phone Pomoc-kontakt

The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2559
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT49) FREDONIA, Ariz. -- July 17, 2002 -- PIPE-SPRING-PIPE -- In 1999, The Pipe Spring National Monument in Fredonia, Ariz., which had been a valuable watering hole for thousands, of years dried up. Officials at the 79-year-old monument recently restored the flow of water by pumping it uphill from a nearby source after the main attraction had sat dry for more than two years. Today, it draws 60,000 visitors a year. Mormon schoolchildren visiting the Monument in May. (Kevin Moloney/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-07-17
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Kevin Moloney/The New York Times/Redux
17336987
0,49MB
14cm x 9cm przy 300dpi
000, 17, 1999, 2002, 60, A, AFTER, ARIZ, AT, ATTRACTION, BEEN, BY, DRAWS, DRIED, DRY, FLOW, FOR, FREDONIA, FROM, HAD, HOLE, IN, IT, JULY, KEVIN, MAIN, MAY, MOLONEY, MONUMENT, MORE, MORMON, NATIONAL, NEARBY, NEW, NYT49, OF, OFFICIALS, PIPE, PUMPING, RECENTLY, REDUX, RESTORED, SAT, SCHOOLCHILDREN, SOURCE, SPRING, THAN, THE, THOUSANDS, TIMES, TODAY, TWO, UP, UPHILL, VALUABLE, VISITING, VISITORS, WATER, WATERING, WHICH, YEAR, YEARS, YORK,