Transport w Kolumbii - Redux

EN_01061504_0005
Transport w Kolumbii - Redux
A DC 3 abandoned rests near another airplane near the airport's landing strip in the city of Villavicencio, Colombia, 2012. In Colombia they call them the buses of the jungle, or the tractors of the jungle, because they fly over everything that is jungle. Introduced in 1935 by the Douglas Aircraft Co., the DC-3 revolutionized air travel, offering 14-berth sleeper transports that allowed passengers to fly from New York to Los Angeles. In World War II, they transported allied troops to Normandy and operated in the heat and sandstorms of North Africa and the frigid Arctic Circle.
MINIMUM PRICE $100
2012-02-21
Carlos Villalon/Redux/EAST NEWS
Redux Pictures
Carlos Villalon/Redux
h_14298940
3,7MB
37cm x 25cm przy 300dpi
1935, 2012, 3, A, ABANDONED, AFRICA, AIR, AIRCRAFT, AIRPLANE, AIRPORT, ALLIED, ALLOWED, AND, ANGELES, ANOTHER, ARCTIC, AVAIATION, BECAUSE, BUSES, BY, CALL, CARLOS, CIRCLE, CITY, CO, COLOMBIA, DC, DC-3, DOUGLAS, EVERYTHING, FLY, FRIGID, FROM, HEAT, II, IN, INTRODUCED, IS, JUNGLE, LANDING, LOS, NEAR, NEW, NORMANDY, NORTH, OF, OFFERING, OPERATED, OR, OVER, PASSENGERS, PLANE, REDUX, RESTS, REVOLUTIONIZED, SANDSTORMS, SLEEPER, STRIP, THAT, THE, THEM, THEY, TO, TRACTORS, TRANSPORTATION, TRANSPORTED, TRANSPORTS, TRAVEL, TROOPS, VILLALON, VILLAVICENCIO, WAR, WORLD, YORK,