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DUKAS_183843131_NUR
Living Reef Immerses Visitors At Edmonton Downtown Library
EDMONTON, CANADA – APRIL 22:
A young visitor interacts with The Wall, a two-storey digital installation at the Stanley A. Milner Library, featuring The Living Reef, a virtual marine ecosystem that immerses users in the Great Barrier Reef, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on April 22, 2025.
The installation promotes STEM learning with interactive experiences exploring prehistoric worlds, marine life, and scientific principles, sparking creativity and exploration. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183843130_NUR
Living Reef Immerses Visitors At Edmonton Downtown Library
EDMONTON, CANADA – APRIL 22:
A young visitor interacts with The Wall, a two-storey digital installation at the Stanley A. Milner Library, featuring The Living Reef, a virtual marine ecosystem that immerses users in the Great Barrier Reef, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on April 22, 2025.
The installation promotes STEM learning with interactive experiences exploring prehistoric worlds, marine life, and scientific principles, sparking creativity and exploration. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183843020_NUR
Living Reef Immerses Visitors At Edmonton Downtown Library
EDMONTON, CANADA – APRIL 22:
Young visitors interact with The Wall, a two-storey digital installation at the Stanley A. Milner Library, featuring The Living Reef, a virtual marine ecosystem that immerses users in the Great Barrier Reef, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on April 22, 2025.
The installation promotes STEM learning with interactive experiences exploring prehistoric worlds, marine life, and scientific principles, sparking creativity and exploration. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183843019_NUR
Living Reef Immerses Visitors At Edmonton Downtown Library
EDMONTON, CANADA – APRIL 22:
A young visitor interacts with The Wall, a two-storey digital installation at the Stanley A. Milner Library, featuring The Living Reef, a virtual marine ecosystem that immerses users in the Great Barrier Reef, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on April 22, 2025.
The installation promotes STEM learning with interactive experiences exploring prehistoric worlds, marine life, and scientific principles, sparking creativity and exploration. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_167218655_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe auf Kampnagel, Hamburg, 21.02.2008
© jm Schulze/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
©DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_167218654_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe auf Kampnagel, Hamburg, 21.02.2008
© jm Schulze/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
©DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_167218652_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe auf Kampnagel, Hamburg, 21.02.2008
© jm Schulze/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
©DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_167218651_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe in der Grossen Freiheit 36, Hamburg, 07.04.2013
© jms- SCHULZE/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
© DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_167218649_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe in der Grossen Freiheit 36, Hamburg, 07.04.2013
© jms- SCHULZE/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
© DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_167218648_DAL
Eels live im Konzert
Eels:
Konzert der Musikgruppe in der Grossen Freiheit 36, Hamburg, 07.04.2013
© jms- SCHULZE/ DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
© DALLE APRF -
DUKAS_154775709_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test. The robot’s head containing the cameras and radar is lowered into a vertical shaft called a moulin at Athabasca Glacier in the Canadian Rockies.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775708_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775707_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775706_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test at an ice rink
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775705_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775704_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test at an ice rink
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775702_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775700_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775698_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775696_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775695_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775692_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775691_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775690_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775689_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: Artist's concept of an EELS robot snake exploring an alien world
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775688_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154775687_FER
US space agency NASA shows off robot snake for exploring alien worlds.
Ferrari Press Agency
EELS 1
Ref 14769
10/05/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech
Robotic snake designed to slither around and explore hostile planetary environments is being developed by US space agency NASA.
The robust machines designed to slide down narrow vents on icy worlds, including Saturn's moons and search their subsurface oceans.
The machine is called the Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor but is known as EELS for short.
It is under development by a team of engineers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory based at the California Institute of Technology.
It could one day be put to work on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus which scientists believe could contain signs of life in oceans that are thuight to be under the surface.
EELS is 4 metres long and weighs about 100 kg.
Its body is made up of 10 identical segments that rotate, using screw threads for propulsion, traction, and grip.
So far it has been tested in different environments with snow, sand, and ice and at a local indoor ice rink.
NASA engineers designed EELS to autonomously sense its environment and calculate risk, as well as recover on its own.
OPS: The EELS robot snake on test
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_154375296_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375295_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375293_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375291_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375290_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375289_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375286_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375285_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375284_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375283_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375282_DAL
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Eels at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375281_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375280_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375276_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375275_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375274_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_154375271_DAL
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
Billie Marten at Salle Pleyel in Paris
21/4/2023
© CUCCAGNA_DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE)
©DALLE aprf -
DUKAS_103775699_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_103775694_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_103775697_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_103775700_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_103775692_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_103775705_EYE
Collecting data at the River Tone, Somerset, on the decline in numbers of eels.
European eel. These mysterious fish migrate from the Atlantic (they are thought to be spawned in the Sargasso Sea) to fresh and coastal waters to grow, then head back out to the ocean to breed. While little is understood about any of the process, juvenile (“glass”) and mature (silver or yellow) eels alike have been consistently overfished, to the point where yields have halved since the 1960s. With excessive exploitation just one of the many threats the eels face, the MCS urges us to “avoid eating European eel at any stage in its lifecycle”. (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.