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  • An elaborate red gate in Senado Square.<br />
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To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
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    China-Macau-14-21-115.JPG
  • A restaurant worker sleeps next to a bright red wall.<br />
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National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-15...JPG
  • Red and green chili peppers on sale in a market in central Jakarta.<br />
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1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    Indonesia-Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-15...JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. 2008
    08-02-032.JPG
  • North Korea. 2009
    09-15-034.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A welcome mate outside a store. 2008.
    08-02-006.JPG
  • North Korea. 2009
    09-15-004.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A spectator wearing the Chinese flag in the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-133.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A fence near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-106.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
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man holding a fan whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-055.JPG
  • CHINA. People taking photos 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
    08-03-050.JPG
  • CHINA. Scene 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
    08-03-029.JPG
  • The Yellow Crane Tower which looks over the Yangtze and the city of Wuhan.<br />
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Image ID: 1933612 <br />
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National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    China-Wuhan-08-22-035.JPG
  • A man carries circuit boards through a small village near Kolkata.<br />
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Image ID: 1925796 <br />
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National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    India-Kolkata-13-28-452.JPG
  • A woman walks along train tracks in central Kolkata.<br />
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Image ID: 1925778 <br />
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National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    India-Kolkata-13-28-350.JPG
  • A woman walks through the streets of Kolkata at dusk.<br />
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To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
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Image ID: 1925742 <br />
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Email: natgeocreative@ngs.org<br />
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Telephone: 202 857 7537 / Toll Free 800 434 2244<br />
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National Geographic Creative<br />
1145 17th St NW, Washington DC 20036
    India-Kolkata-13-28-229.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. In mid-February, over 40,000 people crammed the China International Exhibition Centre, all hoping to land a job in a market that is shrinking rapidly in terms of opportunities. Mass unemployment across China as a result of the recent economic crisis in Asia is causing worry for university graduates and migrant workers alike who are finding it increasingly difficult to find any form of work.  2009.
    09-04-001.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A spectator wearing the Chinese flag in the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-133.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. The back of a woman on Tiananmen Square during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-101.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A Chinese flag being held by supporters during the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-070.JPG
  • CHINA. People taking photos 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-08-03-050.JPG
  • CHINA. Scene 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-08-03-029.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young boy looks out of a car window in the shopping district of Xinjiekou . 2008
    08-02-107.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A street cleaners cart. 2008
    08-02-038.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Shoppers in the Xidan shopping district in central Beijing. 2006.
    Consumerism-China-06-02-028.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Shoppers in the Xidan shopping district in central Beijing. 2006.
    Consumerism-China-06-02-007.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A woman walks amongst the ruins of an old hutong (traditional home) in the central Qianmen district, destroyed to make may for new developments aimed at modernising the city for the 2008 Summer Olympics. 2005
    Hutong-Destruction-Beijing-05-02-025.JPG
  • North Korea. 2009
    09-15-071.JPG
  • North Korea. 2009
    09-15-067.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. In mid-February, over 40,000 people crammed the China International Exhibition Centre, all hoping to land a job in a market that is shrinking rapidly in terms of opportunities. Mass unemployment across China as a result of the recent economic crisis in Asia is causing worry for university graduates and migrant workers alike who are finding it increasingly difficult to find any form of work.  2009
    09-04-001.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. Schoolchildren in the old town. Shanghai is a sprawling metropolis or 15 million people situated in south-east China. It is regarded as the country’s showcase in development and modernity in modern China. This rapid development and modernization, never seen before on such a scale has however spawned countless environmental and social problems. 2008
    08-16-060.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. Tourists on the Bund. Shanghai is a sprawling metropolis or 15 million people situated in south-east China. It is regarded as the country’s showcase in development and modernity in modern China. This rapid development and modernization, never seen before on such a scale has however spawned countless environmental and social problems. 2008
    08-16-054.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. In the Bund Sightseeing tunnel that runs underneath the Huangpu River from the Bund to Pudong. 2008.
    08-16-007.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A spectator near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-130.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Spectators near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-107.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. The back of a woman on Tiananmen Square during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-101.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-069.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A Chinese flag being held by supporters during the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-070.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A young girl drapes the Chinese flag over her face whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-042.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. Lanterns 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
    08-03-030.JPG
  • A view of Wuhan from The Yellow Crane Tower which looks over the city of Wuhan.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1933615 <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
    China-Wuhan-08-22-041.JPG
  • Women and children sift through used electronics in a small village near Kolkata.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1925795 <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-13-28-432.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. A young girl in the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum (?????; pinyin: Shàngh?i ke¯jì gu?n) is a large museum in Pudong, Shanghai, close to Century Park, the largest park of the city. The construction of the museum cost 1,75 billion RMB, and the floor area is 98 000m2 .2008..
    Shanghai-Science-Museum-08-17-021.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. Schoolchildren in the old town. Shanghai is a sprawling metropolis or 15 million people situated in south-east China. It is regarded as the country's showcase in development and modernity in modern China. This rapid development and modernization, never seen before on such a scale has however spawned countless environmental and social problems. 2008.
    Shanghai-China-08-16-060.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. In the Bund Sightseeing tunnel that runs underneath the Huangpu River from the Bund to Pudong. 2008.
    Shanghai-China-08-16-007.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A spectator near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-130.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Spectators near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-107.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A fence near the Olympic village during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-106.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A man whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-069.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
  • 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 young girl drapes the Chinese flag over her face whilst watching the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics. 2008
    08-15-042.JPG
  • CHINA. Lanterns hanging in a tree 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-08-03-051.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. 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. Lanterns 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-08-03-030.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Mops hanging on a fence in Gongzhufen . 2008
    08-02-089.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  Tourists in a temple in the town of Fengdu which is to be flooded. The flooding of the three Gorges, by damming the Yangtze near the town of YiChang, has remained a controversial subject due to the negative environmental consequences and the displacement of millions of people in the flood plain. The Yangtze River however is reported to be at its lowest level in 150 years as a result of a country-wide drought. It is China's longest river and the third longest in the world. Originating in Tibet, the river flows for 3,964 miles (6,380km) through central China into the East China Sea at Shanghai.  2008.
    Three-Gorges-China-08-19-004.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. Tourists on the Bund. Shanghai is a sprawling metropolis or 15 million people situated in south-east China. It is regarded as the country's showcase in development and modernity in modern China. This rapid development and modernization, never seen before on such a scale has however spawned countless environmental and social problems. 2008.
    Shanghai-China-08-16-054.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. A sign warning people not to use car horns. 2008
    08-02-131.JPG
  • CHINA. Beijing. Shoppers in the Xidan shopping district in central Beijing. 2006.
    Consumerism-China-06-02-009.JPG
  • The 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-10-11-021.JPG
  • Scientists look at the nest of a Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-068.JPG
  • Scientists looking for the Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-069.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-064.JPG
  • The nest of a Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-065.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-062.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-060.JPG
  • A tourist photographs the Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-036.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-028.JPG
  • A statue of Red-Crowned Cranes at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-011.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane footprints, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-076.JPG
  • Scientists looking for the Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-070.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Cranes, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-063.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-061.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-058.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-059.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-057.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-056.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-054.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-052.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-033.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-034.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-032.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-031.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-030.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-026.JPG
  • The Red-Crowned Crane, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-025.JPG
  • A large statue of Red-Crowned Cranes at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-009.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-055.JPG
  • Red-Crowned Crane chicks, a threatened species at the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-053.JPG
  • A red-crowned crane stands at the entrance to the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-008.JPG
  • A small pool of red water sits in a footprint in near a waste water channel in the town of Kanpur, in northern India. The water is laced with toxins and is highly acidic, giving it its distinct colour. The city is notorious for having some of the country's worst water pollution which is created by the local leathery tannery industry.
    India-Kanpur-Leather-Pollution-13-29...JPG
  • A tourist walks through some of the temperate forest that make up most of the vegetation cover in the Jiuzhaigou National Park. These forests are home to the endangered giant panda, the red panda and also the golden snub-nosed monkey.
    China-Sichuan-Jiuzhaigou-11-16-130.JPG
  • Traditional Japanese writing next to a deep red coloured wall at Sensoji, an ancient Buddhist temple, in Tokyo.
    13-23-007.JPG
  • Local men toast one another during a lunch. The red alcohol which they consume is a home-brewed 'moonshine' made from a traditional Chinese medicinal plant called wuweizi that is harvested from local forests. These men claim that consumption of alcohol is good for the stomach and liver. Pingwu County in Sichuan Province, south-west China.
    China-Forests-Pingwu-11-15-030.JPG
  • A tourist walks through some of the temperate forest that make up most of the vegetation cover in the Jiuzhaigou National Park. These forests are home to the endangered giant panda, the red panda and also the golden snub-nosed monkey.
    China-Sichuan-Jiuzhaigou-11-16-131.JPG