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Bing Image Archive

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2021-01-29
OHR.RedRobin_ZH-CN4148689161_1366x768
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2021-01-29
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2021-01-29
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2021-01-29
European robin during a winter snowstorm, Peak District National Park, England (© Ben Robson Hull Photography/Getty Images)
冬季暴风雪中的欧亚鸲,英格兰峰区国家公园 (© Ben Robson Hull Photography/Getty Images)


Winter often brings cold and snow to the uplands of England's Peak District National Park, as this wee European robin surely knows. Here we see it puffing up its plumage to insulate its body against the wintry weather. Unrelated to the American robin, the European robin is commonly known in the British Isles as the robin redbreast. But it's more orange than red, you say? That's because when British people first named it the redbreast, probably in the 1400s, the word 'orange' had not yet been introduced as a color name in the English language. Animals and other things were often named 'red' even when orange or tawny: the red deer, Red Planet, and robin redbreast are all examples. Whatever you decide to call our diminutive friend, we appreciate its bright splash of color on an otherwise bleak wintry day.
th.jpg
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2021-01-30
OHR.BodminFrost_ZH-CN4303222848_5000x2813
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
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2021-01-30
Svalbard Global Seed Vault with a glittering facade designed by artist Dyveke Sanne, Svalbard, Norway (© Pal Hermansen/Minden Pictures)
博德明高沼上布朗威利山麓的废弃小屋,英格兰 (© Helen Hotson/Alamy Stock Photo)


This glittering monolith of cold metal is a lot like that still-sealed emergency survival kit languishing in your basement since 1999: Reassuring to have around, but a bummer when you actually have to use it. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault—better known by its cute nickname, the 'Doomsday Vault'—was established on this far-northern Norwegian isle in 2008 to archive frozen genetic copies of seeds already housed in seed banks around the world: a backup of all the backups. Kept at -0.4 degrees F within the Seed Vault, precious botanicals from food to fibers to flowers are safe from disasters, even of the apocalyptic variety. Lucky us: It'll take a healthy diet of veggies to fight off the zombies.
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2021-01-31
OHR.MittenwalderHut_ZH-CN4406131876_3861x2172
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
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2021-01-31
Mittenwalder Hütte in the Bavarian Alps of Germany (© Sebastian Frölich/Offset by Shutterstock)
巴伐利亚阿尔卑斯山脉中的米滕瓦尔德小屋,德国 (© Sebastian Frölich/Offset by Shutterstock)


Peering from this vantage point you may wonder, how in the world could anyone access this hut nestled in the Bavarian Alps? By hiking in, of course. There are well over 1,000 such huts dotting the Alpine landscape throughout Europe, most of them built and maintained by private social clubs devoted to climbing, hiking, and other activities in the mountains. These huts allow hikers to light out onto the extensive trail systems, sometimes for days, while carrying as little gear as possible. No need to pack cooking equipment, tents and sleeping bags when you have guaranteed shelter each night, with dinners, breakfasts, and, if you're lucky, a hot shower, included.