National Geographic showed the most popular photos on social networks
International scientific-popular magazine National Geographic works with the best wildlife photographers. In December, the publication summarized the results and called 10 images, which has gathered the most likes and comments in social networks.
Photographer Keith Ladzinski removed the “bloody” supermoon January 31, 2018. The photo was taken in Colorado.
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Photographer and traveler AMI Vitale took the planet’s last male Northern white Rhino named Sudan a few minutes before his death. The man in the photo is a Ranger from Kenya, comforting his dying friend.
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Dutch photographer Frans Lanting has photographed a female Bonobo, or pygmy chimpanzee, playing with her child.
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Photo of a young orangutan, made by the same photographer, also broke records of popularity.
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Paul Nickle from Canada often sees the starving polar bears. He was happy for once to see a well-fed bear, which shares the meat of a seal with a cub.
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Florian Schulz took a white bear nursing cubs, with an incredibly close range. The animal never threatened the photographer. According to him, during feeding, the mother went into a kind of trance.
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Ornithologist and photographer Tim Laman photographed in Papua New Guinea regginou bird of Paradise.
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Another photo of a rhinoceros of the Sudan together with its Trustees. The did Brent Stirton in Kenya.
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Photographer Justin Hofman captured the sea horse, holding a hygienic wand. An eloquent picture that says more about the pollution of the planet than many books or movies.
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Another picture of Brent Stirton. Poachers in Zimbabwe have deprived the Rhino with his horns, leaving him for dead with multiple bullet wounds. The animal’s death agony lasted almost a week.
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See also:
- The photographer showed the starry sky over Tibet in amazing timelapse
- Photo: the terrible scars on the body of the Earth — the work of human hands
- The loonie took a picture of snowflake close-up