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The Shaved Woman of Chartres (French: La Tondue de Chartres) is a black and white photograph taken by Robert Capa in Chartres on 16 August 1944. This picture was first published in Life magazine and became iconic of the épuration sauvage (wild purge) enacted after the liberation of France and the severe punishment imposed on the French women ...
Peinado presumably developed on Miocene volcanic rocks and eruption products of the Laguna Amarga caldera. [11] A major strike-slip fault zone, the Peinado fault, runs from the western side of Salar de Antofalla south along Laguna Peinado to Peinado volcano. [5] Farther south, it may connect to the San Francisco lineament. [11]
Capa was born Endre Ernő Friedmann to the Jewish family of Júlia (née Berkovits) and Dezső Friedmann in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, on October 22, 1913. [2] His mother, Julianna Henrietta Berkovits was a native of Nagykapos (now Veľké Kapušany, Slovakia) and Dezső Friedmann came from the Transylvanian village of Csucsa (now Ciucea, Romania). [2]