Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 102 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Participant in the pigs feet dunking contest during the annual Summer Redneck Games Dublin, GA.
    redneck_games_0033.JPG
  • The flipper feet of a northern sea otter as it floats in Kachemak Bay at the City of Homer Port & Harbor marina in Homer, Alaska.
    Sea Otter_20190913_043.JPG
  • Participant in the pigs feet dunking contest during the annual Summer Redneck Games Dublin, GA.
    redneck_games_0031.JPG
  • A rooster is trained for cock fighting in Puerto Rico. Close-up of the chickens feet and spurs.
    cockfighting_puerto_rico050.JPG
  • A rooster is trained for cock fighting in Puerto Rico. Close-up of the chickens feet and spurs.
    cockfighting_puerto_rico038.JPG
  • A rooster is trained for cock fighting in Puerto Rico. Close-up of the chickens feet and spurs.
    cockfighting_puerto_rico037.JPG
  • The flipper feet of a northern sea otter as it floats in Kachemak Bay at the City of Homer Port & Harbor marina in Homer, Alaska.
    Sea Otter_20190913_040.JPG
  • A competitor during dunking for pigs feet contest at the 2015 National Red Neck Championships May 2, 2015 in Augusta, Georgia. Hundreds of people joined in a day of country sport and activities.
    Red_Neck_275.JPG
  • A competitor during dunking for pigs feet contest at the 2015 National Red Neck Championships May 2, 2015 in Augusta, Georgia. Hundreds of people joined in a day of country sport and activities.
    Red_Neck_274.JPG
  • Participant in the pigs feet dunking contest during the annual Summer Redneck Games Dublin, GA.
    redneck_games_0032.JPG
  • A rooster is trained for cock fighting in Puerto Rico. Close-up of the chickens feet and spurs.
    cockfighting_puerto_rico060.JPG
  • A rooster is trained for cock fighting in Puerto Rico. Close-up of the chickens feet and spurs.
    cockfighting_puerto_rico049.JPG
  • Jaycee volunteer snake handlers stand among hundreds of western diamondback rattlesnakes in a snake pit during the 51st Annual Sweetwater Texas Rattlesnake Round-Up March 13, 2009 in Sweetwater, Texas. During the three-day event approximately 240,000 pounds of rattlesnake will be collected, milked and served to support charity.
    Rattlesnake roundup_031.JPG
  • Tourists in the all glass balcony skydeck observation deck view the Chicago skyline103rd floor of the Willis Tower previously the Sears Tower.
    chicago_0115.JPG
  • A Mexican charro or cowboy practices roping skills on his horse at a hacienda ranch in Alcocer, Mexico. The Charreada is a traditional Mexican form of rodeo and tests the skills of the cowboy at riding, roping and controlling cattle.
    Mexican_Cowboy_36469.JPG
  • Agora a group of 106 headless and armless iron sculptures by Polish artist Magdalena Abakanowicz, in Grant Park Chicago USA
    Chicago_13307.JPG
  • Fresh slaughtered chickens at Benito Juarez market in Oaxaca, Mexico.
    Oaxaca_Mexico_1055.JPG
  • Tourists in the all glass balcony skydeck observation deck view the Chicago skyline103rd floor of the Willis Tower previously the Sears Tower.
    chicago_0114.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
  • 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
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75049.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75050.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75048.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75047.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75045.JPG
  • Tourists walk along the boardwalk at Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75044.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75043.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75041.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75039.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75038.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75036.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75035.JPG
  • Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming. The Excelsior Geyser can be seen behind.
    Grand Prismatic_75033.JPG
  • Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming. The Excelsior Geyser can be seen behind.
    Grand Prismatic_75023.JPG
  • Tourists walk along the boardwalk at Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming. The Excelsior Geyser can be seen behind.
    Grand Prismatic_75024.JPG
  • Tourists walk along the boardwalk at Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming. The Excelsior Geyser can be seen behind.
    Grand Prismatic_75022.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75046.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75042.JPG
  • Tourists walk along the boardwalk at Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75040.JPG
  • Colorful cyanobacteria mats surround the Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from microorganisms growing in the hot water runoff. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75037.JPG
  • Tourists walk along the boardwalk at Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming. The Excelsior Geyser can be seen in the foreground.
    Grand Prismatic_75034.JPG
  • Grand Prismatic Spring the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park and third largest in the world. Grand Prismatic is about 250 by 300 feet in size, averages 160 degrees Fahrenheit and is up to 160 feet deep. The bright colors around the spring are from cyanobacteria mats. The Grand Prismatic Spring is part of the Midway Geyser Basin Excelsior Group in Yellowstone, Wyoming.
    Grand Prismatic_75032.JPG
  • A construction tarp looking like a giant donut hangs 180 feet above the rotunda of the US Capitol dome during renovation work June 16, 1999 in Washington, DC. The dome, finished in 1866, is undergoing rehabilitation and will be completed in 2003.
    Capitol_Dome_2274.JPG
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_031.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_024.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans walk through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_020.jpg
  • A pair of trumpeter swans swim in the Potter Creek marsh with the Chugach Mountains behind outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_015.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_030.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_029.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_023.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans walk through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_018.jpg
  • The Alyeska Aerial Tram climbs up the mountains in Girdwood, Alaska. The cable tram climbs 2,300 feet to the top of Mt. Alyeska in the Church Mountains.
    Girdwood Alaska_20170723106.JPG
  • The Alyeska Aerial Tram climbs up the mountains in Girdwood, Alaska. The cable tram climbs 2,300 feet to the top of Mt. Alyeska in the Church Mountains.
    Girdwood Alaska_20170723103.JPG
  • The Alyeska Aerial Tram climbs up the mountains in Girdwood, Alaska. The cable tram climbs 2,300 feet to the top of Mt. Alyeska in the Church Mountains.
    Girdwood Alaska_20170723102.JPG
  • The station for the Alyeska Aerial Tram in Girdwood, Alaska. The cable tram climbs 2,300 feet to the top of Mt. Alyeska in the Church Mountains.
    Girdwood Alaska_20170723101.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71664.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71663.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71659.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71589.JPG
  • Horse carriages make their way through floodwater along the Battery in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32631.JPG
  • Horse carriages make their way through floodwater along the Battery in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32629.JPG
  • A young man stands on the narrow bulkhead between the harbor and flooded land along Murray Blvd in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32625.JPG
  • Sunset over the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge, also known as the New Cooper River Bridge in Charleston, SC. The bridge is a cable-stayed bridge over the Cooper River in South Carolina, connecting downtown Charleston to Mount Pleasant. The eight lane bridge opened in 2005 to replace two obsolete cantilever truss bridges. The bridge has a main span of 1,546 feet (471 m), the second longest among cable-stayed bridges in the Western Hemisphere. It was built using the design-build method and was designed by Parsons Brinckerhoff.
    Ravenel_Bridge_020.JPG
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_033.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_025.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans walk through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_017.jpg
  • A pair of trumpeter swans swim in the Potter Creek marsh with the Chugach Mountains behind outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_016.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_032.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_034.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_028.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_027.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_026.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_022.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans walk through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_019.jpg
  • A pair of trumpeter swans swim in the Potter Creek marsh with the Chugach Mountains behind outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_014.jpg
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71666.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71665.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71662.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71661.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71660.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71658.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71652.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71590.JPG
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71588.JPG
  • A car plows through floodwater along the Battery past Water Street in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32635.JPG
  • Tourists jump back from ocean spray as high tides and flooding continued to plague the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32634.JPG
  • Horse carriages make their way through floodwater along the Battery in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32632.JPG
  • Tourists jump back from ocean spray as high tides and flooding continued to plague the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32633.JPG
  • A police car patrols through floodwater along the Battery in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32630.JPG
  • A resident walks through floodwaters to his home in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32628.JPG
  • A postal delivery van pass through floodwaters along Murray Blvd in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32627.JPG
  • Vehicles pass through floodwaters along Murray Blvd in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32626.JPG
  • Water bubbles up through the sidewalk along Murray Blvd in the historic district after record breaking storms dumped more than two feet of rain on the lowcountry October 5, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.
    Hurricane_Joaquin_32624.JPG
  • An exhausted father sleeps in a store as his children play at his feet in Chicago, IL.
    Chicago_13214.JPG
  • A woman firefighter carries a 175-pound mannequin backwards about 100 feet, all while wearing full firefighting gear and working against the clock during the international finals of the Firefighter Combat Challenge on November 18, 2011 in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
    firefighters_01.JPG
  • Confederate re-enactor sleeping with his feet out of his tent during the 150th commemoration of the US Civil War Charleston, SC.
    civil_war_236.JPG
  • A family of trumpeter swans walk through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_021.jpg
  • A family of trumpeter swans swim through Potter Creek at Turnagain Arm outside Anchorage, Alaska. Trumpeter swans are the largest of North American waterfowl and have a wing span of 7 feet.
    Trumpeter Swans_20190914_035.jpg
  • The twin peaks of Denali, the highest mountain in North America in a rare clear day in Denali National Park Alaska. Denali, once called Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain peak in North America, with a summit elevation of 20,310 feet (6,190 m) above sea level. Denali National Park and Preserve encompasses 6 million acres of Alaska’s interior wilderness.
    Denali_71657.JPG
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Ellis Photography

  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Contact Me
  • Archive Search
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area