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From the page: "Best Of National Geographic - Pictures of the Year"
Reviewed by edgeoforever Jul 29 2007, 07:41pm ( 141 reviews ) • zuzafun.com
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- Showing 126 of 141

- Reviews of the site
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Rated by franc2675 on Feb 14 2009, 11:17am
jolie grenouille
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Rated by immy00100 on Nov 19 2008, 8:40am
This picture is 1 in millions.
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Rated by MijaKappa on Nov 03 2008, 4:25am
Amazing!
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Rated by gyatz on Oct 26 2008, 4:38pm
wonderful, thanks, chrisje50
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Rated by TheAuctionAddict on Oct 20 2008, 3:12pm
Nature at it's breathtaking best! These are all fabulous images but this one really does it for me. Love the colours.
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Reviewed by MarieJeanne on Aug 26 2008, 1:00am
The Red-crowned Crane The Red-crowned Crane, or Japanese Crane, has a long tradition in Japan of being a symbol of luck, happiness, and happy marriage. A legend that says that anyone who folds 1000 origami paper cranes will get their wish inspired a young Japanese girl, Sadako Sasaki to fold paper cranes. Sadako had leukemia as a result of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan. Sadako died of her disease in 1955, but she left us with hundreds of paper cranes and the origami paper crane as an international symbol of peace. Since Sadako began the tradition, children around the world have folded many thousands of paper cranes and wished for peace.
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Rated by apereziii on Aug 25 2008, 11:40pm
Anything National Geographic, I'm there.