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Resolución de Internet
426×550px
15.1×19.4cm 28ppcm
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746×961px
26.4×34.0cm 28ppcm
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1651×2128px
14.0×18.0cm 118ppcm
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30.6×39.4cm 118ppcm
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 40-44 años
- 40 años
- 851-
- aborigen
- adulto
- África
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- afrodescendiente
- afrodescendiente (hombre y mujer)
- aire libre
- al aire libre
- aldea
- animal
- árbol
- Axiom Photographic
- cabeza rapada
- cabra
- cadena
- cadena (joyería)
- collar
- decoración
- de pie
- desierto (terreno árido)
- día
- entre 40 y 50 años
- femenino
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- ganadería
- gente
- grupo mediano de animales
- imagen a color
- indígena
- Kenya
- maduro
- mujer
- paisaje
- paisajístico
- pintoresco
- Pueblo
- retrato
- ropa tradicional
- rural
- rústico
- sacar fotos
- Samburu
- seguro de sí
- solo
- sonrisa
- suelo
- tribal
- una persona
- uno
- uno (cantidad)
- vista
Imágenes relacionadas
- Samburu dancers at courtship ceremony,Samburuland,Kenya
- Camel safari along river,Samburuland,Kenya
- A Samburu boy herds his family's goats in the semi-arid terrain of northern Samburuland,a region characterised by grand vistas,poor soil and an unreliable rainfall. The palms are doum palms (Hyphaene compressa),which grow widely in Kenya.
- A Samburu girl drives her family's flocks of fat-tailed sheep and goats to grazing grounds after her brothers have watered them from wells dug in the Milgis - a wide,sandy seasonal watercourse that is a lifeline for Samburu pastoralists in the low-lying,semi-arid region of their land.
- A Samburu Warrior drives his goats along the wide,sandy seasonal watercourse of the Milgis where waterholes dug by the Samburu in the dry season are a lifeline for pastoralists in this semi-arid region of their district.
- A Samburu girl herds her family s goats near a waterhole dug in a seasonal river bed.
- A Samburu girl waters her family s goats at a waterhole dug in a seasonal river bed.
- Up to a year before his circumcision,a Samburu boy will style his hair is a distinctive 'pudding bowl' shape and often rub charcoal and fat into it.Uncircumcised boys are considered children whatever their age. They have no standing in the tribe and do not belong to an age-set..
Más imágenes relacionadas
- A Samburu warrior carries home a small calf to his family's manyatta (homestead) situated in the foothills of the rugged Ndoto Mountains. The Samburu of Northern Kenya are a semi-nomadic pastoral community related to their more famous cousins,the maa speaking Maasai.
- A Samburu homeguard looks out over the steep-sided gorge of Mount Kulal,which divides the mountain into two. Volcanic in origin,Mount Kulal rises to over 6,000 feet in Northern Kenya and is surrounded by a sea of lava and arid wastes. The mountain is forested on top and is a vital water resource. It's open grasslands give pastoralists good grazing for their livestock.
- In the early morning,young Samburu girls take kids to their mothers. They will then milk the nanny goats leaving half the milk for the kids. Only women and children milk goats although every member of the family will drink the milk.
- In the early morning,a young Samburu girl takes a kid to its mother. She will then milk the nanny goat leaving half the milk for the kid. Only women and children milk goats although every member of the family will drink the milk.
- A young Samburu herdsman drives goats towards a Waterhole along the Milgis - a wide,sandy seasonal watercourse which is a lifeline for pastoralists in the low-lying semi-arid region of their district. The hair style of the young man denotes his status as an uncircumcised youth.
- Portrait of Masai at Magadi Lake Village, Kenya
- A Samburu bride waits pensively outside her new home until she is enticed in with promises of cattle.Her wedding gown is made of three goatskins, which are well oiled and covered in red ochre.She carries on her back a gourd full of milk and a small wooden jar containing butter.She now wears the mporro necklace of married women.
- A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace, which denotes her married status. These necklaces were once made of hair from giraffe tails but nowadays, the fibres of doum palm fronds, Hyphaene coriacea, are used instead.The red beads after which the necklace is named are wound glass beads made in Venice c.1850.