Beautiful turquoise waves rise and fall in a series of stunning images taken along the coastline of south-eastern Australia. For the last three years Australian photographer Warren Keelan has been venturing into the ocean to shoot waves off the coast of New South Wales. The 39-year-old, of Wollongong, New South Wales, began his project because he wanted to capture the unpredictability of nature. Warren says: “I’ve always had a fascination with nature, especially the ocean.
Grandmother Janet Kirby was told she couldn't board her plane home after being accused of assault .
BREATHING life back into old photographs, these black and white images are transformed by colour .
An Australian beach is illuminated by an enticing neon blue glow as a rare phenomenon lights up the water .
LIKE A living balloon this baitball of sardines is ready to burst when threatened by a pointy nosed sailfish .
ESCAPING A LANDFILL FUTURE, these amazing science fiction inspired sculptures are made from everyday objects .
THESE LOVE BIRDS can’t keep their beaks off each other as they share a very public display of affection .
A trio of ants are locked in a tug of war over a fly as they pull the bug by its legs .
An Italian photographer travelled to the highlands of New Guinea where he met an Indonesian tribe untouched by the modern world .
From a floating jelly fish to a relaxed seal, Britain’s unappreciated beach life is captured above and below the water .
USUALLY full to bursting, these London Underground stations stand silent and completely commuter free .
A Birmingham man inspired by sci-fi film Wall-E, has created a one- wheeled vehicle, controlled by signals from his BRAIN .
With an abandoned tricycle sitting in an empty corridor, this derelict but once grand mansion could be the setting for The Shining .