Every year, from February to April, 80 percent of North America’s sandhill crane population stops in Nebraska to eat and rest before finishing their lengthy migration to the northern reaches of Canada, Alaska, and even Siberia. Tourists flock (sorry) to nearby towns such as Kearney, Nebraska, to watch this spectacle take place. Some half a million cranes stop to wade through the shallow braids of the Platte River in the valley here, feasting on crop residue from the many cornfields in the area.
A rest stop for the birds
Today in History
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World Bicycle Day
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Presidents hear the echo of history
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Pacific Rim Whale Festival
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Dressed to impress
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National Park Week: Guadalupe Mountains National Park
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Dalmatian pelicans, Lake Kerkini, Greece
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Quebec City for Winter Carnival
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Oxbow Bend on the Snake River, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
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Summer Olympics begin in Paris
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Do spirits haunt the Gardens of Versailles?
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Ancient groves in Australia
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Jan van Eyckplein in Bruges, Belgium
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Black History Month
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It s ∞ Day!
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Where is this wintry road?
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Giants of the avian world
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Serra de Tramuntana, Majorca, Spain
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Red-leaf hunting in Japan
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Birch trees, Drammen, Norway
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A long, erratic commute
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Composite of photographs from the Apollo 15 mission
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The Hermitage of Santa Justa
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Mediterranean red sea stars
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World Rainforest Day
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Tour de France begins
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

