In case you missed it
From migrating crabs in Cuba to Goths in England, here are this week's headlines that didn't make the news.
Catching a glimpse of the Holy Relic of Prophet Mohammed in Kashmir
On the occasion of the Muslim festival Mehraj-u-Alam, Kashmiri women in Srinagar, India pray as a priest displays the holy relic believed to be a whisker from the beard of the Prophet Mohammed.
Welcoming the grazing season in Hungary
Racka sheep are seen during celebrations for the start of the new grazing season in the Great Hungarian Plain in Hortobagy, Hungary. The animals are known for their unusual spiral-shaped horns, which can grow up to 61 centimeters (2 feet) long.
Crabs are invading the Bay of Pigs in Cuba
A man driving a vintage car waves as he passes by crabs on their way to spawn in the sea in Playa Giron, Cuba. Millions of red, yellow and black landcrabs march for days from the surrounding forests to the bay on Cuba's southern coast, wreaking havoc along the way.
A million light years away in Washington
A man views the exhibit "Infinity Mirrored Room- The Souls of a Million Light Years Away" by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington.
Tai chi formation in China
People practice tai chi on a suspension bridge during an event at a tourist spot in Beijing.
Perilous trip to get home in Turkey
A different picture in vertiginous heights, this time in Turkey. Women use a primitive aerial lift system in Rize, a city in the Black Sea Region of Turkey, to reach their houses with a linkage that travels 100 meters above the ground, due to the lack of a proper road.
Collecting bees in Gaza
Palestinian beekeepers collect honey at a farm in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. The apiary's 450 bees produce some 4,000 kilos of honey every year, which is only sold in the Gaza Strip.
Strolling Goths in North Yorkshire
The biannual "Whitby Goth Weekend" brings together thousands of Goths and alternative lifestyle fans from the UK and around the world for a weekend of music, dancing and shopping.
Frosty vineyards in France
Workers and wine growers light heaters early in the morning to protect vineyards from frost damage outside Chablis. The unseasonably cold April has serious consequences for farmers, who are fretting about frost destroying their crops.