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  • A fisherman holds a shark fin at the port in Jakarta.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID:1574974<br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
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Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-10...JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A mother carries her child in the Olympic village whilst watching rehearsals for the Beijing Olympic games. 2008
    08-15-020.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A mother carries her child in the Olympic village whilst watching rehearsals for the Beijing Olympic games. 2008
    08-15-020.JPG
  • Men unload boxes from the back of a lorry in central Kolkata.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
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Image ID: 1925707 <br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
<br />
Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    India-Kolkata-13-28-090.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young child and her mother whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-051.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young child and her mother whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-051.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. People in the Olympic village whilst watching rehearsals for the Beijing Olympic games. 2008
    08-15-003.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young girl on Tiananmen Square during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-098.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. People in the Olympic village whilst watching rehearsals for the Beijing Olympic games. 2008
    08-15-003.JPG
  • A vegetable seller sits outside his shop in central Jakarta.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID:  1588052<br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
<br />
Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-15...JPG
  • A fisherman rakes shrimp at the port in Jakarta.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1574975 <br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
<br />
Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-10...JPG
  • A young girl with her father in a central Jakarta slum.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1574965  <br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
<br />
Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-10...JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young girl on Tiananmen Square during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-098.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A mother and child near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-109.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A mother and child near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-109.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A woman holding an Olympic flag whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-053.JPG
  • Picture showing a boy holding a Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis),  Anhui Research Center for Alligator Reproduction. Only 120 individuals remain in the wild in China as a result of wetlands reclamation. Xuancheng City, Anhui Province. China. 2010
    Chinese-Alligator-10-11-029.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A person holding an umbrella. 2008
    08-02-124.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding his head in the shopping district of Xidan . 2008
    08-02-070.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding a cellphone. 2008
    08-02-021.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding an umbrella. 2008
    08-02-005.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding a fan whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-055.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A woman holding an Olympic flag whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-053.JPG
  • CHINA. A woman holding a heart during Chinese New Year in Ditan Park in Beijing.  Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is the most important festival and holiday in the Chinese calendar In mainland China, many people use this holiday to visit family and friends and also visit local temples to offer prayers to their ancestors. The roots of Chinese New Year lie in combined influences from Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, and folk religions.  2008
    08-03-049.JPG
  • CHINA. A woman holding a heart during Chinese New Year in Ditan Park in Beijing.  Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is the most important festival and holiday in the Chinese calendar In mainland China, many people use this holiday to visit family and friends and also visit local temples to offer prayers to their ancestors. The roots of Chinese New Year lie in combined influences from Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, and folk religions.  2008
    08-03-048.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding a fan whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-055.JPG
  • CHINA. A woman holding a heart during Chinese New Year in Ditan Park in Beijing.  Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is the most important festival and holiday in the Chinese calendar In mainland China, many people use this holiday to visit family and friends and also visit local temples to offer prayers to their ancestors. The roots of Chinese New Year lie in combined influences from Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, and folk religions.  2008.
    Chinese-New-Year-08-03-049.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A person holding an umbrella. 2008
    08-02-124.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding his head in the shopping district of Xidan . 2008
    08-02-070.JPG
  • CHINA. A woman holding a heart during Chinese New Year in Ditan Park in Beijing.  Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is the most important festival and holiday in the Chinese calendar In mainland China, many people use this holiday to visit family and friends and also visit local temples to offer prayers to their ancestors. The roots of Chinese New Year lie in combined influences from Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, and folk religions.  2008.
    Chinese-New-Year-08-03-048.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding a cellphone. 2008
    08-02-021.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding an umbrella. 2008.
    08-02-005.JPG
  • Ken Suzuki, Deputy General Manager, Corporate Sustainability Department, Suntory Holding Limited. CNN Shoot at Suntory Hakushu Distillery, in the Yamanashi Prefecture, Chubu region, Japan. 14-15 January, 2020. - Image Copyright Sean Gallagher.
    CNN-Suntory-20-01-023.JPG
  • A man checking his cellphone while holding a cigarette.
    14-24-166.JPG
  • A Tibetan monk holding prayer beads in the thangka artists village, Upper Wutan Monastery, Rebgong (Chinese name - Tongren),  on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. China.
    10-24-291.JPG
  • A woman holding a baby in the centre of Beijing.
    13-21-084.jpg
  • An Indonesian man holding a guitar walks past a polluted water channel in central Jakarta.
    Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-10-028.JPG
  • A Tibetan hold and his mother in a community on the Tibetan Plateau, in western China. Relocation communities been created to house nomadic herders moved from the highland grasslands. The nomads have been blamed for contributing to the deterioration of the grasslands, so have been moved, sometimes forcibly, into newly built towns that can be found across the plateau.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-762.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A wheel used to hold long lengths of cables in the shopping district of Xidan . 2008
    08-02-084.JPG
  • Navdeep Kaur (17) and Sandeep Kaur (13) hold a portrait of their late father, Daljit Singh, who died of tongue cancer in 2005, aged only 34. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-146.JPG
  • A young couple, Kelly Lu and Yanding Li, hold hands during a walk through Beijing's Olympic Park. "I'm pretty sad about this. It's worse and worse", explains Li. "I think the pollution is bad for our health. The PM2.5 damages our lungs [but] we don't have any choice", he laments. "I left China two and half years ago. Then it wasn't so bad. I've been abroad. I know what's good [air] and what's bad. Young people care more than old people. We have more information. We know how bad it is." PM2.5 reading - 218 - Very Unhealthy
    Beijing-Air-Pollution-Masks-15-04-04...JPG
  • A man holds used transistors in a village near Kolkata whose residents recycle E-Waste.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1925789 <br />
 <br />
Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
<br />
Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
<br />
National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    India-Kolkata-13-28-394.JPG
  • Sukhbeer Kaur (19) holds a portrait of her father, Pippal Singh, who died in 2010 of cancer, aged 40. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-074.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A fans holds an unfurled Chinese flag whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-064.JPG
  • A man holds recycled electronics in his hands in the village of Sangrampur, located south of Kolkata in northeast India. Globally, an estimated 50 million tons of e-waste are produced annually, and much of it ends up in countries like India. November, 2013
    India-E-Waste-13-28-395.JPG
  • A woman holds tea leaves collected from a plantation nestled in the remote mountain valleys of northern Sichuan. Tea plantations are some of the projects being targeted by the EU-China Biodiversity Program to promote sustainable harvesting in the region.  Pingwu County in Sichuan Province, south-west China.
    China-Forests-Pingwu-11-15-125.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A woman holds her baby near the 4th Ring Roag, near the new Olympic park. In recent years construction has boomed in Beijing as a result of the country's widespread economic growth and the awarding of the 2008 Summer Olympics to the city. For Beijing's residents however, it seems as their city is continually under construction with old neighborhoods regularly being razed and new apartments, office blocks and sports venues appearing in their place. A new Beijing has been promised to the people to act as a showcase to the world for the 'new' China. Beijing's residents have been waiting for this promised change for years and are still waiting, asking the question "Where's the new Beijing?!". 2008.
    08-21-036.JPG
  • A farmer holds micronutrient fertiliser before adding it to water to spray on his fields in the region of Punjab.
    13-30-232.JPG
  • Sukhjit Kaur (55) holds a portrait of her late husband, Baltej Singh, who died in 2012 of throat cancer, aged 57. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-087.JPG
  • Daukhi Valmaki (50) holds a portrait of her late husband who died in 2007 from throat cancer, aged 60. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-142.JPG
  • Ramesh Chander (30) holds a picture of his sister, brother-in-law and their infant child, Karan Valmaki, who died of blood cancer in 2013, aged only 2. It is thought that this was linked to uranium toxicity caused by excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-141.JPG
  • Balkaur Singh (52) holds a portrait of his late mother Mukhtyar Kaur, who died in 2013 of breast and liver cancer, aged 75. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-088.JPG
  • Ajit Singh (68) holds a portrait of his late wife, Manjit Kaur, who died in 2012 of cancer, aged 65. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-083.JPG
  • Sukpal Kaur, holds a portrait of her late husband who died as a result of contracting Hepatitis C. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems in rural communities. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-061.JPG
  • A farmer holds a chicken that has just been killed in Hebei Province, China.
    08-20-080.JPG
  • A military policeman holds an Elongated Tortiose shell, discovered during a patrol for illegal logging in the Phnom Tnout Phnom Pok Wildlife Sanctuary, in northern Cambodia. The species is classified as Highly Threatened.
    Cambodia-Burning-Sean-Gallagher-20-0...JPG
  • Shao Jian Feng, 26, holds a Yangtze Alligator (Alligator sinensis) in his home on the outskirts of Beijing. Listed by the Chinese government as a "first-class protected animal" in 1972, this species is all but extinct in the wild and is listed as "critically endangered" by the IUCN Red List. It is estimated that there are only around 100+ individuals left, mainly due to poaching and wetland reclamation, in eastern China.
    China-Exotic-Pets-17-06-024.JPG
  • Shao Jian Feng, 26, holds a Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) in his home on the outskirts of Beijing. This juvenile is only two and half years old, but when fully grown can reach up to six metres, making it the largest reptile in the world. It's just one of five crocodilians he owns, along with two other large snakes. "There are twenty three crocodilian species in the world. We hope to collect all of them", he boasts. A Saltwater Crocodile can retail for up to 9000RMB (US$1500). In the wild, they can be found mainly in South East Asia and Northern Australia.
    China-Exotic-Pets-17-06-022.JPG
  • A veterinarian holds a Rhesus Macaque (Macaca mulatta) in a store in central Beijing. It has become increasingly difficult for people to own monkeys as pets in China with laws making it illegal for most species. This does not stop many, especially young people, who see moneys as unique exotic pets that make them stand out amongst their peers. The Rhesus Macaque is mainly found in South East Asia.
    China-Exotic-Pets-17-06-020.JPG
  • A woman holds tea leaves collected from a plantation nestled in the remote mountain valleys of northern Sichuan. Tea plantations are some of the projects being targeted by the EU-China Biodiversity Program to promote sustainable harvesting in the region.  Pingwu County in Sichuan Province, south-west China.
    China-Forests-Pingwu-11-15-110.JPG
  • A man holds a jar of traditional Chinese medicine in a store in Pingwu County in Sichuan Province, south-west China. Unregulated harvesting of plants for use in TCM have been blamed for damaging the forests in the region.
    China-Forests-Pingwu-11-15-017.JPG
  • A factory worker holds a piece of bamboo. Bamboo removal in China has grown from 260 million tons in 1990 to 1.2 billion tons in 2005.
    China-Bamboo-Forests-11-17-014.JPG
  • A young girl holds onto a lamppost in a Tibetan community on the Tibetan Plateau, in western China.
    Asia-Threatened-Headwaters-12-26-022.JPG
  • A fisherman holds a shark fin in the port area of Jakarta. It is believed that Indonesia <br />
is one of the world’s biggest producers of shark fins due to limited to no regulation.
    Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-10-462.JPG
  • In the village of Teejaruhela on the India-Pakistan border, Khushal Singh (33) holds a picture of his younger sister, Ranu Vai, who died during a fit, as a result of complications from having cerebral palsy and mental disabilities. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-192.JPG
  • Survana, 27, holds her youngest child Reetu, 2, who has suffered from spastic cerebral palsy since birth, outside their home in the village of Teejaruhela. She is one of many children in the village who suffer from development health issues. Scientists believe that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems in rural communities. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. Local farmers and their families are now paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-183.JPG
  • Ghukar Singh (58) holds a portrait of his late daughter, Amandeep Kaur,who died in 2013 from cancer, aged only 23. It is believed that excessive pesticide use in the region over the past 30-40 years has led to the accumulation of dangerous levels of toxins such as uranium, lead and mercury which are contributing to increased health problems including cancers, birth defects and mental disabilities in children. It's a hidden epidemic which is gripping the Punjab region in northeast India which for decades has been the country's 'bread basket'. As local farmers and their families continue to get ill they are paying the price for the country's 'Green Revolution'.
    13-30-095.JPG
  • A mother holds her child in a building at the Beijing Zoo.
    05-07-245.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A woman holds her baby near the 4th Ring Roag, near the new Olympic park. In recent years construction has boomed in Beijing as a result of the country’s widespread economic growth and the awarding of the 2008 Summer Olympics to the city. For Beijing’s residents however, it seems as their city is continually under construction with old neighborhoods regularly being razed and new apartments, office blocks and sports venues appearing in their place. A new Beijing has been promised to the people to act as a showcase to the world for the ‘new’ China. Beijing’s residents have been waiting for this promised change for years and are still waiting, asking the question “Where’s the new Beijing?!”. 2008
    08-21-036.JPG
  • Li Shiyang, holds a Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) in his home on the outskirts of Beijing. This juvenile is only two and half years old, but when fully grown can reach up to six metres, making it the largest reptile in the world. It's just one of five crocodilians he owns, along with two other large snakes. "There are twenty three crocodilian species in the world. We hope to collect all of them", he boasts. A Saltwater Crocodile can retail for up to 9000RMB (US$1500). In the wild, they can be found mainly in South East Asia and Northern Australia.
    China-Exotic-Pets-17-06-023.JPG
  • Shao Jian Feng, 26, holds a Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) in his home on the outskirts of Beijing. This juvenile is only two and half years old, but when fully grown can reach up to six metres, making it the largest reptile in the world. It's just one of five crocodilians he owns, along with two other large snakes. "There are twenty three crocodilian species in the world. We hope to collect all of them", he boasts. A Saltwater Crocodile can retail for up to 9000RMB (US$1500). In the wild, they can be found mainly in South East Asia and Northern Australia.
    China-Exotic-Pets-17-06-021.JPG
  • A farmer holds a chicken that has just been killed in Hebei Province, China.
    Desertification-In-China-08-20-080.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A fans holds an unfurled Chinese flag whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-064.JPG
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