
764-4855 - Black bear (Ursus americanus) sow and three cubs of the year, Yellowstone National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Wyoming, United States of America, North America
764-4836 - Three black bear (Ursus americanus) cubs of the year or spring cubs, Yellowstone National Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Wyoming, United States of America, North America
909-168 - Hope Bay hut. Hope Bay was discovered in 1902 by the Swedish expedition led by Otto Nordenskjöld. He named it Hope Bay, after three of his party inadvertently wintered there during 1903; they were dropped off not long before their ship, Antarctic, sank and the sound beyond the bay bears the name of their doomed vessel. Their makeshift stone hut stands near the dock – it was largely rebuilt over the summer season of 1966-67. Hope Bay, Antarctic Sound, Weddell Sea
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