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The easiest-to-navigate source of non-copyrighted images are the NOAA, NASA, US Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management & National Park service photo streams on Flickr:

https://www.flickr.com/photospeople/noaaphotolib/

https://www.flickr.com/photospeople/nasacommons/

https://www.flickr.com/people/usforestservice/

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https://www.flickr.com/people/nationalparkservice/

https://www.flickr.com/people/departmentofenergy/

NASA photos are typically in the public domain, while photos from other agencies are typically governed by the "Attribution 2.0 Generic" license which requires giving appropriate credit to the agency that produced them. Check the license for each photo.

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  • Public domain
  • No known copyright restrictions restrictions
  • United States government work

can be used freely. Photos denoted with:

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If you spend a few minutes browsing, you can see that there are absolutely stunning images that aren't copyrighted in these galleries that are in the public domain or that can be used with attribution.

"Theodore Roosevelt National Park" is a public domain image from the National Park Service:

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"Young Monk Seal" is an Attribution 2.0 license image which can be used freely by crediting NOAA:

Photo credit: NOAA

"Jupiter's Great Red Spot as Viewed by Voyager 1" is a public domain no known copyrights image from NASA:

"Changing Arctic Ecosystem" is a United States government work image from the Department of Energy:

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The second-most easy-to-use database of royalty-free images is Wikimedia Commons. It has over 72 million images and many of them are in the public domain and can be used for any purpose.

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