Month: August 2018
National Geographic Landscape Photos 2018
A hiker greets the morning in Yosemite Valley, California. Your Shot photographer Eric Harris says, “The adrenaline from standing on the edge of a 1,000-foot cliff helps me wake up.”



A worker cleans windows at the 124th floor of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai—the tallest building in the world. Taken in February, the photograph illustrates the low-level winter clouds that gather at sunrise.

The Chinese municipality of Chongqing is home to some 30 million people in southwest China. With more than 100 days of fog a year, Chongqing is nicknamed Fog City—and appropriately, its sister city in the United States is Seattle.

“This iconic maple seems to be on every photographer’s bucket list to photograph, including mine,” says Your Shot photographer Holly Fischer. The famous tree stands in the Portland Japanese Garden in Oregon. “It is just a simply stunning example of Mother Nature’s perfect brilliance,” Fischer says.


The sun rises behind Abraham Lake in the Canadian Rockies. Fluctuating water levels make ice conditions on the lake unpredictable—even in winter.

Sunlight shines into the water as a diver swims in a cenote in Mexico. “It’s an amazing and unique experience in the life of a underwater photographer,” says Your Shot photographer Fabrice Guerin. “The mysticism, beauty, and exuberance of these underwater landscapes make me feel like I discovered another world.”

Years and years of erosion have formed this meandering sandstone canyon in Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Below, vegetation thrives on the banks of the river that has cut through the stone for so long.

Leaves turn into an autumnal rainbow along the Kancamagus Highway in New Hampshire. “This is my favorite place on the whole scenic route,” says Your Shot photographer Manish Mamtani. “I always fly my drone here to capture the curve of the road and moving cars.”

In far northern Xinjiang, China, herders guide camels, sheep, and cattle to new pastures, where they’ll graze during the summer months. Summer in the area is warm, but very dry.

Early morning fog sweeps over northwestern New Mexico, where Shiprock stands 1,583 feet tall. The formation holds special significance to the Navajo people, who govern the land surrounding it.

Green space nestles between enormous apartment complexes in Hong Kong. Hong Kong is one of the most crowded places on earth, with more than 7 million people living in 427 square miles.

The sun sets over Grand Falls on the Little Colorado River in Arizona. “This view shows the effect of summer rains over the desert,” explains Your Shot photographer Bernhard Michaelis, “resulting in muddy flows which give the falls another name: Chocolate Falls.”

These limestone towers off the coast of Victoria, Australia, are known as the Twelve Apostles. It’s a bit of a misnomer, though—there are only eight, after a ninth collapsed in 2005.

Out of the Kīlauea Volcano on the island of Hawai’i, a fountain of lava streams into the ocean. When the hot lava hits the cool waters, an explosive reaction sends rocks and debris flying.

Classify this one as Super Stupid
This idiot is really lucky he didn’t get badly injured.
File this under ‘how not to interact with wildlife.’ A viral video shows a visitor apparently harassing a bison on a road at Yellowstone National Park. In the footage, a man in a blue shirt and shorts can be seen gesturing wildly at the animal, which grunts and charges, nearly goring the man in the process. Park officials called the man’s actions “reckless, dangerous, and illegal.”
The Time Tunnel
There was a science fiction TV show from the 1960’s called the Time Tunnel in which a massive U.S. government agency was building a time machine, called the Time Tunnel. The show itself was basically the adventures of two scientists who go back in time to prominent historic events and occasionally forward into the future.
But the best part of the show was the underground base in which the Time Tunnel was located. 36,000 people worked in the giant underground base in Arizona. Entering the base was done by going through a Batcave like entrance and then driving into a colossal parkade. The ground above the base looked like regular desert. The corridors and walkways in the base crisscrossed over thousand foot high drops.
This must be one of the best underground bases ever conceived.

Project Tic-Toc is a top secret U.S. government effort to build an experimental time machine, known as “The…
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Europe heatwave: All-time temperature could be broken
Europe is in the middle of a heatwave, and forecasters say the all-time temperature record could be broken in the coming days.
The current European record is 48C (118.4F), set in Athens in July 1977.
Southern Spain and Portugal are both forecast to hit 47C (116.6F) on Friday and Saturday.
Pictures show shrunken lakes and dry riverbeds, along with people cooling off with water fountains and beach umbrellas, including in the Spanish town of Benidorm, below.

Spain’s national weather service has put a warning in place until at least Sunday, saying the heatwave will be “especially intense and lasting in the southwest”.

Here a woman cools off in a fountain in the city of Seville.

The Trocadero Fountain in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris brought welcome relief for Parisians and visitors.

Temperatures in Montpellier were forecast to reach 33C (91.4F), not unusual for the time of the year.

Swimmers were finding a reprieve from the heat by leaping into the Mediterranean Sea in Nice, southeastern France.

Others enjoyed the view from the safety of sunhats.

In the Polish capital Warsaw, people and their pets used public sprinklers to keep cool.


At the Colosseum in central Rome, Italy, visitors used fans and parasols to escape the sun and heat as temperatures approached 40C (104F).

Members of the Italian Civil Protection authority distributed water bottles.

Fountains had heavy use in Rome.

BBC
Ethnic Origins in the Winnipeg Metropolitan Area

| Top 20 Ethnic Origins in the Winnipeg CMA (2011; Total Responses) |
Population | % | 2006 | Population | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English | 153,060 | 21.4 | English | 156,290 | 22.8 |
| Scottish | 126,320 | 17.7 | Scottish | 126,740 | 18.5 |
| Canadian | 123,445 | 17.3 | German | 121,565 | 17.7 |
| German | 121,470 | 17.0 | Canadian | 117,225 | 17.1 |
| Ukrainian | 115,230 | 16.1 | Ukrainian | 110,335 | 16.1 |
| French | 97,720 | 13.7 | French | 97,410 | 14.2 |
| Irish | 94,820 | 13.3 | Irish | 95,185 | 13.9 |
| Filipino | 58,535 | 8.2 | Polish | 58,050 | 8.5 |
| Polish | 58,440 | 8.2 | Métis | 42,175 | 6.1 |
| Métis | 46,070 | 6.4 | Filipino | 38,275 | 5.6 |
| First Nations | 40,010 | 5.6 | First Nations | 36,515 | 5.3 |
| Dutch | 29,060 | 4.1 | Dutch | 30,310 | 4.4 |
| Russian | 25,415 | 4.1 | Russian | 23,385 | 3.4 |
| Chinese | 20,410 | 2.9 | Italian | 18,580 | 2.7 |
| East Indian | 19,855 | 2.8 | Icelandic | 17,655 | 2.6 |
| Italian | 18,410 | 2.6 | Chinese | 16,695 | 2.4 |
| Icelandic | 18,210 | 2.5 | East Indian | 13,545 | 2.0 |
| Swedish | 13,910 | 1.9 | Swedish | 13,470 | 2.0 |
| Norwegian | 12,340 | 1.7 | Jewish | 12,210 | 1.8 |
| Jewish | 11,995 | 1.7 | Welsh | 11,350 | 1.6 |
| Portuguese | 11,490 | 1.6 | Belgian | 10,680 | 1.6 |
| Total population | 714,640 | 100 | Total population | 686,040 | 100 |








