People

Celebrities and Royals from around the world. Right on schedule.

News

Daily news and events, covered by our international photographers.

Features

Odd, funny and touchy images. Be amazed.

Styling

Fashion and design trends.

Portrait

Premium Portraiture.

Reportage

In-depth Coverage.

Creative

Selected stock imagery.

Dukas Bildagentur
request@dukas.ch
+41 44 298 50 00

  • NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    DUK10116004_002
    NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, Indonesia issued incandescent lava (hot) on Thursday on Thursday, March 7, 2019 night. Based on data from the Agency for Investigation and Development of Geological Disaster Technology (BPPTKG), a hot cloud glide occurred at 07.44 with a sliding distance of 1.2 kilometers and at 10:17 a distance of 1 kilometer. The hot cloud glide is still small. According to the Head of BPPTKG Hanik Humaida, the community can still move as usual, but not within the danger radius 3 kilometers from the summit of Mount Merapi. (Photo by Slamet Riyadi/INA Photo Agency/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 25798427
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    DUK10116004_001
    NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, Indonesia issued incandescent lava (hot) on Thursday on Thursday, March 7, 2019 night. Based on data from the Agency for Investigation and Development of Geological Disaster Technology (BPPTKG), a hot cloud glide occurred at 07.44 with a sliding distance of 1.2 kilometers and at 10:17 a distance of 1 kilometer. The hot cloud glide is still small. According to the Head of BPPTKG Hanik Humaida, the community can still move as usual, but not within the danger radius 3 kilometers from the summit of Mount Merapi. (Photo by Slamet Riyadi/INA Photo Agency/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 25798428
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    DUK10116004_003
    NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, Indonesia issued incandescent lava on Thursday, March 7, 2019. Based on data from the Geological Disaster Research and Development Agency (BPPTKG), a hot cloud glide occurred at 07.44 with a sliding distance of 1.2 kilometers and 10.17 with distance of 1 kilometer. The hot cloud glide is still small. According to the Head of BPPTKG Hanik Humaida, the community can still move as usual, but not within the danger radius 3 kilometers from the summit of Mount Merapi.(Photo by Slamet Riyadi/INA Photo Agency/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 25798426
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    DUK10116004_005
    NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, Indonesia issued a hot cloud on Thursday on March 7, 2019 morning. Based on data from the Agency for Investigation and Development of Geological Disaster Technology (BPPTKG), a hot cloud glide occurred at 07.44 with a sliding distance of 1.2 kilometers and at 10:17 a distance of 1 kilometer. The hot cloud glide is still small. According to the Head of BPPTKG Hanik Humaida, the community can still move as usual, but not within the danger radius 3 kilometers from the summit of Mount Merapi.(Photo by Slamet Riyadi/INA Photo Agency/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 25798424
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    DUK10116004_004
    NEWS - Indonesien: Vulkan Merapi speit wieder Feuer
    Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, Indonesia issued a hot cloud on Thursday on March 7, 2019 morning. Based on data from the Agency for Investigation and Development of Geological Disaster Technology (BPPTKG), a hot cloud glide occurred at 07.44 with a sliding distance of 1.2 kilometers and at 10:17 a distance of 1 kilometer. The hot cloud glide is still small. According to the Head of BPPTKG Hanik Humaida, the community can still move as usual, but not within the danger radius 3 kilometers from the summit of Mount Merapi.(Photo by Slamet Riyadi/INA Photo Agency/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 25798425
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Aschewolke des Vulkans Kilauea auf Hawaii zieht zu den Marshallinseln
    DUK10092770_009
    NEWS - Aschewolke des Vulkans Kilauea auf Hawaii zieht zu den Marshallinseln
    May 25, 2018 - Pahoa, HI, United States of America - An ash plumes rises from the Halemaumau crater at the summit of the Kilauea volcano May 25, 2018 in Pahoa, Hawaii (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    DUK10088364_026
    FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    March 26, 2018 - North Sumatera, Indonesia - seen on the top of mount sinabung fully smoked by solfatara. O2 or sulfur dioxide is a colorless gas or liquid compound, with a strong odor and neck strangulation..Other SO2 names are: sulfur dioxide or sulfur anhydride, sulfuroxide, sulfur oxide, sulfuric acid anhydride (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    DUK10088364_008
    FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    March 26, 2018 - North Sumatera, Indonesia - seen a startrail behind the sinabung volcano, when the summit still fire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    DUK10088364_007
    FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    March 26, 2018 - North Sumatera, Indonesia - seen on the top of mount sinabung fully smoked by solfatara (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    DUK10088364_001
    FEATURE - Leben mit dem Vulkan - Sinabung in Indonesien
    March 26, 2018 - North Sumatera, Indonesia - a school girl and their teacher seen passing in their school with a background mount sinabung continued smoked by solfatara on the top (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Colourful spings of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia
    DUKAS_123871483_RHA
    Colourful spings of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia
    Colourful springs of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia, Africa
    Michael Runkel

     

  • Colourful spings of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia
    DUKAS_123871476_RHA
    Colourful spings of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia
    Colourful springs of acid in Dallol, hottest place on earth, Danakil depression, Ethiopia, Africa
    Michael Runkel

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072088_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955a)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072087_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955b)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072084_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955c)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX