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Saturday, 15 December 2012

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE'S BEST PHOTOS OF 2012


New Picture 195
Best of 2012 - National Geographic Magazine Photos of the Year
By
National Geographic, 13 December 2012.

Martin Schoeller

New Picture 196

Six-year-old Johanna Gill puts a protective hand on her sister, Eva. The twins both have mild autism, a disorder linked to genetic inheritance.

More than 900 images were published in National Geographic this year. Editor in Chief Chris Johns chose his top ten. “Invariably the best photographs will always surprise you. You’ll see something you couldn’t have imagined,” he says.

Watch Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Mitch Dobrowner

New Picture 197

A dying tornado like this one is said to be in the "roping out" phase.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Lynn Johnson

New Picture 198

Aidyng Kyrgys caresses his new-born baby girl, whom he refers to using a Tuvan term of endearment: anayim, or "my little goat." There are only 235,000 Tuvan speakers in Russia.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Aaron Huey

New Picture 199

Stanley Good Voice Elk, a heyoka on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, burns sage to ritually purify his surroundings. In Oglala spirituality, heyokas are recipients of sacred visions who employ clownish speech and behaviour to provoke spiritual awareness and "keep balance," says Good Voice Elk. Through his mask, he channels the power of an inherited spirit, which transforms him into Spider Respects Nothing.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Aaron Huey

New Picture 200

A passenger barely has room for the journey home as a car is loaded with used clothing donated by a Colorado-based Native American charity. Contrary to popular myth, Native Americans do not automatically receive a monthly federal check and are not exempt from taxes. The Oglala Lakota and other Sioux tribes have refused a monetary settlement for the U.S.'s illegal seizure of the Black Hills, their spiritual home.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Stephanie Sinclair

New Picture 201

Eleven-year-old Turki Ahmed flies a kite amid the rubble of Sadah, a northern anti-government stronghold near Yemen’s border with Saudi Arabia. His ten-year-old cousin Afnan Hussein Ali Jarallah al Tamani scampers behind him. Since 2004 an insurgency in the north has destroyed much of the city, left hundreds dead, and driven more than 100,000 from their homes.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Karla Gachet and Ivan Kashinsky

New Picture 202

Beyond Buzescu's mansion district, a kitchen belonging to a hard pressed Romani family serves as a dance hall for Iasmina Iancu, six, twirling for her grandfather Ion, who raises her. Iasmina's mother works in Spain. Many households contain only old and young, the rest scattered across Europe to earn money.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Paolo Pellegrin

New Picture 203

Markers of a richly Cuban outing at Havana’s Parque Lenin: the clicking of dominoes, the head-to-toe white clothing of a SanterĂ­a adherent, and a Russian sedan likely kept running with transplanted parts.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.

Paul Nicklen

New Picture 204

Emperor penguins can bolt away for any number of reasons, as photographer Paul Nicklen discovered when he spooked this group. "A tenth of a second after I took this picture, all I could see were bubbles."

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


Michael "Nick" Nichols

New Picture 205

Cloaked in the snows of California's Sierra Nevada, the 3,200-year-old giant sequoia called the President rises 247 feet. Two other sequoias have wider trunks, but none has a larger crown, say the scientists who climbed it. The figure at top seems taller than the other climbers because he's standing forward on one of the great limbs.

Watch Editor in Chief Chris Johns discuss his picks in a video from the December digital edition of National Geographic.


[Source: National Geographic. Edited.]


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