Sulfur, salt, and other minerals color the crater of Dallol volcano, part of the Danakil Depression in Ethiopia. At 157 feet (48 meters) below sea level, Dallol is Earth's lowest land volcano.
Photograph by Carsten Peter

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Sulfur, salt, and other minerals color the crater of Dallol volcano, part of the Danakil Depression in Ethiopia. At 157 feet (48 meters) below sea level, Dallol is Earth's lowest land volcano.
Photograph by Carsten Peter
National Geographic: ‘Ol Doinyo Lengai’ (2003) photo: Carsten Peter
caverna de cristais, naica, chihuahua, méxico, por volta de 2008. foto de carsten peter.
Sơn Đoòng Cave in Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park, Vietnam, 2010 Photographer: Carsten Peter Source: National Geographic
DANIKIL DEPRESSION, ETHIOPIA
Discs of deposited minerals ring a 12-foot wide hot spring in Ethiopia.
PHOTOGRAPH BY CARSTEN PETER, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE
Tiefschwarze Höhlen, tobende Vulkane, tosende Tornados: Carsten Peter ist in der ganzen Welt unterwegs. Ein Besuch bei einem, der für ein Foto alles riskiert.
NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA
Mammoth ferns flourish between the narrow walls of Claustral Canyon in New South Wales, Australia.
PHOTOGRAPH BY CARSTEN PETER, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE
Photo by Carsten Peter