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  • People fish from a small boat in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610165.JPG
  • A brown pelican flies over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521035.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521020.JPG
  • A stone wall topped with cactus as a security barrier in the ghost town of Mineral de Pozos, Guanajuato, Mexico. The town, once a major silver mining center was abandoned and left to ruin but has slowly comeback to life as a bohemian arts community.
    Pozos Mexico_20171027066.JPG
  • A brown pelican flies over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521028.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521024.JPG
  • A seagull flies over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521034.JPG
  • A seagull flies over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521031.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521027.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521025.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611226.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611223.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611222.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611218.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_611236.JPG
  • Great egrets line a tidal pond inside Bulls Island in the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610249.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge surrounded by oyster mounds near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610187.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge surrounded by oyster mounds near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610185.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610184.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron is reflected in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge as it hunts for fish near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610182.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610180.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610177.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron is reflected as it hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610176.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610175.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a small fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610173.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron lands in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610171.JPG
  • A flats fisherman casts a fly rod from a small boat in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610169.JPG
  • A boat passes through the intracoastal waterway heading north through the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610167.JPG
  • People fish from a small boat in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610166.JPG
  • Police erect a barrier to stop vehicles from driving flooded streets in the historic district as Hurricane Joaquin brings heavy rain, flooding and strong winds as it passes offshore October 4, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32563.JPG
  • Police erect a barrier to stop vehicles from driving flooded streets in the historic district as Hurricane Joaquin brings heavy rain, flooding and strong winds as it passes offshore October 4, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32564.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521026.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521023.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521022.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521021.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521018.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521017.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_521016.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron flies over the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521036.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron flies over the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521032.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521030.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_521019.JPG
  • Sunrise over the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611221.JPG
  • Sunrise peaks through clouds causing crepuscular rays across the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611220.JPG
  • Sunrise peaks through clouds causing crepuscular rays across the tidal salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Marsh Sunrise_611219.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_611235.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_611234.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_611233.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge surrounded by oyster mounds near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610186.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron is reflected in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge as it hunts for fish near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610183.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610181.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron looks at a fish it captured in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610179.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron spears a fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610178.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron is reflected as it hunts for fish in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610174.JPG
  • A great egret also called a great white heron lands in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Great Egret_610172.JPG
  • People fish from a small boat in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610168.JPG
  • A flats fisherman poles his small boat in the salt marshes of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near Charleston, South Carolina. The 66,287 acre National Wildlife Refuge encompass water impoundments, creeks, bays, emergent salt marsh and barrier islands most of which is only accessible by boat.
    Cape Romain_610170.JPG
  • lighthouse on Morris Island in South Carolina. The light stands on the southern side of the entrance to Charleston Harbor, north of the town of Folly Beach...The lighthouse is unusual in that it now stands several hundred feet offshore. When constructed in 1876 the light was approximately 1,200 feet (370 m) from the water's edge. However, the construction in 1889 of the jetties which protect the shipping lanes leading to Charleston Harbor altered ocean currents, resulting in the rapid erosion of Morris Island and the destruction of many structures and historical sites (such as Fort Wagner). By 1938 the shoreline had reached the lighthouse, forcing its automation as it was no longer safe or practical to keep it manned. In 1962 the Morris Island Light was decommissioned and replaced by the Sullivan Island Lighthouse on the north side of the harbor.The Charleston Light, located on Morris Island, at the entrance to the harbor of Charleston, SC, was one of the colonial lights turned over to the Federal Government under the terms of the act of August 7, 1789. The light was in a brick tower, built by the Colony of South Carolina in 1767.
    pp_charleston_100201.JPG
  • lighthouse on Morris Island in South Carolina. The light stands on the southern side of the entrance to Charleston Harbor, north of the town of Folly Beach...The lighthouse is unusual in that it now stands several hundred feet offshore. When constructed in 1876 the light was approximately 1,200 feet (370 m) from the water's edge. However, the construction in 1889 of the jetties which protect the shipping lanes leading to Charleston Harbor altered ocean currents, resulting in the rapid erosion of Morris Island and the destruction of many structures and historical sites (such as Fort Wagner). By 1938 the shoreline had reached the lighthouse, forcing its automation as it was no longer safe or practical to keep it manned. In 1962 the Morris Island Light was decommissioned and replaced by the Sullivan Island Lighthouse on the north side of the harbor.The Charleston Light, located on Morris Island, at the entrance to the harbor of Charleston, SC, was one of the colonial lights turned over to the Federal Government under the terms of the act of August 7, 1789. The light was in a brick tower, built by the Colony of South Carolina in 1767.
    pp_charleston_1002.JPG
  • lighthouse on Morris Island in South Carolina. The light stands on the southern side of the entrance to Charleston Harbor, north of the town of Folly Beach...The lighthouse is unusual in that it now stands several hundred feet offshore. When constructed in 1876 the light was approximately 1,200 feet (370 m) from the water's edge. However, the construction in 1889 of the jetties which protect the shipping lanes leading to Charleston Harbor altered ocean currents, resulting in the rapid erosion of Morris Island and the destruction of many structures and historical sites (such as Fort Wagner). By 1938 the shoreline had reached the lighthouse, forcing its automation as it was no longer safe or practical to keep it manned. In 1962 the Morris Island Light was decommissioned and replaced by the Sullivan Island Lighthouse on the north side of the harbor.The Charleston Light, located on Morris Island, at the entrance to the harbor of Charleston, SC, was one of the colonial lights turned over to the Federal Government under the terms of the act of August 7, 1789. The light was in a brick tower, built by the Colony of South Carolina in 1767.
    ellis_charleston_002.jpg
  • Sullivan's Island Lighthouse also called the Charleston Light marks the entry to Charleston Harbor. ..Sullivan's Island, South Carolina, which is the northern entrance to Charleston harbor, was built to replace the old Charleston light on Morris Island. Construction was started in 1960, and it was first lit on June 15, 1962.The lighthouse has a steel frame, an aluminum alloy skin, and a modern triangular cross section. It is 140 ft (42.7 m) tall. The focal plane of the light is 163 ft (49.7 m) above mean sea level. The daymark is a black upper half and white lower half. It is the only U.S. lighthouse with an elevator and was the last manned lighthouse to be built...It has a DCB 24 light. It originally had 28-million candela (candlepower) that was the most powerful in the Western Hemisphere. As the light was actually too dazzling, the power was lowered to 1.2 million candela that still be seen over 26 miles. Its characteristic is two 0.2 s flashes separated by 4.8 s every 30 s. The light was automated in 1975.
    ellis_charleston_001.jpg
  • Sunrise over Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is a Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge.
    Bulls_Island_310.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach at Botany Bay Plantation July 11, 2014 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Botany_Bay_29800.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_521037.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_521033.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611225a.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611230.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611228.JPG
  • An juvenile Atlantic bottlenose dolphin surfaces in the saltwater tidal marsh of Grey Bay on the edge of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge at sunrise June 1, 2017 near Charleston, South Carolina. A subspecies of estuary bottlenose dolphins live in the marsh along the coast and never venture into the open ocean.
    Dolphin Marsh_611227.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610248.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610247.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610246.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610244.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610243.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610242.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610241.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610238.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610237.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610235.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610234.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610231.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610230.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610227.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610225.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610222.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610220.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610218.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610217.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610214.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610210.JPG
  • Sunrise over the Boneyard Beach on Bulls Island, South Carolina. Bulls Island is an uninhabited Sea Island 3 miles off the mainland and part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Rising tides caused by climate change and shifting sand has eroded the beach stranding part of the coastal forest in sea water.
    Bulls Island_610205.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach as the tide swirls around driftwood trees at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Edisto_Island_45260.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach as the tide swirls around driftwood trees at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Edisto_Island_45259.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach as the tide swirls around driftwood trees at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Edisto_Island_45258.JPG
  • A white-tailed deer fawn walks through the woods at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina.
    Whitetailed_Deer_45257.JPG
  • A doe white-tailed deer walks through the woods at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina.
    Whitetailed_Deer_45254.JPG
  • A white-tailed deer fawn walks through the woods at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina.
    Whitetailed_Deer_45253.JPG
  • A doe and fawn white-tail deer walk through the woods at Botany Bay Plantation July 3, 2016 in Edisto Island, South Carolina.
    Whitetailed_Deer_45250.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach at Botany Bay Plantation July 11, 2014 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Botany_Bay_29801.JPG
  • Dawn breaks over Boneyard Beach at Botany Bay Plantation July 11, 2014 in Edisto Island, South Carolina. Each year 144,000 cubic yards of sand is washed away with the waves at the beach and nearshore eroding the coastal forest along the beachfront.
    Botany_Bay_29797.JPG
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