Wooden fishing boats off the coast of Nouadhibou in northern Mauritania. The water surrounding Nouadhibou is the world's richest fishing area.
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Resolución de Internet
550×355px
19.4×12.5cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
1054×681px
37.2×24.1cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
2332×1506px
19.8×12.8cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
5700×3682px
48.3×31.2cm 118ppcm
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Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- actividad financiera
- África
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- agua
- AWL Images
- barco pesquero
- bote
- comerciar (en la bolsa)
- comercio
- Costa Norte
- embarcación
- escena costera
- escenas de costa
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- imagen a color
- lejano oeste
- litoral
- negociar
- océano
- Océano Atlántico
- paisaje
- paisajístico
- pesca (industria)
- pescar
- pintoresco
- portuario
- portuarios
- puerto
- puerto (marítimo)
- región costanera
- sacar fotos
- vista
- western
Imágenes relacionadas
- The rusting hulk of a freighter sits buried in the sands of the Plage des Pecheurs (Fishermens Beach) near Nouakchott in southern Mauritania
- Colourful fishing boats on the shore at the Plage des Pecheurs (Fishermens Beach) near the Mauritanian capital of Nouakchott. The waters off the west African nation are regarded as one of the richest fishing areas in the world.
- Fishermen unload gear from boats returning to shore at Plage des Pecheurs (Fishermens Beach) near Nouakchott on the south coast of Mauritania
- Boats moored in the busy fishing port in Tangier,Morocco.
- Colourful fishing boat on the shore at Plage des Pecheurs (Fishermens Beach) near Nouakchott on the south coast of Mauritania. The waters off the west African nation are regarded as one of the richest fishing areas in the world.
- The rusting hulk of a shipwrecked freighter sits buried in the sands of the Plage de Pecheurs (Fishermens Beach) near Nouakchott. The waters off the west African nation are amongst the richest fishing grounds in the world.
- Kenya,Coast,Mombasa. A fisherman in a dugout canoe paddles past Fort Jesus and the old town of Mombasa. Only dhows - the wooden sailing vessels of the region - now use the Old Harbour.
- View of the old medina from the fishing port in Tangier,Morocco.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- The locomotive for the worlds longest train sits at the station in Nouâdhibou. The full train is up to 2.5 kilometres long and trundles between Nouâdhibou and the iron mines of Zouérat in Mauritania.
- Painted mural depicting Mauritanian life on a wall in the northern coastal town of Nouadhibou
- Two old boats are left to rot in the sea.
- Pirogues (Niger River water taxis) jostle to meet an incoming passenger ferry near the port of Mopti. The slender wooden canoes are the traditional craft for fishing and transporting passengers and livestock on the Niger.
- Fishermen cast a line into the boat filled harbour on the island of Cheung Chau in Hong Kong.
- Fishing boats in the habour of Nouadhibou, Mauritania, Africa
- On a foggy dawn, fishermen try their chance at the Niger river. Bamako, Mali, West Africa
- The harbour at Lamu Island.Lamu town already existed in the 14th and 15th centuries and flourished more recently between 1650 and 1900.The town is said to have been founded by one or more royal immigrants from the Arabian or Persian regions on the Caliphate.In culture, Lamu belongs to the distinctive civilisation called Swahill.