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  • New Jersey: ICC Sues Gas Plant
    DUKAS_187969252_ZUM
    New Jersey: ICC Sues Gas Plant
    August 21, 2025, Newark, New Jersey, USA: Demontrators partner with the Ironbound Community Corporation (ICC) and the city of Newark at press conference and rally at the Passiac Valley Sewage Commission (PVSC ) building in the Ironbound section of Newark, New Jersey. The ICC announced their lawsuits challenging the approval of the PVSC fracked gas power plant in their community. (Credit Image: © Brian Branch Price/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555861_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four Sixties vibe packaging.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555858_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four Sixties vibe packaging.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555857_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four Sixties vibe packaging.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555856_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555855_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555854_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555853_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fantastic Four movie watch
    DUKAS_187555852_FER
    Fantastic Four movie watch
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Fantastic Four 1
    Ref 17048
    04/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Fossil
    Fans of new Marvel superhero movie Marvel Fantastic Four: First Steps can now get a retro-styled replica watch worn by the actors.
    American company Fossil’s limited edition timepiece is modelled on the Reed Tech wrist device featured in the movie.
    Pedro Pascal. 50, plays astronaut Reed Richards who returns to earth with the three pottier crew members all endowed with superpowers.
    His unique gift is being able to stretch his limbs.
    Vanessa Kirby, 37, is the Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, 48, is rock-skinned Thing and Joseph Quinn, 31, is the Human Torch.
    All the Fantastic Four team wear the Reed Tech wrist devices throughout the movie.
    They offer the wearers alerts and warnings.
    The Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch itself has a 32mm wide rectangle steel case. I
    It is water-resistant to 30 meters and has a mineral crystal over the screen.
    The quartz battery-powered movement offers the time both in digital and analogue form.
    A TV-screen style display has a an LCD display that offers the digital readout
    Underneath the digital display is the analogue time readout designed to resemble the frequency selector of an analog radio.
    It has a black leather strap embossed with a blue Fantastic Four logo.
    The watch is limited to 804 pieces worldwide with a retail price of €295 euros.
    OPS: Fossil x Marvel Fantastic Four watch
    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Daily Life In Alberta
    DUKAS_187181044_NUR
    Daily Life In Alberta
    CALGARY, CANADA – JULY 11:
    Oil wells operate in a field alongside the Edmonton-Calgary highway near Calgary, Alberta, Canada, on July 11, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Alberta
    DUKAS_187180965_NUR
    Daily Life In Alberta
    CALGARY, CANADA – JULY 11:
    Oil wells operate in a field alongside the Edmonton-Calgary highway near Calgary, Alberta, Canada, on July 11, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764142_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: John Eason/Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Fossil team (left to right): Andrew Crockett, Craig Eury, Jeremy Madin, Jenny Delaforce, John Long

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764134_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the reptile making the tracks some 350 million years ago.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764127_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the type of reptile that made the tracks.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764118_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the type of reptile that made the tracks.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764110_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit:Traci Klarenbeek/ Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Professor John Long comparing the trackways with a modern Iguana foot

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764102_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: The fossil trackway with different tracks on it highlighted

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764095_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Professor John Long with the fossil trackway

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613148_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613147_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613146_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613145_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613144_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613143_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613142_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613141_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638163_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    A small campaign sign for Kamala Harris is displayed on a home's lawn, while a "Trump Coming Soon" sign is visible on a barn in the background. Looming behind them is the A & M Hibbard oil and gas waste facility, operated by Coterra.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638160_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Active drilling is underway at Coterra Energy’s Bushnell pad in Dimock, PA.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638158_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Trailers transport hydraulic fracturing equipment on narrow residential roads in Dimock, PA.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

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  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638157_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Silos, store fracking sand at an oil drilling site in Dimock, Pennsylvania in October.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638161_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Shortly after a gas well was drilled a few hundred feet from Ray Kemble's home, he said his drinking water turned from dark brown to green and finally jet black.

    Ray Kemble, sorts through the hundreds of documents and photos chronicling the long fight against fracking in Dimock, PA.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638162_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Craig Stevens and Calin Riffle go over documents at Ray Kemble’s home, now a new research non-profit that will test the property’s water, soil and plants for contamination, to help inform potential new laws in Dimock, PA.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

  • Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    DUKAS_176638156_EYE
    Fracking's return stirs fury in Pennsylvania town of Dimock whose water turned toxic.
    The small town of Dimock saw its water become brown, undrinkable, even flammable - and its residents are still feeling the effects.

    Fracking has burst back on to the national stage in the US presidential election contest for the must-win swing state of Pennsylvania. But for one town in this state that saw its water become mud-brown, undrinkable and even flammable 15 years ago, the spectre of fracking never went away.

    Victoria Switzer is a rare liberal in this staunchly conservative county but also shares Kemble's frustration.

    Victoria Switzer, a former school teacher turned artist, poses for a portrait in the home her husband built for her in Dimock, Pennsylvania in October.

    Thalia Juarez / Guardian / eyevine

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    The Guardian

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780830_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780845_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780829_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780844_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780827_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780826_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - Steve Etches looks at the pliosaur fossil

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780823_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - the new pliosaur skull fossil and teeth restored by Steve Etches

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780825_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - the new pliosaur skull fossil and teeth restored by Steve Etches

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    DUKAS_163780846_EYE
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK.
    Pliosaur skull has been discovered in Dorset, UK. The find is part of a David Attenborough BBC documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster and will go on show to the public next year at the Etches Collection in Dorset, UK. Images taken at the Etches Collection in Kimmeridge, Dorset. Pictured - the new pliosaur skull fossil restored by Steve Etches

    © David Stock / eyevine

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    © David Stock / eyevine.

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468966_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468963_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468949_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468965_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468948_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468958_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468953_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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    © No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine

     

  • The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    DUKAS_162468957_EYE
    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sells poppies for the British Legion at Norwich Station on way to Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal
    06/11/2023. Norwich, United Kingdom. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak visits Bacton Oil & Gas Terminal. He travelled by train and on the return stopped at Norwich Station to help sell poppies for the British Legion. Picture by Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine

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