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"shape"
27,903 professional editorial images found
#13772400
1 Jun 2026
Horseshoe Bend, a horseshoe-shaped incised meander of the Colorado River, is located near the town of Page, Arizona, United States. It is also referred to as the ''east rim'' of the Grand Canyon. Photographed on May 3, 2026.
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#13772401
1 Jun 2026
Horseshoe Bend, a horseshoe-shaped incised meander of the Colorado River, is located near the town of Page, Arizona, United States. It is also referred to as the ''east rim'' of the Grand Canyon. Photographed on May 3, 2026.
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#13772397
1 Jun 2026
Tourists pose under an arch known as Biidi in Page, Arizona, on May 3, 2026. The Navajo word ''biidi'' can be understood as ''the arch'' and is often used to describe the graceful, curved stone formations that appear across the Navajo homeland, shaped over thousands of years by wind and water.
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#13772398
1 Jun 2026
A tourist poses under an arch known as Biidi in Page, Arizona, on May 3, 2026. The Navajo word ''biidi'' can be understood as ''the arch'' and is often used to describe the graceful, curved stone formations that appear across the Navajo homeland, shaped over thousands of years by wind and water.
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#13772399
1 Jun 2026
Biidi ''The Arch'' is photographed in Page, Arizona, on May 3, 2026. The Navajo word ''biidi'' can be understood as ''the arch'' and is often used to describe the graceful, curved stone formations that appear across the Navajo homeland, shaped over thousands of years by wind and water.
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#13772405
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772406
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772407
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772408
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772409
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772410
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772411
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13772412
1 Jun 2026
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, a slot canyon on Navajo land near Page, Arizona, is photographed on May 4, 2026. The canyon, part of the American Southwest, consists of six separate scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation. It was formed by the erosion of Navajo Sandstone due to flash flooding and other sub-aerial processes. Rainwater, particularly during the monsoon season, flows into the extensive basin above the slot canyon sections, gaining speed and sand as it moves through the narrow passageways. Over time, this process eroded the passageways, deepening the corridors and smoothing hard edges to create the characteristic ''flowing'' shapes.
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#13771511
1 Jun 2026
Visitors walk onto the passenger pier for Bayerische Seenschifffahrt at Lake Ammersee in Herrsching am Ammersee, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany, on May 31, 2026. Lake Ammersee is part of the Land of Five Lakes, Fuenfseenland, where boat trips, tourism, and lakeside recreation shape summer daily life.
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#13769936
31 May 2026
Visitors ride swan-shaped pedal boats on Shinobazu Pond in Ueno Park, with residential towers and office buildings forming the skyline in the background. Tokyo, Japan, May 24, 2026. NO SALES POLAND
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#13764536
30 May 2026
A panoramic view of Suncheon Bay Wetland is seen from Yongsan Observatory in Suncheon, South Korea, on May 28, 2026. The observatory, opened in 2025, overlooks the bay's iconic S-shaped tidal channel, expansive reed fields, and coastal marshes within the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Getbol, Korean Tidal Flats, one of East Asia's most significant coastal wetland ecosystems.
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