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"Treaty No.6"
67 professional editorial images found
#13080133
10 December 2025
A horse reaches for half an apple and a piece of a carrot lying on a bar of a fence at Zaporizhzhia Stud Farm N86, which is close to the front line, in Trudove village, Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine, on December 6, 2025. Nine Ukrainian Riding and Thoroughbred horses are relocated to the Southern Breeding Horse Centre in Mykolaiv, considered a safer location. These horses are earlier evacuated from Dnipropetrovsk Stud Farm N65, which is destroyed by Russian shelling. In December 2022, Russian forces strike Zaporizhzhia Stud Farm with S-300 missiles, severely damaging part of the stables.
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#13065400
6 December 2025
A festive Christmas market takes place in Tegernsee, Miesbach, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany, on December 6, 2025. Tegernsee is located in the Bavarian Alps, on the eastern shore of Lake Tegernsee.
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#12796802
26 September 2025
The Leonidas Belgian chocolate store has its recognizable blue signage and entrance on a cobblestone street in Verviers, Belgium, on September 6, 2025.
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#12796803
26 September 2025
The Leonidas Belgian chocolate store has its recognizable blue signage and entrance on a cobblestone street in Verviers, Belgium, on September 6, 2025.
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#12451451
7 June 2025
A sign for Dubai chocolate and strawberry desserts is displayed at the Northern Heat Rib and Beer Festival in Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, on June 6, 2025. The Northern Heat Rib Series is Canada's largest Rib & Beer Festival, featuring some of the best rib teams in North America.
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#12334737
5 May 2025
EDMONTON, CANADA - MAY 3: Counter-protesters hold the Treaty No.6 flag, during the Rally for Alberta Independence outside the Alberta Legislature, following the federal election win by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals and the tabling of new independence-related legislation by Premier Danielle Smith’s UCP government, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on May 3, 2025. A smaller group of counter-protesters demonstrated nearby, highlighting concerns over Indigenous treaty rights and the broader implications of provincial separation.
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#12334711
5 May 2025
EDMONTON, CANADA - MAY 3: A rally attendee stands in front of an counter-protesters who hold the Treaty No.6 flag, during the Rally for Alberta Independence outside the Alberta Legislature, following the federal election win by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals and the tabling of new independence-related legislation by Premier Danielle Smith’s UCP government, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on May 3, 2025. A smaller group of counter-protesters demonstrated nearby, highlighting concerns over Indigenous treaty rights and the broader implications of provincial separation.
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#11837561
5 December 2024
A sales stand with Santa Claus figures is at the Christmas market on Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, on December 5, 2024.
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#11837562
5 December 2024
A sales stand with Santa Claus figures is at the Christmas market on Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, on December 5, 2024.
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#11837564
5 December 2024
A sales stand with Santa Claus figures is at the Christmas market on Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, on December 5, 2024.
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#11837588
5 December 2024
A sales stand with Santa Claus figures is at the Christmas market on Marienplatz in Munich, Germany, on December 5, 2024.
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#10197260
24 June 2023
Stevia is a natural sweetener and sugar substitute made from the leaves of the plant species Stevia rebaudiana, native to Paraguay and Brazil. It's about 100 to 300 times sweeter than table sugar, but it has no carbohydrates, calories, or artificial ingredients. Not everyone likes the way it tastes. Stevia sweeteners are safe to consume. They are one of eight types of low- and no-calorie sweeteners permitted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the U.S. food supply. The plant Stevia rebaudiana has been used for more than 1,500 years by the Guarani peoples of South America, who called it ka'a he'e (''sweet herb''). The leaves have been used traditionally for hundreds of years in both Paraguay and Brazil to sweeten local teas and medicines and as a ''sweet treat''. The stevia plant is a source of sweetness that does not contain calories. The primary components responsible for stevia's sweetness--steviol glycosides--are in their leaves. This photo was taken at Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama, Sargachi at Beldanga, West Bengal; India on 22/6/2023.
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#10197262
24 June 2023
Stevia is a natural sweetener and sugar substitute made from the leaves of the plant species Stevia rebaudiana, native to Paraguay and Brazil. It's about 100 to 300 times sweeter than table sugar, but it has no carbohydrates, calories, or artificial ingredients. Not everyone likes the way it tastes. Stevia sweeteners are safe to consume. They are one of eight types of low- and no-calorie sweeteners permitted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the U.S. food supply. The plant Stevia rebaudiana has been used for more than 1,500 years by the Guarani peoples of South America, who called it ka'a he'e (''sweet herb''). The leaves have been used traditionally for hundreds of years in both Paraguay and Brazil to sweeten local teas and medicines and as a ''sweet treat''. The stevia plant is a source of sweetness that does not contain calories. The primary components responsible for stevia's sweetness--steviol glycosides--are in their leaves. This photo was taken at Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama, Sargachi at Beldanga, West Bengal; India on 22/6/2023.
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#10197264
24 June 2023
Stevia is a natural sweetener and sugar substitute made from the leaves of the plant species Stevia rebaudiana, native to Paraguay and Brazil. It's about 100 to 300 times sweeter than table sugar, but it has no carbohydrates, calories, or artificial ingredients. Not everyone likes the way it tastes. Stevia sweeteners are safe to consume. They are one of eight types of low- and no-calorie sweeteners permitted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the U.S. food supply. The plant Stevia rebaudiana has been used for more than 1,500 years by the Guarani peoples of South America, who called it ka'a he'e (''sweet herb''). The leaves have been used traditionally for hundreds of years in both Paraguay and Brazil to sweeten local teas and medicines and as a ''sweet treat''. The stevia plant is a source of sweetness that does not contain calories. The primary components responsible for stevia's sweetness--steviol glycosides--are in their leaves. This photo was taken at Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama, Sargachi at Beldanga, West Bengal; India on 22/6/2023.
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#10197266
24 June 2023
Stevia is a natural sweetener and sugar substitute made from the leaves of the plant species Stevia rebaudiana, native to Paraguay and Brazil. It's about 100 to 300 times sweeter than table sugar, but it has no carbohydrates, calories, or artificial ingredients. Not everyone likes the way it tastes. Stevia sweeteners are safe to consume. They are one of eight types of low- and no-calorie sweeteners permitted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the U.S. food supply. The plant Stevia rebaudiana has been used for more than 1,500 years by the Guarani peoples of South America, who called it ka'a he'e (''sweet herb''). The leaves have been used traditionally for hundreds of years in both Paraguay and Brazil to sweeten local teas and medicines and as a ''sweet treat''. The stevia plant is a source of sweetness that does not contain calories. The primary components responsible for stevia's sweetness--steviol glycosides--are in their leaves. This photo was taken at Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama, Sargachi at Beldanga, West Bengal; India on 22/6/2023.
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#6996976
28 August 2021
More than a thousand water protectors gathered at Saint Paul, the Minnesota State Capitol, USA on August 25, 2021 for ''Treaties Not Tar Sands,'' a peaceful rally to put pressure on elected officials to stop Line 3. The event coincides with the final day of the ''Treaty People Walk for Water'' as they reach the end of their 256-mile journey traveling on foot from the White Earth Nation to St. Paul.
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