Survival Media Agency

Show Navigation
  • Galleries
  • Search
  • Clients
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Contact
  • SMA Website

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 229 images found }

Loading ()...

  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29823809...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29710808...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29531057...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29197545...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29197543...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29197537...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29196217...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp-participants-march...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238400...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238252...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238211...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238172...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238133...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_298238097...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_297108056...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_295310581...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_291975402...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    horses-at-sacred-stone-camp_29430149...jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp_29531055...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    Sacred Stone Camp_29430172826_o.jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    Sacred Stone Camp_29356200742_o.jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    Sacred Stone Camp participants march...jpg
  • CANNON BALL, NORTH DAKOTA-- On September 4, 2016, over Labor Day Weekend, thousands of people over 200 Native Nations remain gathered at Sacred Stone Camp to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. If built, the Pipeline would carry crude oil upstream of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.  Construction of the pipeline has already begun in some areas and has damaged sacred sites. <br />
<br />
The clearing of land by the Dakota Access Pipeline corporation on September 3rd has irreparably harmed Native historic and sacred sites. “Dakota Access Pipeline and Energy Transfer Partners brazenly used bulldozers to destroy our burial sites, prayer sites and culturally significant artifacts,” Tribal Chairman David Archambault II said. Working on a Saturday, the corporation scraped away soil and damaged sacred sites along a 150 foot corridor running more than a mile. This happened the day after Standing Rock Sioux notified officials in Washington, DC, of the existence and importance of those sites. <br />
<br />
Photo by Emma Cassidy | Survival Media Agency
    sacred-stone-camp_28842840213_o.jpg
  • #NoDAPL - Sacred Stone Camp<br />
Cannon Ball, North Dakota<br />
September 2016<br />
Photo by Sunshine Velasco | Survival Media Agency
    nodapl---sacred-stone-camp_297108224...jpg
Prev
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x