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  • Rabida Cliffs<br />
Red Beach<br />
Rabida<br />
Galapagos<br />
Ecuador, South America
    20160617_Rabida_Cliffs_1648.jpg
  • Rabida Cliffs<br />
Red Beach<br />
Rabida<br />
Galapagos<br />
Ecuador, South America
    20160617_Rabida_Cliffs_1635.jpg
  • Cliffs of Cordillera Real, Andes<br />
Condor Bioreserve as part of the Antisana Ecological Reserve<br />
ECUADOR, South America<br />
Last erupted between 1801 and 1802
    20160717_Cliffs_of_Cordillera_Real_1...jpg
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_297.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_264.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_230.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_192.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_182.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_156.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_110.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_74.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_348.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_287.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_288.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_269.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_281.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_186.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_175.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_127.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_153.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_133.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_114.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_83.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_90.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_55.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_61.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs & Tourists<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_&_T...TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_46.TIF
  • Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Alkefjellet_Bird_cliffs_166.TIF
  • Flaming Cliffs & rainbow<br />
Gobi Desert<br />
Mongolia<br />
site of famous dinosaur finds from 1922 expedition
    89752_Flaming_Cliffs_&_rainbow.jpg
  • Sand Stone Cliffs<br />
nesting sites of Lear's Macaw (very rare)<br />
Caatinga Habitat.  Bahia State, NE BRAZIL.  South America<br />
Threatened Habitat
    113026 Sand Stone Cliffs.tif
  • Sand Stone Cliffs<br />
nesting sites of Lear's Macaw (very rare)<br />
Caatinga Habitat.  Bahia State, NE BRAZIL.  South America<br />
Threatened Habitat
    113011 Sand Stone Cliffs.tif
  • Red Sandstone Cliffs in Cerrado Habitat<br />
THREATENED HABITAT<br />
Piaui State.  BRAZIL  South America
    112935 Red Sandstone Cliffs.tif
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180526_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_412.TIF
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
Steeple Jason Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    SJ670 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180526_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180526_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180525_Brunnich's_Guillemot_124.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180525_Brunnich's_Guillemot_122.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180525_Brunnich's_Guillemot_119.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_584.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_488.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_473.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_431.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_421.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_408.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_400.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_390.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_372.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_365.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_337.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_323.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_284.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_37.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP809 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP812 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP813 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP807 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP779 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP776 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP669 Rockhopper Penguins.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP663 Rockhopper Penguins.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP591 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP486 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP482 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP488 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP411 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP401 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP386 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP393 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP389 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP106 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP51 Rockhopper Penguins.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
West Point Island. Off of West Falkland Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    WP101 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Fossilized claw (Protoceratops dinosaur)<br />
near Flaming Cliffs<br />
Gobi Desert<br />
Mongolia
    103592_Fossilized_claw.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome) & Black-browed Albatross (Thalassarche melanophrys) <br />
Steeple Jason Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
The Penguins return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.<br />
<br />
Black-browed Albatross return to the same nest annually. The nest is a a solid pillar up to 50cm high of mud and guano with some grass and seaweed incorporated. A single egg is laid in October and juveniles fledge between mid March and April. They have a circumpolar range betweeen 65 S and 20 south and breed on Subantarctic Islands, Including South Georgia and islands off southern South America. In the Falklands they are also found on Beauchene, Saunders, West Point and New Island.<br />
The Jasons (Grand, Elephant and Steeple) are a chain of islands 40 miles (64km) north and west off West Falkland towards Patagonia. Steeple is 6 by 1 mile (10Km by 1.6km) in size. From the coast the land rises steeply to a rocky ridge running along the length. <br />
THIS ISLAND HAS THE LARGEST BLACK-BROWED COLONY IN THE WORLD WITH 100,000+ PAIRS. The island is owned by WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) Falklands Conservation have an ongoing research project with the Albatross on Steeple Jason.<br />
LISTED AS ENDANGERED
    SJ920 Rockhopper Penguins & Albatros...jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome) & Black-browed Albatross (Thalassarche melanophrys) <br />
Steeple Jason Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
The Penguins return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.<br />
<br />
Black-browed Albatross return to the same nest annually. The nest is a a solid pillar up to 50cm high of mud and guano with some grass and seaweed incorporated. A single egg is laid in October and juveniles fledge between mid March and April. They have a circumpolar range betweeen 65 S and 20 south and breed on Subantarctic Islands, Including South Georgia and islands off southern South America. In the Falklands they are also found on Beauchene, Saunders, West Point and New Island.<br />
The Jasons (Grand, Elephant and Steeple) are a chain of islands 40 miles (64km) north and west off West Falkland towards Patagonia. Steeple is 6 by 1 mile (10Km by 1.6km) in size. From the coast the land rises steeply to a rocky ridge running along the length. <br />
THIS ISLAND HAS THE LARGEST BLACK-BROWED COLONY IN THE WORLD WITH 100,000+ PAIRS. The island is owned by WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) Falklands Conservation have an ongoing research project with the Albatross on Steeple Jason.<br />
LISTED AS ENDANGERED
    SJ822 Rockhopper Penguins & Albatros...jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome)<br />
Steeple Jason Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
They return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.
    SJ669 Rockhopper Penguin.jpg
  • Rockhopper Penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome) & Black-browed Albatross (Thalassarche melanophrys) <br />
Steeple Jason Island. FALKLAND ISLANDS.<br />
The Penguins return in early October to breed after their winter pelagic wandering. The males return about 10 days before the females. They nest in close-packed colonies on cliffs, often in association with Black-browed albatross and King Cormorants. They lay 2 eggs. The first egg is smaller and the chick is rarely reared to fledging. After the chicks fledge in April the colonies are once again deserted. They are the most abundant penguin species in the Falklands. They feed mostly on squid, Lobster Krill and fish.<br />
RANGE: Subantarctic Islands, Cape Horn, Ildefonso Island, Isla Morton, Isla Hornos and Southern Chile, Falkands and a few in South Georgia. Also Tristan de Cunha, Gough, St Paul and Amsterdam Islands, Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Antipodes and Auckland Islands.<br />
<br />
Black-browed Albatross return to the same nest annually. The nest is a a solid pillar up to 50cm high of mud and guano with some grass and seaweed incorporated. A single egg is laid in October and juveniles fledge between mid March and April. They have a circumpolar range betweeen 65 S and 20 south and breed on Subantarctic Islands, Including South Georgia and islands off southern South America. In the Falklands they are also found on Beauchene, Saunders, West Point and New Island.<br />
The Jasons (Grand, Elephant and Steeple) are a chain of islands 40 miles (64km) north and west off West Falkland towards Patagonia. Steeple is 6 by 1 mile (10Km by 1.6km) in size. From the coast the land rises steeply to a rocky ridge running along the length. <br />
THIS ISLAND HAS THE LARGEST BLACK-BROWED COLONY IN THE WORLD WITH 100,000+ PAIRS. The island is owned by WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) Falklands Conservation have an ongoing research project with the Albatross on Steeple Jason.<br />
LISTED AS ENDANGERED
    SJ643 Rockhopper Penguin & Albatross.jpg
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180526_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_518.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_501.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_446.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_341.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_316.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_8.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_20.TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
  • Brunnich's Guillemot & Scenery<br />
(Uria lomvia)<br />
Alkefjellet Bird cliffs<br />
Spitsbergen<br />
Svalbard<br />
Norway<br />
Arctic Ocean
    20180522_Brunnich's_Guillemot_&_Scen...TIF
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