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Robb Kendrick
A taxidermic specimen of a thylacine imaged using tintype photography. The last known 'Tasmanian tiger' died in 1936, but a group of scientists want to bring the animal back.
A story in the May 1994 issue documented the global necessity of rice crops. Here, an enormous structure of twisted rice straw, called shimenawa, hangs over Izumo Taisha, a Shinto shrine in Japan.
As Salt Lake City prepared to host the 2002 Olympics, National Geographic published a profile of the area, which was seeing a population and development boom. Here, a girl plays on top of pumpkins at her family's farm in Draper, Utah, 20 miles south of Salt Lake City.
Steam and smoke rise from the cooling towers and chimneys of a power plant. Artificial intelligence is being used to prove the case that plants that burn carbon-based fuels aren't profitable.
Steam and smoke rise from the cooling towers and chimneys of a power plant in Juliette, Georgia.
At a coal terminal, railcars loaded with coal line up to fill waiting ships in Virginia.
The Scherer power plant in Juliet, Georgia, is the largest coal-fired power plant in the U.S. It burns 34,000 tons of coal daily, pumping over 25 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year.
Firefighters carry axes through a blanket of thick smoke in Texas, USA.
Flowing through Glacier National Park, the Flathead River offers prime boating through some of the most pristine landscapes of the Rocky Mountains.
A farmer prepares for spring near a power plant in Shanxi Province, China. The facility, which supplies electricity to Beijing, 200 miles away, covers local fields, crops, and people with soot.