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  • North Korea. 2009
    09-15-014.JPG
  • A woman bathes in the Ganges River at sunset in Kolkata.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1925783 <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
    India-Kolkata-13-28-369.JPG
  • Cityscape of the southern section of Macao.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1973127 <br />
 <br />
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
    China-Macau-14-21-161.JPG
  • Boats pass along the Yangtze River and under the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge in Wuhan, central China.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1933607 <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
    China-Wuhan-08-22-019.JPG
  • People bathe in the Ganges River in central Kolkata.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1925775 <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-13-28-346.JPG
  • Sand-ships on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-048.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. A ship passing down the Yangtze River near the 3 Gorges.  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-08-19-087.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  A passenger walks down the corridor of a ship passing through the 3 Gorges. 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-08-19-009.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Chains on a ship in the 3 Gorges.  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-08-19-079.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. Shipping along the Yangtze River. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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.
    Wuhan-China-08-22-019.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. Shipping along the Yangtze River. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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.
    Wuhan-China-08-22-018.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. Shipping along the Yangtze River. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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
    08-22-018.JPG
  • A sand-ship on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-043.JPG
  • A sand-ship on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-044.JPG
  • A sand-ship on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-006.JPG
  • A young girl and a sand-ship at Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-025.JPG
  • A sand-ship on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-026.JPG
  • A sand-ship on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-018.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. A night view of the HuangPo River and the Pudong syline. 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
    08-16-029.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. A view of the Yangtze River. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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.
    Wuhan-China-08-22-017.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. On the banks of the Yangtze. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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.
    Wuhan-China-08-22-016.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. On the banks of the Yangtze. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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
    08-22-016.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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.
    Wuhan-China-08-22-009.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. A man on a a boat passing through the 3 Gorges Dam.  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-08-19-099.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Boats passing through the 3 Gorges Dam.  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-08-19-094.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Two villagers dressed in traditional clothes near the  3 Gorges.  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-08-19-076.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  Men travelling down the Yangtze. 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-08-19-007.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Wuhan. Wuhan (population 4.3 million) is a sprawling city that sits on both sides of the Yangtze River. Its trade has been inextricably linked with the Yangtze river for centuries. The Yangtze River 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
    08-22-009.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. A night view of the HuangPo River and the Pudong syline. 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-08-16-029.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. A boat passing through the 3 Gorges Dam.  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-08-19-097.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. A boy on a boat passing through the 3 Gorges Dam.  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-08-19-095.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. A man and his son in a village near the 3 Gorges.  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-08-19-078.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  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-08-19-005.JPG
  • Men walking near Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-001.JPG
  • CHINA.Wuzhen. The town of Wuzhen is located in the center of the six ancient towns south of Yangtze River, 10 miles north of the city of Tongxiang, Wuzhen displays a two-thousand-year history in its ancient stone bridges, stone pathways between the mottled walls and its delicate wood carvings all lying above a network of canals and small lakes. 2008
    08-24-035.JPG
  • A woman on the beach in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province. Major coastal developments have been one of the major causes of mangrove loss. Over the past century, the world has lost over 50% of its coastal mangroves. They have been cleared mainly to make way for commercial shrimp and fish farms. The unique trees which live in salt water are valued for the ability to protect shorelines and are home to a diverse array of flora and fauna. 2010
    Mangroves-Guangdong-China-10-16-041.JPG
  • Local Tibetans stand by the head of a statue at Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-057.JPG
  • A female Tibetan monk looks out from a boat window on Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-054.JPG
  • The reservoir behind the Zipingpu dam, which lies just a few kilometres upstream from the Dujiangyan Irrigation System, a 2000-year old structure which harvests summer flood waters.  The new dam has resulted in changing water flow and has caused numerous environmental concerns for local ecosystems. Sichuan Province. 2010
    Dujiangyan-Irrigation-Sichuan-10-13-...JPG
  • The reservoir behind the Zipingpu dam, which lies just a few kilometres upstream from the Dujiangyan Irrigation System, a 2000-year old structure which harvests summer flood waters.  The new dam has resulted in changing water flow and has caused numerous environmental concerns for local ecosystems. Sichuan Province. 2010
    Dujiangyan-Irrigation-Sichuan-10-13-...JPG
  • Scene next to the Yangtze River in Wuhan, central China.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1933604 <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-08-22-010.JPG
  • A passenger boat cruises along the Ganges River in Kolkata.<br />
<br />
To license this image, please contact the National Geographic Creative Collection:<br />
<br />
Image ID: 1925781 <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-13-28-355.JPG
  • Major coastal developments have been one of the major causes of mangrove loss in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province. Over the past century, the world has lost over 50% of its coastal mangroves. They have been cleared mainly to make way for commercial shrimp and fish farms. The unique trees which live in salt water are valued for the ability to protect shorelines and are home to a diverse array of flora and fauna. 2010
    Mangroves-Guangdong-China-10-16-044.JPG
  • Major coastal developments have been one of the major causes of mangrove loss in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province. Over the past century, the world has lost over 50% of its coastal mangroves. They have been cleared mainly to make way for commercial shrimp and fish farms. The unique trees which live in salt water are valued for the ability to protect shorelines and are home to a diverse array of flora and fauna. 2010
    Mangroves-Guangdong-China-10-16-043.JPG
  • Local residents take to the water to escape the summer heat in the city of Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province. 2010
    Mangroves-Guangdong-China-10-16-014.JPG
  • Tourists visiting Qinghai Lake. Qinghai Lake, China's largest inland body of water lies at over 3000m on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. The lake has been shrinking in recent decades, as a result of increased water-usage for local agriculture. Qinghai Province. China. 2010
    Qinghai-Lake-China-10-14-042.JPG
  • CHINA. Hubei Province. Villagers dressed in tradional dress near the 3 Gorges.  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-08-19-077.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  Passengers on a boat on the Yangtze River near the three Gorges. 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-08-19-008.JPG
  • A man riding a boat on Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-049.JPG
  • Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-038.JPG
  • Reducing water levels in the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-004.JPG
  • Reducing water levels in the Zhalong Wetlands, Heilongjiang Province. China. 2011
    Zhalong-Wetlands-China-10-11-003.JPG
  • Major coastal developments have been one of the major causes of mangrove loss in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province. Over the past century, the world has lost over 50% of its coastal mangroves. They have been cleared mainly to make way for commercial shrimp and fish farms. The unique trees which live in salt water are valued for the ability to protect shorelines and are home to a diverse array of flora and fauna. 2010
    Mangroves-Guangdong-China-10-16-036.JPG
  • A young boy escapes the flooding near Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-005.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. A boat passes by the famous PuDong skyline. 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
    08-16-046.JPG
  • Children play near a shipyard on the shores of Dongting Lake, Hunan Province. Dongting Lake has decreased in size in recent decades as a result of land reclamation and damming of the Yangtze. China. 2010
    Dongting-Lake-China-10-12-037.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. 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
    08-16-030.JPG
  • CHINA. Chongqing Province.  A poster of Mao near the town of Fengdu that is yo be flooded by damming the Yangtze near the town of YiChang. It  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-08-19-002.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. A boat passes by the famous PuDong skyline. 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-08-16-046.JPG
  • CHINA. Shanghai. 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-08-16-030.JPG
  • A container ship enters Dongjiang port in Tianjin. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-045.JPG
  • A container ship enters Dongjiang port in Tianjin. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-042.JPG
  • CHINA. Jiangxi Province.  Jiujiang. Ships pass a temple on the banks of the Yangtze River. Jiujiang is a city of 4.6 million people, located on the southern shore of the Yangtze River. The Yangtze River 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
    08-09-014.JPG
  • CHINA. Jiangxi Province.  Jiujiang. Ships passing along the Yangtze River. Jiujiang is a city of 4.6 million people, located on the southern shore of the Yangtze River. The Yangtze River 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
    08-09-010.JPG
  • CHINA. Jiangxi Province.  Jiujiang. Ships passing along the Yangtze river. Jiujiang is a city of 4.6 million people, located on the southern shore of the Yangtze River. The Yangtze River 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
    08-09-042.JPG
  • CHINA. Jiangxi Province.  Jiujiang. Ships passing along the Yangtze River. Jiujiang is a city of 4.6 million people, located on the southern shore of the Yangtze River. The Yangtze River 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
    08-09-012.JPG
  • A sea wall protects Dongjiang port in Tianjin. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-152.JPG
  • A pier juts into Bohai Bay at Tianjin port. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-150.JPG
  • A sea wall which protects part of Tianjin port. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-149.JPG
  • Ships in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China. This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-025.JPG
  • A man climbs over a sea wall which protects Tianjin port. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-148.JPG
  • A sea wall protects Dongjiang port in Tianjin. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-051.JPG
  • A sea wall protects Dongjiang port in Tianjin. The port has been built largely on reclaimed land and is now one of the busiest port cities in the world. It is protected predominantly by sea walls of various shapes and sizes which help shelter the coastline and the ships delivering goods in and out of northern China. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-048.JPG
  • The wreck of the ship 'Van Camp' lies off of the coast of the island of Fongafale in the Funafuti atoll. The ship ran aground during a typhoon in the 1970's. The last remnants of the ship's shell are slowly dissapearing to the ocean, as modern vessels (in background) continue to ply the waters nearby. Tuvalu is made up of a collection of small islands and coral atolls, totalling only 27 square kilometres, scattered over 500,000 square kilometres of ocean. The highest point throughout the country is only 5 metres above sea level, resulting in special vulnerability to sea level rise. Funafuti, Tuvalu. March, 2019.
    Tuvalu-19-05-112.JPG
  • The wreck of the ship 'Van Camp' lies off of the coast of the island of Fongafale in the Funafuti atoll. The ship ran aground during a typhoon in the 1970's. The last remnants of the ship's shell are slowly disappearing to the ocean. Tuvalu is made up of a collection of small islands and coral atolls, totalling only 27 square kilometres, scattered over 500,000 square kilometres of ocean. The highest point throughout the country is only 5 metres above sea level, resulting in special vulnerability to sea level rise. Funafuti, Tuvalu. March, 2019.
    Tuvalu-19-05-100.JPG
  • The wreck of the ship 'Van Camp' lies off of the coast of the island of Fongafale in the Funafuti atoll. The ship ran aground during a typhoon in the 1970's. The last remnants of the ship's shell are slowly disappearing to the ocean. Tuvalu is made up of a collection of small islands and coral atolls, totalling only 27 square kilometres, scattered over 500,000 square kilometres of ocean. The highest point throughout the country is only 5 metres above sea level, resulting in special vulnerability to sea level rise.
    Tuvalu-19-05-101.JPG
  • The wreck of the ship 'Van Camp' lies off of the coast of the island of Fongafale in the Funafuti atoll. The ship ran aground during a typhoon in the 1970's. The last remnants of the ship's shell are slowly disappearing to the ocean, as modern vessels (in background) continue to ply the waters nearby. Tuvalu is made up of a collection of small islands and coral atolls, totalling only 27 square kilometres, scattered over 500,000 square kilometres of ocean. The highest point throughout the country is only 5 metres above sea level, resulting in special vulnerability to sea level rise.  Funafuti, Tuvalu. March, 2019.
    Tuvalu-19-05-056.JPG
  • A ship off of the coast of southern Sri Lanka.
    15-20-101.JPG
  • A sand ship passes down the Yangtze River in Nanjing.
    13-21-037.jpg
  • A machine gun sits on the deck of the USS Pueblo, a captured US ship, which is now a tourist site in Pyongyang.
    09-15-182.JPG
  • Workers unload goods from a ship in the port area of northern Jakarta.
    Jakarta-Sinking-City-13-15-170.JPG
  • CHINA. Jiangxi Province.  Jiujiang. A ship passes by a temple along the Yangtze River. Jiujiang is a city of 4.6 million people, located on the southern shore of the Yangtze River. The Yangtze River 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
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  • A ship on Indian Ocean, off of the coast of Colombo.
    15-20-152.JPG
  • A Japanese Coast Guard ship at dock in Naha city. Okinawa, Japan. 2012
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  • A ship in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China.  This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-028.JPG
  • A ship leaves a trail in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China. This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-029.JPG
  • A ship in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China. This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-026.JPG
  • A ship on Indian Ocean, off of the coast of Colombo.
    15-20-151.JPG
  • A ship in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China.  This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-027.JPG
  • A ship in the Tao'er estuary that feeds into Boahai Bay in Shandong Province, China.  This stretch of coastline has been highlighted as one of the most vulnerable in China and will be one of the first to feel the impacts of rising sea levels and increased storm surges. 2019
    Bohai-Bay-19-10-030.JPG
  • Colourful shipping containers in the port area of Jakarta.
    13-21-064.jpg
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