RANDY OLSON_MM8059_1493936.JPG
An ancient Moai statue and wild horses on Rano Raraku crater. Moai toppled along the road were left as rubble.Their eyes are not completed until they standing upright.
A small herd of wild horses, introduced from Tahiti by Catholic missionaries in the 19th-century, trek across Easter Island.
- Copyright
- RANDY OLSON
- Image Size
- 5562x3450 / 15.5MB
- Keywords
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ancient civilization, animals, antiquities, antiquities and artifacts, architecture and art, artifacts, broken, coastlines, color image, colossus, craters and calderas, day, easter island, fallen, famous place, geography, grazing, horizons over water, horses, human representation, indigenous culture, international landmark, male likeness, mammals, moai, mystery, no people, oceanic architecture and art, oceans, outdoors, pacific islands, pacific ocean, past, photography, polynesia, polynesian antiquities and artifacts, polynesian architecture and art, polynesian culture, rano raraku, rano raraku crater, rapa nui, rock, sculpture, shorelines, statues, travel destinations, two animals, unesco world heritage sites, volcanic rock, water, wild horses, world heritage sites
- Contained in galleries
- Easter Island_National Geographic magazine 7/2012