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African Air is a compilation of pictures from ten years of flying over Africa, mostly with a motorized paraglider. Empty Quarter contains images of the Arabian landscape, its people, and its wildlife. Desert Air is a photographic collection of the world's "extreme deserts", which receive less than four inches of precipitation per year.
George Hallett (December 30, 1942 [1] – July 1, 2020) was a South African photographer known for images of South African exiles. His body of work captures much of the country's turbulent history through Apartheid and into the young democracy.
Inspired by earlier trips to Africa in both 1955 and 1960, Beard traveled to Kenya upon graduation. [7] Working at Tsavo National Park , he photographed and documented the demise of 35,000 elephants and other wildlife, later to become the subject of his first book, The End of the Game . [ 8 ]
Images of Africa (3 C, 1 F) Σ. Africa stubs (76 C, 78 P) Pages in category "Africa" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
In 2011, he returned to Africa to photograph lions in Kenya. [8] He has since used BeetleCam to photograph wildlife in other African countries, including leopards in Zambia and African wild dogs in Zimbabwe. [9] In 2015, Burrard-Lucas used BeetleCam to photograph wildlife at night in Liuwa Plain National Park in Zambia. [10]
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Once they had their pilot's licenses, they purchased two Sikorsky amphibious planes, a S-39-CS Spirit of Africa and S-38-BS Osa's Ark. On their fifth African trip, from 1933 to 1934, the Johnsons flew the length of Africa, getting now classic aerial scenes of large herds of elephants, giraffes, and other animals moving across the plains of Africa.