photo: Public Domain / SolarSurfer
Pirates' Lair
photo: Creative Commons / SteamFan
Pirate's Lair on Tom Sawyer Island.
photo: Public Domain / Jonnyboyca
Pirate's Lair on Tom Sawyer Island.
photo: US Navy / U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Melissa White
David Lair and Petty Officer 1st Class Julie Coyle transfer a name to paper from The Moving Wall.
photo: Creative Commons / SolarSurfer
Pirate's Lair on Tom Sawyer Island is an artificial island surrounded by the Rivers of America at Disneyland. It contains caves with references to Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean film trilogy, Mark Twain characters from the novel The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and provides interactive, climbing, and scenic opportunities.
photo: Creative Commons
Beinn Liath Mhòr
photo: Creative Commons / Greenmnm69
The Taktshang Monastery, also known as the "Tiger's Nest"
photo: AP / Jeff Maitem
Philippine troops fire howitzers at Muslim rebel lairs in Midsayap town, North Cotabato province, southern Philippines on Sunday Aug. 10, 2008. Government troops attacked Muslim guerrillas, setting off fierce exchanges of machine gun and artillery fire in a southern province after hundreds of rebels defied an ultimatum to withdraw from Christian villages, officials s
photo: US AF
Bare B-1 Lancer (US AF) KLeo
photo: AP Photo / Brendan P. Kelly
Ice Seal
photo: Creative Commons / Vassil
Taktsang Dzong
photo: U.S. Army / Sgt. Patrick Lair
RUBBLE CROSSING - U.S. Army Sgt. Cole Weih crosses a pile of rubble at Combat Outpost Killer near downtown Mosul, Iraq, Jan. 23, 2008. Weih is a medic assigned to the 3d Armored Cavalry Regiment's 3rd Squadron. wnhires
photo: Creative Commons / Dar-Ape
Wolf eel
photo: Public Domain / File Upload Bot (Eloquence)
Hercules and the Hydra, (c. 1475) by Antonio Pollaiuolo (Galleria degli Uffizi).
photo: Creative Commons / Alfred A. Si
Fantasmic! finale as seen on July 4, 2010. Fantasmic! which debuted in 1992, is a popular multimedia nighttime show on the Rivers of America.
photo: Creative Commons
Devils Tower, 1900
photo: Creative Commons / Mick Knapton
Sgorr Ruadh is a mountain situated in the mountainous area between Strath Carron and Glen Torridon in Wester Ross in the Highland Region of Scotland. It is located in Coire Lair near Achnashellach along with two other fine mountains, Beinn Liath Mhòr and Fuar Tholl, and is often climbed in conjunction with one or both of these other mountains.
photo: Creative Commons / Yuval Y
Containers in The Port of Haifa Bay has been a refuge for mariners since prehistoric times. When the Crusaders conquered Haifa in the year 1100, it became an important town and the main port for Tiberias, the capital of the Galilee.
photo: Creative Commons
The village of Houdeng-Aimeries
photo: Creative Commons / Serdelll
Kętrzyn [ˈkɛntʂɨn] ( listen) (German: Rastenburg (Ltspkr.png listen); former Polish: Rastembork), is a town in northeastern Poland with 28,351 inhabitants (2004). Situated in the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship (since 1999), Kętrzyn was previously in Olsztyn Voivodeship (1975-1998). It is the capital of Kętrzyn County. The city was named after Wojciech Kętrzyński in 1950.
photo: Creative Commons
Painting of Padmapani and Vajrapani from Cave No. 1
photo: Creative Commons / Mick Knapton
Stob Coire Easain is a Scottish Munro mountain which reaches a height of 1115 metres (3658 feet), situated 18 kilometres east of Fort William. It stands on the western side of Loch Treig, along with its "twin", the Munro Stob a' Choire Mheadhoin (1105 metres). Collectively the pair are called "The Easains" or the "Stob Corries"[1] and stand just one kilometre apart connected by a high col with an approximate height of 965 metres. The fine corrie of Coire Easain Beag lies in between the two mount
photo: Creative Commons
17th-century manuscript illustration showing Amblett, on whom Shakespeare's Hamlet is based