As part of the four-week competition, which concluded November 30, professional photographers and amateurs alike from over 150 countries submitted more than 7,000 diverse entries in three categories: people, places and nature.
The competition was judged on creativity and photographic quality by a panel of experts, among them National Geographic Magazine Senior Photo Editor Susan Welchman and documentary photographers Stephanie Sinclair and Ed Kashi, who were tasked with selecting the winners.
First prize recipient Paul Souders, who caught a glimpse of a polar bear in Manitoba, Canada, will be awarded $10,0000 and a trip to National Geographic headquarters in Washington, DC, to take part in an annual photography seminar next month.
The winning print will also be published in National Geographic Magazine.
Over its 125-year history, the magazine has been a destination for high-quality photography depicting life around the planet.
This year's entries were extremely diversity, providing commentary on the human condition, showcasing the beauty of remote and exotic locales and celebrating nature in all its forms.
Besides Mr Souders' captivating ursine subject floating in icy waters, which earned top honors, three other outstaning prints got honorable mentions from the panel of judges, including an otherwordly image of egrets in a fog, a close-up of a rhino, and a stark image of a crow's nest in Tokyo built entirely out of clothes hangers.
Read more: dailymail.co.uk
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