In the early morning,a Maasai herdsboy and his sister drive their family's flock of sheep across the friable,dusty plains near Malambo in northern Tanzania.
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Resolución de Internet
550×353px
19.4×12.5cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
1056×679px
37.3×24.0cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
2338×1503px
19.8×12.7cm 118ppcm
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6600×4244px
55.9×35.9cm 118ppcm
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- aborigen
- adulto
- África
- africano (hombre y mujer)
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- animal
- animal doméstico
- AWL Images
- cultura
- desierto (inhabitado)
- femenino
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- ganadería
- ganado
- gente
- hombre
- imagen a color
- indígena
- infantil
- juventud
- Llano
- llanura
- manada
- Masai
- masculino
- menor
- menores
- miembro de una tribu
- niña
- niño
- niño (niño y niña)
- oveja
- Ovis aries
- paisaje
- paisajístico
- pastor (hombre)
- pastor (hombre y mujer)
- pastorear
- pintoresco
- poco denso
- polvo
- República Unida de Tanzania
- ropa tradicional
- rural
- rústico
- sacar fotos
- tío
- tradición
- tribal
- vacío
- vista
Imágenes relacionadas
- In the early morning,a Maasai family drives their livestock across the friable,dusty plains near Malambo in northern Tanzania.
- Maasai herdsmen drive their cattle home in the late afternoon over the dusty volcanic soil at the base of the western wall of the Gregory Rift,which dominates the landscape in this remote corner of northern Tanzania.
- A young Maasai herdsboy controls his family's cattle at the Sanjan River to prevent too many animals watering at the same time.
- A young Maasai herdsboy drives his family's herds to grazing grounds close to the Sanjan River in Northern Tanzania.
- A Maasai warrior drives his family's cattle to the Sanjan River in northern Tanzania
- A Maasai warrior and a young herdsboy draw water for livestock from the deep wells at Naberera where cattle paths are cut deep into the soil to allow livestock nearer to the source of water.
- Two Maasai warriors,spears on their shoulders,leave the friable dusty banks of the Sanjan River after watering their cattle.
- Deep Maasai wells at Loibor Serrit where cattle paths are cut deep into the soil to allow livestock nearer to the source of water. Despite this immense amount of manual labour.Four fit, young men are necessary to bring water to the stock troughs about 30 feet above the water level at the bottom of the hand dug wells.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Maasai pastoralists water their livestock at the seasonal Sanjan River,which rises in the Gol Mountains of northern Tanzania.
- Maasai livestock watering at the seasonal Sanjan River,which rises in the Gol Mountains of northern Tanzania.
- In the late afternoon,a Maasai boy drives his father's cattle home across the grassy plains west of the Lake Manyara National Park.
- Maasai men,spears in hand,drive their laden donkeys across pristine volcanic grassland at the southern end of Lake Natron. Donkeys carry loads in leather panniers strapped loosely to their flanks
- Maasai men,spears in hand,drive their laden donkeys across pristine volcanic grassland at the southern end of Lake Natron. Donkeys carry loads in leather panniers strapped loosely to their flanks.
- Datoga herdsmen drive their family's cattle along the edge of Lake Balangida Lelu,a seasonal alkaline lake situated due south of Lake Eyasi in northern Tanzania. Balang'ida in the Datoga language means 'salt'.The Datoga (known to their Maasai neighbours as the Mang'ati and to the Iraqw as Babaraig) live in northern Tanzania and are primarily pastoralists.
- The scene at a Maasai manyatta,or homestead,as the first rays of sun herald another scorching day in an arid part of northern Tanzania,south of Lake Natron.
- Two young Datoga men work wells on the east side of Lake Manyara to water their family's livestock. The man who draws water balances precariously on two poles.The Datoga (known to their Maasai neighbours as the Mang'ati and to the Iraqw as Babaraig) live in northern Tanzania and are primarily pastoralists.