PhotoStock-Israel Licensed stock photography

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 2110 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Anthropological map of the Geographical distribution of the various tribes of Ethiopia Omo Vally region
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05640.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05636.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Ran_660.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men collecting water from the muddy almost dry waterhole. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_668.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, children of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05635.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, children of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05631.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05629.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, Child of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05625.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05622.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men hunting with bow and arrow Small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe
    GF_Tanzania_0912_261.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men hunting with bow and arrow Small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe
    GF_Tanzania_0912_260.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Yuval_656.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Ran_659.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Ran_658.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_672.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters collect the hunted animals before cooking. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_671.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters collect the hunted animals before cooking. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_670.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_667.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men collecting water from the muddy almost dry waterhole. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_666.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza man eats the catch pg the day. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_665.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_664.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Portrait of a young Hadza mother with her baby, A small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_663.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters with bow and arrow. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_661.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, members of the Datoga tribe Woman in traditional dress, beads and earrings. Beauty scarring can be seen around the eyes,
    EB_Tanzania_9426.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, members of the Datoga tribe Woman in traditional dress, beads and earrings. Beauty scarring can be seen around the eyes,
    EB_Tanzania_9430.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05637.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men hunting with bow and arrow Small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe
    GF_Tanzania_0912_257.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, Child of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05633.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05630.jpg
  • Africa, Ethiopia, Debub Omo Zone, woman of the Mursi tribe. A nomadic cattle herder ethnic group located in Southern Ethiopia, close to the Sudanese border. Woman with clay lip disc as body ornaments
    RH_Ethiopia_DSC05623.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza men collecting water from the muddy almost dry waterhole. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_669.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Lake Eyasi, Hadza hunters collect the hunted animals before cooking. Hadza are a small tribe of hunter gatherers AKA Hadzabe Tribe August 2009
    GF_Hatza-Eran_662.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2011_233.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_0869.jpg
  • First weaver Bronze Age according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0331.jpg
  • Portrait of a mature Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2014_101.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2008_437.jpg
  • Ancient Ethnographical map of South Africa (1895) [Percentage of Whites in the population] from the book 'The Castle Line atlas of South Africa' : a series of 16 plates, printed in colour, containing 30 maps and diagrams, with an account of the geographical features , the climate, the mineral and other resources, and the history of South Africa. And an index of over 6,000 names
    IR_f_South-Africa-Map_0075.jpg
  • Iron Age agriculture, according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0415.jpg
  • Iron Age, The Chase boar hunting according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0407.jpg
  • Machine colorized (AI) image Iron Age warriors, according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0399-Colorised.jpg
  • Machine colorized (AI) image Bronze Age warriors according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0353-colorized.jpg
  • Feast during the Bronze Age according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0341.jpg
  • Garden cultivating Bronze Age according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0337.jpg
  • Bronze Age hunting according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0303.jpg
  • Bronze Age village according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0289.jpg
  • Bronze workshop according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0273.jpg
  • Tumulus according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0261.jpg
  • Dugout canoe according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0231.jpg
  • Fishing during the Polished-Stone epoch according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0187.jpg
  • according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0177.jpg
  • according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0177-colorized.jpg
  • Funeral Ceremony during the Reindeer epoch according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0163.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_431.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2012_683.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2008_435.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2008_433.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2008_428.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_0785.jpg
  • The Venus of Willendorf is an 11.1-centimetre-tall (4.4 in) Venus figurine estimated to have been made 30,000 BCE. It was found on August 7, 1908 during excavations at a paleolithic site near Willendorf, a village in Lower Austria near the town of Krems It is carved from an oolitic limestone that is not local to the area, and tinted with red ochre. The figurine is now in the Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria.
    IR_Vienna_E4376.jpg
  • Humanoid Skeletal reconstruction of Homo ergaster, also Homo erectus ergaster or African Homo erectus is an extinct chronospecies of the genus Homo that lived in eastern and southern Africa during the early Pleistocene, between about 1.9 million and 1.4 million years ago.. Originally proposed as a separate species, H. ergaster is now mostly considered either an early form, or an African variety, of H. erectus.[at the Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria
    IR_Vienna_E4372.jpg
  • Humanoid Skeletal reconstruction of Homo ergaster, also Homo erectus ergaster or African Homo erectus is an extinct chronospecies of the genus Homo that lived in eastern and southern Africa during the early Pleistocene, between about 1.9 million and 1.4 million years ago.. Originally proposed as a separate species, H. ergaster is now mostly considered either an early form, or an African variety, of H. erectus.[at the Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria
    IR_Vienna_E4371.jpg
  • Hominin Skeletal reconstruction of Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy) A. afarensis was a bipedal human-like primate (hominid) that lived in Africa 3.9-3 million years ago. Lucy's skeleton was found in Ethiopia in 1974 and is thought to be 3.3 million years old. at the Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria
    IR_Vienna_E4369.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5865.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5861.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5843.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5829.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5769.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5771.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5755.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5742.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5727.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5720.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5708.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5702.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5327.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5229.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Maasai dancing with European tourists in traditional robes at sunset an ethnic group of semi-nomadic people April 2006
    GF_0604_Tanzia_016.jpg
  • life-size sculptures by Rita Longa at the reconstructed Taino village of Guamá, Cuba depicting the life of this indigenous tribe
    AG_Taino-Village_1075_1.jpg
  • life-size sculptures by Rita Longa at the reconstructed Taino village of Guamá, Cuba depicting the life of this indigenous tribe
    AG_Taino-Village_1088_1.jpg
  • Iron Age warriors, according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0399.jpg
  • Iron Age furnace and smelting , according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0379.jpg
  • Iron Age Funeral ceremony, according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0393.jpg
  • Bronze Age warriors according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0353.jpg
  • Early human warfare according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0237.jpg
  • Early humans working flint, according to the French illustrator Emile Bayard (1837-1891), illustration Artwork published in Primitive Man by Louis Figuier (1819-1894), Published in London by Chapman and Hall 193 Piccadilly in 1870
    IR_Primitive-Man_0205.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman with baby Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2012_673.jpg
  • Portrait of a Datooga woman Photographed in Lake Eyasi Tanzania
    GF_Datooga-Woman_2008_211.jpg
  • The Venus of Willendorf is an 11.1-centimetre-tall (4.4 in) Venus figurine estimated to have been made 30,000 BCE. It was found on August 7, 1908 during excavations at a paleolithic site near Willendorf, a village in Lower Austria near the town of Krems It is carved from an oolitic limestone that is not local to the area, and tinted with red ochre. The figurine is now in the Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria.
    IR_Vienna_E4383.jpg
  • Humanoid Skeletal reconstruction of Homo ergaster, also Homo erectus ergaster or African Homo erectus is an extinct chronospecies of the genus Homo that lived in eastern and southern Africa during the early Pleistocene, between about 1.9 million and 1.4 million years ago.. Originally proposed as a separate species, H. ergaster is now mostly considered either an early form, or an African variety, of H. erectus.[at the Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria
    IR_Vienna_E4373.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5870.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5816.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5785.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5757.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5437.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5399.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5394.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5395.jpg
  • Bushman, Kalahari Desert, Namibia. The Bushmen are indigenous people of southern Africa that span areas of South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. Bushmen were traditionally hunter-gatherers but began to switch to farming in the 1950s. Genetic evidence suggests they are one of the oldest, if not the oldest, peoples in the world, from which all humans can ultimately trace their genetic heritage.
    BT_Namibia_IA8A5204.jpg
  • Africa, Tanzania, Maasai an ethnic group of semi-nomadic people February 2006
    GF_Maasai_0206_018.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x