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ny070424222407 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 6:30 A.M. ET, APRIL 8, 2024. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Shotguns and other products for sale at Gibson?s Discount Center in Kerrville, Texas, on March 29, 2024. Millions of tourists could bolster smaller economies in the eclipse's path of totality across North America. (Christopher Lee/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny070424222106 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 6:30 A.M. ET, APRIL 8, 2024. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Eclipse souvenirs and other products for sale at Gibson?s Discount Center in Kerrville, Texas, on March 29, 2024. Millions of tourists could bolster smaller economies in the eclipse's path of totality across North America. (Christopher Lee/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny070424221907 **EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before MONDAY 6:30 A.M. ET, APRIL 8, 2024. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Eclipse souvenirs and other products for sale at Gibson?s Discount Center in Kerrville, Texas, on March 29, 2024. Millions of tourists could bolster smaller economies in the eclipse's path of totality across North America. (Christopher Lee/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny180523173306 Matthew Ronay?s 24-foot-long work, ?The Crack, the Swell, an Earth, an Ode? at the Casey Kaplan booth during the Frieze Fair, at the Shed, in New York on May. 17, 2023. Exciting work from emerging artists exploring environmental change, and proof that much of the most innovative work of the past half century has been by women. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny101222190306 An undated photo provided by NASA of Earth, photographed from the Orion space capsule. The capsule, this time with no astronauts aboard, will splash down on Sunday afternoon after a 26-day journey that took it to the moon and back. (NASA via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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ny270522193405 FILE Ñ One of the hydraulic lifting posts in the basement of the historic Palace Theater, in preparation to lift it three stories to add retail space underneath, in ManhattanÕs Time Square, Jan. 7, 2022. The developer of TSX Broadway, a hotel and entertainment complex, has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style protected landmark theater without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270822185705 Boulders in the Tsiolkovskiy Crater, captured by NASA?s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The agency is set to launch a massive rocket on Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, kicking off a return to Earth?s closest neighbor after many scientists and policymakers had once moved on. (NASA via The New York Times) ? EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
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ny190321191505 Jos Pimentel-Cardoso with her plants in Brooklyn, March 7, 2021. Every Sunday, Pimentel-Cardoso checks on her dozens of houseplants and plays music for them Ñ she often plays Mort GarsonÕs 1976 album ÒMother EarthÕs Plantasia.Ó (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270522192805 FILE Ñ Stabilizing scaffolding on the stage of the Palace Theater, in ManhattanÕs Time Square, Dec. 3, 2020. In order to add three stories of retail space underneath, the developer of TSX Broadway, a hotel and entertainment complex, has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style protected landmark theater without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270522193605 FILE Ñ The TSX building, center, which includes a 661-room hotel and an outdoor stage, in ManhattanÕs Time Square, Oct. 15, 2020. In order to to add retail space underneath, the developer of the hotel and entertainment complex has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style Palace Theater, a protected landmark, three stories without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270522193205 FILE Ñ Stabilizing scaffolding inside the Palace Theater, in ManhattanÕs Time Square, Oct. 14, 2020. The developer of TSX Broadway, a hotel and entertainment complex, has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style protected landmark theater without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270522193805 FILE Ñ Construction in the basement of the historic Palace Theater in preparation to lift it three stories to add retail space underneath, in ManhattanÕs Time Square, Oct. 14, 2020. The developer of TSX Broadway, a hotel and entertainment complex, has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style protected landmark theater without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200920164704 Metronome, a New York City public art project and the Climate Clock, which displays the window for action to prevent the effects of global warming from becoming irreversible, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020. On Saturday at 3:20 p.m., messages including ÒThe Earth has a deadlineÓ began to appear on the display. Then numbers Ñ 7:103:15:40:07 Ñ showed up, representing the years, days, hours, minutes and seconds until that deadline. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200920165404 Andrew Boyd, left, and Gan Golan, the artists who created Metronome, a New York City public art project and the Climate Clock, which displays the window for action to prevent the effects of global warming from becoming irreversible, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020. On Saturday at 3:20 p.m., messages including ÒThe Earth has a deadlineÓ began to appear on the display. Then numbers Ñ 7:103:15:40:07 Ñ showed up, representing the years, days, hours, minutes and seconds until that deadline. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200920164905 The Climate Clock, a New York City public art project, which displays the window for action to prevent the effects of global warming from becoming irreversible, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020. On Saturday at 3:20 p.m., messages including ÒThe Earth has a deadlineÓ began to appear on the display. Then numbers Ñ 7:103:15:40:07 Ñ showed up, representing the years, days, hours, minutes and seconds until that deadline. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200920165104 Metronome, a New York City public art project and the Climate Clock, which displays the window for action to prevent the effects of global warming from becoming irreversible, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020. On Saturday at 3:20 p.m., messages including ÒThe Earth has a deadlineÓ began to appear on the display. Then numbers Ñ 7:103:15:40:07 Ñ showed up, representing the years, days, hours, minutes and seconds until that deadline. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny190719124004 A photo provided by NASA shows Earth as seen from the Apollo 11 lunar mission in July 1969. Could a Òmoon shotÓ for climate change cool a warming planet? Fifty years after humans first left bootprints in the lunar dust, itÕs an enticing idea. The effort and the commitment of brainpower and money, and the glorious achievement itself, shine as an international example of what people can do when they set their minds to it. The spinoff technologies ended up affecting all of our lives. (NASA via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
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ny030719110206 A man watches the solar eclipse from the hills outside Mogna, Argentina, on Tuesday, July 2, 2019. Late on Tuesday afternoon, the shadow of the moon swept along a narrow arc of Earth in parts of Chile and Argentina. (Tali Kimelman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny030719105805 A man watches the solar eclipse from the hills outside Mogna, Argentina, on Tuesday, July 2, 2019. Late on Tuesday afternoon, the shadow of the moon swept along a narrow arc of Earth in parts of Chile and Argentina. (Tali Kimelman/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny200519150904 A photo provided by Project Apollo Archive/NASA of seismometers being deployed on the moon by Apollo 11 astronauts in 1969. A new study suggests that shallow moonquakes were triggered across myriad young faults by a combination of escaping internal heat and Earth?s gravitational pull. (Project Apollo Archive/NASA via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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ny090519183803 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519183604 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519183404 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519181104 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519181704 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519182104 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny090519181605 Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, discusses his Blue Origin rocket venture in Washington, May 9, 2019. The event was billed as a chance for Bezos to ?update on our progress and share our vision of going to space to benefit Earth.? (Tom Brenner/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270522193005 FILE Ñ Work to remove the historic Palace Theater marquee, in preparation to eventually raise it three stories to add retail space underneath, in ManhattanÕs Times Square, April 5, 2019. The developer of TSX Broadway, a hotel and entertainment complex, has managed to lift the 14 million pound Beaux-Arts style protected landmark theater without sending anything crashing down to earth. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny210119172904 A photo provided by the Johnson Space Center and NASA shows astronaut Charles M. Duke Jr., the lunar module pilot on the Apollo 16 mission, near Plum Crater on the moon in 1972. Scientists are retracing the history of the moon?s craters to explain why Earth lacks them. (JSC/NASA via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
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ny080118172212 A photo from NASA of the Earth, as seen from the moon, during the Apollo 8 mission, Dec. 24, 1968. Dec. 21, 2018, marks the 50th anniversary when Frank Borman, James Lovell Jr. and William Anders went round the moon and back in a lunar orbit that set the stage for 1969?s Apollo 11 mission. (NASA via The New York Times) ? FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
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ny130817214710 Bill White, a melon vendor, talks to customers at his stand in Wickliffe, Ky., Aug. 8, 2017. Wickliffe, in western Kentucky, thought about cashing in on the upcoming eclipse by inviting viewers, but then its mayor started to worry about the crowds and scrapped plans to advertise the event. (Andrea Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130817214910 Jo Wilfong, mayor of Barlow, Ky., Aug. 8, 2017. Surrounded by acres of soybean and corn fields, Barlow, which doesn't have a police officer or hotel, lies fully in the path of upcoming total eclipse and expects to have several thousand visitors. (Andrea Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130817215010 George Lane, the mayor of Wickliffe, Ky., Aug. 8, 2017. Wickliffe, in western Kentucky, thought about cashing in on the upcoming eclipse by inviting viewers, but then Lane started to worry about the crowds and scrapped plans to advertise the event. ?I kept reading more and more were coming,? Lane said of the crowds. ?We?re just not geared up to handle this.? (Andrea Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130817215011 The cross at Wickliffe?s Fort Jefferson Hill Park at overlooks the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, in Wickliffe, Ky., Aug. 8, 2017. Wickliffe, in western Kentucky, thought about cashing in on the upcoming eclipse by inviting viewers, but then its mayor started to worry about the crowds and scrapped plans to advertise the event. (Andrea Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny130817214810 The cross at Wickliffe?s Fort Jefferson Hill Park at overlooks the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, in Wickliffe, Ky., Aug. 8, 2017. Wickliffe, in western Kentucky, thought about cashing in on the upcoming eclipse by inviting viewers, but then its mayor started to worry about the crowds and scrapped plans to advertise the event. (Andrea Morales/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny180717213010 Gene Fastook, a police auxiliary captain in the Bronx, who is the department?s second-oldest person, in New York, July 12, 2017. Fastook, who helped make it possible for humans to walk on the moon and return to Earth to tell the tale, is still on the go with the police auxiliary in the Bronx. (Chang W. Lee/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny110218235612 FILE -- President Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka Trump talk via satellite link with astronauts Peggy Whitson and Jack Fischer, seen on the monitor, as they orbit the Earth aboard the International Space Station, at the White House in Washington, April 24, 2017. According to a budget proposal to be released on Monday, Feb. 12, 2018, the Trump administration aims to give the private sector a greater role in sending astronauts back to the moon, one of the top space priorities of the president. (Stephen Crowley/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny110218235412 FILE -- President Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka Trump talk via satellite link with astronauts Peggy Whitson and Jack Fischer, seen on the monitor, as they orbit the Earth aboard the International Space Station, at the White House in Washington, April 24, 2017. According to a budget proposal to be released on Monday, Feb. 12, 2018, the Trump administration aims to give the private sector a greater role in sending astronauts back to the moon, one of the top space priorities of the president. (Stephen Crowley/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny180917141404 In a handout photo, inspecting the solar array cooling system for the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in February, 2017. Launching in the summer of 2018, NASAÕs Parker Solar Probe will become EarthÕs first spacecraft to ever reach a star. It will fly within about 4 million miles of the sunÕs surface, braving the brutal heat and destructive radiation of its outermost atmosphere, known as the corona. (NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. --
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ny171116140803 People watch the rise of a super moon in Miami Beach, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116140303 A street flooded with high water caused by an annual so-called king tide in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116140002 A construction crew gathers materials away from the high water caused by an annual so-called king tide in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116135803 Narelle Prew, who lives in the Twin Lakes neighborhood of Key Largo, Fla., skipped over a puddle as she walked her chihuahua, Lexy, Nov. 15, 2016. A super moonâÃôs king tide caused flooding throughout the Florida Keys. King tides, which frequently flood South Florida even when the sun shines, are the most blatant example of the interplay between rising seas and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. (Angel Valentin/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny141116165403 The supermoon rises next to the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and U.S. Capitol, in Washington, Nov. 13, 2016. On the nights of Nov. 13 and Nov. 14, the full moon was the closest to Earth it had been since 1948 and was about 7 percent larger and 15 percent brighter than a regular moon. (Al Drago/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny141116165303 The supermoon rises behind the Trump International Hotel in Washington, Nov. 13, 2016. On the nights of Nov. 13 and Nov. 14, the full moon was the closest to Earth it had been since 1948 and was about 7 percent larger and 15 percent brighter than a regular moon. (Al Drago/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116140502 A street flooded with high water caused by an annual so-called king tide in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116140103 A bicyclist passes a flooded Las Olas Boulevard, caused by an annual so-called king tide in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny171116135902 Par Lundin walks through floodwaters caused by an annual so-called king tide at a construction site on Mola Avenue in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Nov. 14, 2016. The frequent king tides are the most blatant example of the interplay between sea level rise and the alignment of the moon, sun and Earth. Even without a drop of rain, many places in South Florida flood like clockwork. (Scott McIntyre/The New York Times/Fotoarena)
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ny270822185606 An image taken by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter shows fractures on the Moon, seen in the floors of ancient, flat-floored highlands craters. The agency is set to launch a massive rocket on Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, kicking off a return to Earth?s closest neighbor after many scientists and policymakers had once moved on. (NASA via The New York Times) ? EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
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ny270822185505 Bright crater rays and boulders, captured by NASA?s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The agency is set to launch a massive rocket on Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, kicking off a return to Earth?s closest neighbor after many scientists and policymakers had once moved on. (NASA via The New York Times) ? EDITORIAL USE ONLY ?
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ny270818154037 A photo provided by NASA of the moon. There is almost certainly ice water on the surface of the moon, hiding in the cold, dark places near the north and south poles, a new study shows. (NASA via The New York Times) -- FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY --
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Total de Resultados: 51

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