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New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, Louisiana, United States (30°00’ N, 90°05’ W). Financial District, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).Municipal Building, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°43’ N, 74°00’ W).
Statue of Liberty, Liberty Island, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°41’ N, 74°02’ W).Buildings of Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).Rooftop water tower, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).
IAC Building, Designed by architect Frank Gehry, 11th Avenue, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).Blue Tower © Bernard Tschumi Architects, 105 Norfolk Street, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).Park in Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).
Shepard Hall, City University of New-York, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°49’ N, 73°56’ W).Buildings of Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).New Museum of Contemporary Art, Bowery, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).
Rooftop water tower, Manhattan, New York, United States (40°45’ N, 73°59’ W).Venetian Islands in Biscayne Bay, Miami, Florida, United States (25°47’ N, 80°10’ W).




Interchange between the 105 and 110 freeways, Los Angeles, United States (34°02’ N, 118°16’ W).

Los Angeles, in Southern California, is the second-largest city in the United States in population and area. Los Angeles is a shipping, industrial, communication, and financial center for the western United States and much of the Pacific Basin, and the motion-picture capital of the nation, if not the world. The Los Angeles metropolitan area encompasses 34,000 square miles (88,000 km2) and is connected by a freeway system, which is increasingly unable to accommodate the growing traffic. The tremendous number of vehicles, coupled with the geographic position of the city, creates unhealthily high levels of smog. A light-rail system and bus transporation do little to alleviate the highway congestion. One-quarter of the energy produced globally is absorbed by the transport sector. Transportation accounts for half of world petroleum consumption, which has expanded sevenfold in fifty years. This sector is responsible for nearly a fourth of carbon dioxide emissions and is thus among the chief sources of greenhouse gas emissions, which lead in turn to global warming. It is possible, however, that the petroleum era may be coming to a close, succeeded by the age of hydrogen, a clean fuel extracted from water, which can be used in engines equipped with a fuel-driven battery.

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