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Features

Water world

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AP PHOTO/MARGRIET FABER
In this photo taken Wednesday, March 28, 2012 amphibious houses are seen in the harbor of the IJburg neighborhood in Amsterdam. IJburg is a new district in the eastern part of town completely surrounded by water. The Netherlands, a third of which lies below sea level, has been managing water since the Middle Ages and has thus emerged as a pioneer in the field, exporting its expertise to Indonesia, China, Thailand, Dubai and the Republic of the Maldives, an Indian Ocean archipelago that with a maximum elevation of about 2 meters (8 feet) is the world's lowest country. (AP Photo/Margriet Faber)
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Associated Press photos A vendor on a boat sells food to residents along the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
A computer-generated image released by Dymaxion Studio shows a model of Bang Khunthein Geriatric Hospital in Bangkok, above. Work has begun on the 300-bed hospital over a permanently flooded area near Bangkok that is also subject to tides from the nearby Gulf of Thailand. Concrete stilts will raise its first floor about 13 feet above average water levels.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Homes sit along the Chao Phraya River in front of a construction site in Bangkok. The Thai capital is among the mega-coastal cities projected by the end of this century to lie totally or partially underwater as global warming boosts sea levels, according to the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
@Caption1:A boat floats between amphibious houses in the harbor of the IJburg neighborhood in Amsterdam. IJburg is a new district in the eastern part of town completely surrounded by water. Another view of the neighborhood is shown below.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Boats float near amphibious homes lined on the River Maas in Maasbommel, Netherlands. The country, a third of which lies below sea level, has been managing water since the Middle Ages.