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"coarse threads"
33 professional editorial images found
#12838945
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838946
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838952
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838953
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838955
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838956
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#12838957
7 October 2025
An Indian farmer dries jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, in Nagaon District, Assam, India, on October 7, 2025.
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#11474157
13 August 2024
An Indian farmer is drying jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, at Bhurbandha village in Nagaon District of Assam, India, on August 13, 2024.
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#11474158
13 August 2024
An Indian farmer is drying jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, at Bhurbandha village in Nagaon District of Assam, India, on August 13, 2024.
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#11474167
13 August 2024
An Indian farmer is drying jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, at Bhurbandha village in Nagaon District of Assam, India, on August 13, 2024.
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#11474168
13 August 2024
A woman is drying jute, a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse strong threads, at Bhurbandha village in Nagaon District in Assam, India, on August 13, 2024.
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#2607609
11 April 2018
April 11, 2018-Goyang, South Korea-A View of Korean War battle of white horse memorial monument in Cheorwon, South Korea. The Battle of White Horse was another in a series of bloody battles for dominant hilltop positions during the Korean War. Baengma-goji was a 395-metre (1,296 ft) hill in the Iron Triangle, formed by Pyonggang at its peak and Gimhwa-eup and Cheorwon at its base, was a strategic transportation route in the central region of the Korean peninsula. White Horse was the crest of a forested hill mass that extended in a northwest-to-southeast direction for about two miles (3 km), part of the area controlled by the U.S. IX Corps, and considered an important outpost hill with a good command over the Yokkok-chon Valley, dominating the western approaches to Cheorwon. Loss of the hill would force the IX Corps to withdraw to the high ground south of the Yokkok-chon in the Cheorwon area, would deny the IX Corps use of the Cheorwon road net, and would open up the entire Cheorwon area to enemy attack and penetration. During ten days of battle, the hill would change hands 24 times after repeated attacks and counterattacks for its possession. It was one of the most intense position-grasping battle for a small hill during the course of the Korean War. Afterwards, Baengma-goji looked like a threadbare white horse, thence its name of Baengma, meaning a white horse.
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#2607610
11 April 2018
April 11, 2018-Goyang, South Korea-A View of Korean War battle of white horse memorial monument in Cheorwon, South Korea. The Battle of White Horse was another in a series of bloody battles for dominant hilltop positions during the Korean War. Baengma-goji was a 395-metre (1,296 ft) hill in the Iron Triangle, formed by Pyonggang at its peak and Gimhwa-eup and Cheorwon at its base, was a strategic transportation route in the central region of the Korean peninsula. White Horse was the crest of a forested hill mass that extended in a northwest-to-southeast direction for about two miles (3 km), part of the area controlled by the U.S. IX Corps, and considered an important outpost hill with a good command over the Yokkok-chon Valley, dominating the western approaches to Cheorwon. Loss of the hill would force the IX Corps to withdraw to the high ground south of the Yokkok-chon in the Cheorwon area, would deny the IX Corps use of the Cheorwon road net, and would open up the entire Cheorwon area to enemy attack and penetration. During ten days of battle, the hill would change hands 24 times after repeated attacks and counterattacks for its possession. It was one of the most intense position-grasping battle for a small hill during the course of the Korean War. Afterwards, Baengma-goji looked like a threadbare white horse, thence its name of Baengma, meaning a white horse.
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#2607611
11 April 2018
April 11, 2018-Goyang, South Korea-A View of Korean War battle of white horse memorial monument in Cheorwon, South Korea. The Battle of White Horse was another in a series of bloody battles for dominant hilltop positions during the Korean War. Baengma-goji was a 395-metre (1,296 ft) hill in the Iron Triangle, formed by Pyonggang at its peak and Gimhwa-eup and Cheorwon at its base, was a strategic transportation route in the central region of the Korean peninsula. White Horse was the crest of a forested hill mass that extended in a northwest-to-southeast direction for about two miles (3 km), part of the area controlled by the U.S. IX Corps, and considered an important outpost hill with a good command over the Yokkok-chon Valley, dominating the western approaches to Cheorwon. Loss of the hill would force the IX Corps to withdraw to the high ground south of the Yokkok-chon in the Cheorwon area, would deny the IX Corps use of the Cheorwon road net, and would open up the entire Cheorwon area to enemy attack and penetration. During ten days of battle, the hill would change hands 24 times after repeated attacks and counterattacks for its possession. It was one of the most intense position-grasping battle for a small hill during the course of the Korean War. Afterwards, Baengma-goji looked like a threadbare white horse, thence its name of Baengma, meaning a white horse.
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#2607612
11 April 2018
April 11, 2018-Goyang, South Korea-A View of Korean War battle of white horse memorial monument in Cheorwon, South Korea. The Battle of White Horse was another in a series of bloody battles for dominant hilltop positions during the Korean War. Baengma-goji was a 395-metre (1,296 ft) hill in the Iron Triangle, formed by Pyonggang at its peak and Gimhwa-eup and Cheorwon at its base, was a strategic transportation route in the central region of the Korean peninsula. White Horse was the crest of a forested hill mass that extended in a northwest-to-southeast direction for about two miles (3 km), part of the area controlled by the U.S. IX Corps, and considered an important outpost hill with a good command over the Yokkok-chon Valley, dominating the western approaches to Cheorwon. Loss of the hill would force the IX Corps to withdraw to the high ground south of the Yokkok-chon in the Cheorwon area, would deny the IX Corps use of the Cheorwon road net, and would open up the entire Cheorwon area to enemy attack and penetration. During ten days of battle, the hill would change hands 24 times after repeated attacks and counterattacks for its possession. It was one of the most intense position-grasping battle for a small hill during the course of the Korean War. Afterwards, Baengma-goji looked like a threadbare white horse, thence its name of Baengma, meaning a white horse.
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#2607613
11 April 2018
April 11, 2018-Goyang, South Korea-A View of Korean War battle of white horse memorial monument in Cheorwon, South Korea. The Battle of White Horse was another in a series of bloody battles for dominant hilltop positions during the Korean War. Baengma-goji was a 395-metre (1,296 ft) hill in the Iron Triangle, formed by Pyonggang at its peak and Gimhwa-eup and Cheorwon at its base, was a strategic transportation route in the central region of the Korean peninsula. White Horse was the crest of a forested hill mass that extended in a northwest-to-southeast direction for about two miles (3 km), part of the area controlled by the U.S. IX Corps, and considered an important outpost hill with a good command over the Yokkok-chon Valley, dominating the western approaches to Cheorwon. Loss of the hill would force the IX Corps to withdraw to the high ground south of the Yokkok-chon in the Cheorwon area, would deny the IX Corps use of the Cheorwon road net, and would open up the entire Cheorwon area to enemy attack and penetration. During ten days of battle, the hill would change hands 24 times after repeated attacks and counterattacks for its possession. It was one of the most intense position-grasping battle for a small hill during the course of the Korean War. Afterwards, Baengma-goji looked like a threadbare white horse, thence its name of Baengma, meaning a white horse.
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