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  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • XINING, March 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
The aerial photo taken on March 20, 2016 shows the scenery of ice floating on the Qinghai Lake in northwest China's Qinghai Province. Qinghai Lake, covering 4,400 square kilometers, is China's largest inland salt lake. With ice melting on the surface of the lake, Qinghai Lake begins its spring season<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_aerial_photo_ice_floati...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - <br />
<br />
Stunning Aerial images of Salt Lake in China<br />
<br />
Aerial view of colorful Salt Lake, a world-renowned inland salt lake known as \"Dead Sea of China\" on March 20, 2017 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. As temperature rises in Spring, the color of Salt Lake changes. Seen from above, colorful Salt Lake colors looks like a color palette. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Aerial_images_of_Salt...jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland4.jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland6.jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland5.jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland3.jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland2.jpg
  • The Kerio Lake In Iceland<br />
<br />
The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic crater in existence. It’s a regular stop for tourists along the Golden Circle sightseeing route and one of the most-photographed features in this amazing landscape.<br />
The crater was formed by a volcanic eruption around 3,000 years ago and is one of several volcanic craters in the area, known as Iceland's Western Volcanic Zone, which includes the Reykjanes peninsula and the Langjökull Glacier. But Kerio Crater is the most visually recognizable with the caldera still intact, because it is only half the age of most of the surrounding volcanic features.<br />
The caldera is approximately 55 meters deep, 170 meters wide, and 270 meters across. Like other volcanic rocks in the area, the rocks of the caldera is hued bright red caused by iron in the basaltic lava that has been oxidized by the groundwater. While most of the crater is steep-walled with little vegetation, one wall is sloped more gently and blanketed with a deep moss, and can be descended fairly easily. At the bottom is a pool of blue water that lies at the about same level as the ground water table.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Kerio_Lake_Iceland1.jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Early morning, the first divers enter the lake with long wooden sticks.<br />
They use the sticks to break the bottom of the lake; then they dive along them in the shallow water, collect the black mud full of salt, and bring it back on the bank.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Salt From Lake Assal In Djibouti, Tepi Village, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • Jun 9, 2016 - Kazakhstan -<br />
 This stunning Earth image taken by the Expedition 47 crew on May 31, 2016, from the International Space Station looks from northwestern China on the bottom into eastern Kazakhstan. The large lake in Kazakhstan with golden sun glint is the crescent-shaped Lake Balkhash, the second largest lake in Central Asia. Lake Balkhash sits in the Balkhash-Alakol depression in southeastern Kazakhstan and stretches over 7,115 square miles.<br />
©NASA/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Beams_of_Light_on_Golden_Lake1.jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
Vessels stop by island on the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, March 15, 2016. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
A yacht sails on the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, March 15, 2016. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
an aerial view of the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Some men say they can make 3 trips in a single day. It takes them 30 mn to go down (at least double for a tourist), one hour to collect the salt, then 1 hour to clim up back to the village with loaded donkeys. Some men do work from sunrise to sunset.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Three kind of salt can be found in the lake: the black salt for animals, the white salt for the people, and crystals which can be sold at a high price.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
aerial view of the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
 the scenery of the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
aerial view of the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, March 15, 2016 (Xinhua) -- <br />
<br />
A yacht sails on the Qiandao Lake, or Thousand-Island Lake, in Chun'an County of Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, March 15, 2016. With 1,078 islands scattered across the lake, Qiandao Lake is a famous spot for sightseeing in China.  <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Amazing_Aerial_views_Th...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   Some men say they can make 3 trips in a single day. It takes them 30 mn to go down (at least double for a tourist), one hour to collect the salt, then 1 hour to clim up back to the village with loaded donkeys. Some men do work from sunrise to sunset.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows;  Once the donkeys are loaded with 2x25kg of salt in each bag, they have to climb up to the village on the edge of the volcano. Under the sun, the rocks are turning into an oven, making the way back a hell. Some miners even collapse after such efforts.<br />
There is no room for industrialisation: Boranas are against it, willing to carry on this tradition as source of - small- revenues, and part of their culture.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows;  Only Borana people get access to the salt in the volcano. A conflict would raise whenever another tribe try to enter the area.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Women do not take part in the salt extraction. few of them go down in the carter to collect wood or branches for the cattle. As men are most the time naked , and some a re muslims, they also prefer to stay away, Usually women are dedicated to the hardest tasks in the Borana Culture, This is an exception<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Borana tribe man with protection in his nose ready to dive in the volcano crater to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Borana tribe man with protection in his nose ready to dive in the volcano crater to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Borana tribe man arms wounded after diving in the volcano crater to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Borana tribe man covered with salt after diving in the volcano crater to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Volcano crater where Borana tribe men dive to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • EL SOD: THE SALT OF LIFE<br />
 <br />
 El Sod, the House Of Salt, is a village located 90 km from Yabelo, the capital of Borana people in South Ethiopia. It stands on the edge of an extinct volcano wide of 1,8 km diameter, with a salted lake in the crater. For centuries, men dive into the lake to collect the salt and sell it across Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya<br />
<br />
 It takes 1 hour on a narrow path to go down the 2,5 km from the village to the lake, 340 meters lower. The best view on the crater can be spotted from the recently built mosque.<br />
Every miner works as a free lance, independent from any company or boss. Most of the time divers are naked, the salted water being so agressive that it destroys everything, including clothes and shoes.<br />
 Miners try to protect their nose and ears with plugs made of soil wrapped in plastic bags. There’s no protection for the eyes: many suffer heavily from blindness.<br />
 When the weather is good after rains (Borana wait for it for months since the area suffers from drought) more than 200 men dive into the lake. More and more children are joining for the families to get some extra revenue. The parents are aware of the dangers but they don’t have any choice if they want to survive.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows: Borana tribe man feet wounded after diving in the volcano crater to collect salt, Oromia, El Sod, Ethiopia<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Stunning_Images_The_Salt_Of_Li...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - OCTOBER 02: <br />
<br />
Aerial view of the colorful salt lake on October 2, 2016 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. The salt lake displaying red and green colors in Yuncheng attract tourists during the National Day holiday. Formed about 500 million years ago, the salt lake owns different colors as a result of the algae in the water. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Colorful_Salt_Lake1.jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - OCTOBER 02: <br />
<br />
Aerial view of the colorful salt lake on October 2, 2016 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. The salt lake displaying red and green colors in Yuncheng attract tourists during the National Day holiday. Formed about 500 million years ago, the salt lake owns different colors as a result of the algae in the water. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Colorful_Salt_Lake2.jpg
  • YUNCHENG, CHINA - OCTOBER 02: <br />
<br />
Aerial view of the colorful salt lake on October 2, 2016 in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province of China. The salt lake displaying red and green colors in Yuncheng attract tourists during the National Day holiday. Formed about 500 million years ago, the salt lake owns different colors as a result of the algae in the water. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Colorful_Salt_Lake3.jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • GOLOG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 14: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
22 Yaks Drop Into Frozen Lake found Dead <br />
<br />
Fire workers and the police salvage yaks dropped into a frozen lake when drinking by the lake in Maduo County on November 14, 2015 in Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Golog, Qinghai Province of China. 22 yaks reared by herdsman in northwest of Chinas Qinghai Province dropped into a frozen lake when drinking as the ice collapsed suddenly. The yaks were found dead after the fire workers of Maduo County rushing to for long distance of about 150 kilometers between the collapsing site and the central town. These yaks have been brought ashore two hours later.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_22_Yaks_Drop_Into_Froze...jpg
  • CHAOHU, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Blue-Green Algae Blooms In Chaohu Lake <br />
A general view of the blue-green algae blooming in the Chaohu Lake on June 16, 2013 in Chaohu, Anhui Province of China. Chaohu Lake is one of the five largest freshwater lakes in China, with an area of 800 square kilometers.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Algae_Blooms_In_Chaohu_...jpg
  • CHAOHU, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Blue-Green Algae Blooms In Chaohu Lake <br />
A general view of the blue-green algae blooming in the Chaohu Lake on June 16, 2013 in Chaohu, Anhui Province of China. Chaohu Lake is one of the five largest freshwater lakes in China, with an area of 800 square kilometers.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Algae_Blooms_In_Chaohu_...jpg
  • CHAOHU, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Blue-Green Algae Blooms In Chaohu Lake <br />
A general view of the blue-green algae blooming in the Chaohu Lake on June 16, 2013 in Chaohu, Anhui Province of China. Chaohu Lake is one of the five largest freshwater lakes in China, with an area of 800 square kilometers.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Algae_Blooms_In_Chaohu_...jpg
  • CHAOHU, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Blue-Green Algae Blooms In Chaohu Lake <br />
A general view of the blue-green algae blooming in the Chaohu Lake on June 16, 2013 in Chaohu, Anhui Province of China. Chaohu Lake is one of the five largest freshwater lakes in China, with an area of 800 square kilometers.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Algae_Blooms_In_Chaohu_...jpg
  • CHAOHU, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Blue-Green Algae Blooms In Chaohu Lake <br />
A general view of the blue-green algae blooming in the Chaohu Lake on June 16, 2013 in Chaohu, Anhui Province of China. Chaohu Lake is one of the five largest freshwater lakes in China, with an area of 800 square kilometers.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Algae_Blooms_In_Chaohu_...jpg
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