Bing Wallpapers Archive

Bing 壁纸档案馆

存档数
455
上次更新
2026年3月28日

找到 455 条结果,当前第 5 / 38页。

Salar de Uyuni salt flats in Bolivia
2026年2月7日20260207

Salar de Uyuni salt flats in Bolivia

Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia doesn't ease you in—it erupts into view like a horizon made of light. It's the world's largest salt flat, stretching across more than 10,400 square kilometres at nearly 3,658 metres above sea level. The landscape dramatically shifts with the seasons: when the rain arrives, the surface floods just enough to become an enormous mirror, so perfectly reflective that sky and ground melt into a single glowing plane.

© Abstract Aerial Art/Getty Images

Ra Gusela peak at Giau Pass, near Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy
2026年2月6日20260206

Ra Gusela peak at Giau Pass, near Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy

At the Giau Pass, where cyclists gasp and clouds drift like they're sightseeing too, this sharp-backed peak rises with quiet confidence. It's the kind of mountain that says, 'Take your time,' and then steals your breath anyway. Ra Gusela sits above Giau Pass, one of the most scenic high passes in the Dolomites, just outside Cortina d'Ampezzo. At 2,595 metres, it isn't the tallest neighbour in the room, but it has presence.

© Tomasz Podolski/Getty Images

Salt evaporation ponds on the island of Gozo, Malta
2026年2月5日20260205

Salt evaporation ponds on the island of Gozo, Malta

Xwejni Bay in Gozo, Malta, has a way of making everyday elements look like a quiet choreography between sea, stone and sun. You can't help but pause and look closer, right? Centuries back, families began carving these limestone pans, shaping hundreds of basins that trap seawater with each wave. Once the water settles in, the sun's heat does the rest, slowly evaporating it into natural Mediterranean salt. Gozo became a salt-making hub because its limestone coast is easy to shape, and its warm, dry summers keep the crystallisation process steady. The first crystals form around May, marking the beginning of the harvesting season. Workers rake the salt by hand, sweep it with brooms and brushes, gather it into small piles to dry for another day, then bag it and store it in the caves.

© Marius Roman/Getty Images

Red kite in snow
2026年2月4日20260204

Red kite in snow

Red kites are striking birds of prey known for their reddish‑brown bodies, pale heads and long, forked tails that help them steer with impressive precision. Mostly found in Europe, they thrive in countries such as the United Kingdom, Spain, France and Germany. The Chiltern Hills in England are one of the biggest conservation success stories: once nearly wiped out there, the birds rebounded after chicks from Spain were released in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

© Carl Mckie/500px/Getty Images

Emerald Bay and Fannette Island, Lake Tahoe, California, United States
2026年2月3日20260203

Emerald Bay and Fannette Island, Lake Tahoe, California, United States

You know a place holds stories when geologists, filmmakers and local folklore all claim it for different reasons. Lake Tahoe, straddling the border between California and Nevada, United States, fits that bill perfectly. Formed during the Ice Age, the lake was shaped by faulting and glacial carving that created its deep basin. It is now one of the deepest freshwater lakes in the United States. For generations, the Washoe people lived around these clear waters, fishing and gathering seasonally. Centuries later, miners arrived, steamboats crossed the water and Tahoe shifted from a resource hub to a year-round retreat.

© Bill Stevenson/Cavan Images

Alpine marmots, Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria
2026年2月2日20260202

Alpine marmots, Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria

Alpine marmots are among the most charismatic inhabitants of the central European mountains. They stand out for their social life and their ability to adapt to the harshest winters. They live in colonies that cooperate with each other and use sharp whistles to warn of predators. Their bodies are robust, and they have thick coats of fur that protect them from extreme cold. During winter, they hibernate for several months thanks to a remarkable drop in body temperature. They dig extensive underground tunnels where they take shelter and raise their young. In today's image, we see alpine marmots in Hohe Tauern National Park in Austria, a landscape where this animal has become a symbol of high mountain life. Observing them in the wild allows us to admire their social behaviour and survival skills, connecting visitors with nature in its most authentic state.

© Raimund Linke/Getty Images

Colourful house in Olinda, Brazil
2026年2月1日20260201

Colourful house in Olinda, Brazil

Colour feels at home in Olinda. The house seen in today's image, painted in bold, joyful tones, reflects a city where history and creativity live side by side. Founded in the 16th century in Pernambuco, northeastern Brazil, Olinda grew from a colonial stronghold into a cultural landmark shaped by Portuguese architecture, Afro-Brazilian traditions and centuries of artistic expression. Its hills are lined with pastel facades, baroque churches and narrow cobblestone streets that seem designed for wandering rather than rushing.

© Robert Pekar/Alamy

Plains zebras, Etosha National Park, Namibia
2026年1月31日20260131

Plains zebras, Etosha National Park, Namibia

Some animals whisper their way through the wild. Zebras don't. They show up in high-contrast stripes, act like it's the most practical outfit ever invented—and somehow, it is. These African equines come in three species. Plains zebras—featured in today's image from Namibia's Etosha National Park—wear bold stripes, mountain ones sport pinstripes, and Grévy's go for the ultra-fine, designer look. No two patterns match, turning every individual into a walking fingerprint. Scientists believe those stripes help confuse predators, deter biting flies and even cool the body by creating tiny air currents.

© Mogens Trolle/Shutterstock

St. Michael's Mount in Marazion, Cornwall, England
2026年1月30日20260130

St. Michael's Mount in Marazion, Cornwall, England

Picture a small island rising from the Cornish sea, connected to the mainland only when the tide retreats. For a few hours a day, you can wander across a centuries-old granite causeway made smooth by pilgrims and fishermen. This is St. Michael's Mount, just off the coast of Marazion, in Cornwall, England. Managed by the National Trust and home to the St. Aubyn family since the 1600s, the mount blends myth, medieval history and sweeping coastal views.

© Baxter Bradford/robertharding/Getty Images

The eight-story open atrium of Milwaukee City Hall, Wisconsin, United States
2026年1月29日20260129

The eight-story open atrium of Milwaukee City Hall, Wisconsin, United States

Milwaukee City Hall, in the state of Wisconsin, United States, is one of the city's most recognisable landmarks. Completed in 1895, this towering Flemish Renaissance Revival masterpiece doesn't just dominate the skyline; it defines it. For nearly eight decades, it stood as the city's tallest building, a title it proudly held until 1973. Designed by architect Henry C. Koch, this hall blends German-inspired architecture with Milwaukee's own historic influences. That connection isn't accidental—its design pays tribute to the city's strong German heritage, which shaped much of the surrounding neighbourhood as well.

© lavin photography/Getty Images

Whanganui National Park, Retaruke, New Zealand
2026年1月28日20260128

Whanganui National Park, Retaruke, New Zealand

Whanganui National Park showcases one of New Zealand's most distinctive river landscapes. Established in 1986, the park covers about 741 square kilometres across the central North Island, with the Whanganui River tracing long, quiet bends through dense forest. Although the river is not officially within the park's boundaries, it shapes nearly everything around it, including the Whanganui Journey—one of New Zealand's designated Great Walks.

© Matthew Micah Wright/Getty Images

Dalmatian pelicans, Lake Kerkini, Greece
2026年1月27日20260127

Dalmatian pelicans, Lake Kerkini, Greece

Winter at Lake Kerkini in Greece delivers some of Europe's clearest views of Dalmatian pelicans. Their large silhouettes move in tight, steady groups across the still water, making their scale hard to miss. With wingspans stretching over 3 metres, they rank among the world's largest flying birds. Lake Kerkini's predictable winter conditions offer reliable, close-range views of their size, grace and coordinated movement.

© Guy Edwardes/naturepl.com