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| January 2, 2013 |
2013: Marking the New Year
Around the globe people celebrated with fireworks, kisses, toasts, cheers, and plunges into icy bodies of water to welcome the new year. Here's a look at how some of them marked the transition. -- Lloyd Young ( 39 photos total)

People watch fireworks along Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro on Jan. 1 during celebrations by over three million people attending New Year's Eve festivities. World cities from Sydney and Hong Kong to Dubai and London rang in the New Year with spectacular fireworks, as revelers at Times Square in New York sought to top off the global extravaganza. (Ari Versiani/AFP/Getty Images) #

A flower that was thrown into the sea as an offering by followers of the Afro-Brazilian religion Umbanda is seen on the shore of Praia Vermelha (Red Beach) in Rio de Janeiro on Dec. 31. Every end of the year, worshippers present gifts to the sea goddess to give thanks for the year that is finishing and ask for blessings for the upcoming new year. (Pilar Olivares/Reuters) #

A South African member of the Cape Minstrel bands poses for the photographer as he attends the annual 'Tweede Nuwe Yaar' (second new year) carnival through the streets of Cape Town, South Africa, on Jan. 2. The annual parade dates back to the days of slavery when slaves were granted a holiday on this day each year. The carnival includes about 60 troupes of brightly-dressed minstrels and marching bands competing over several days for a grand prize as the parade also known as the Kaapse Klopse makes its way through the tourist lined streets of the city center. (Nic Bothma/European Pressphoto Agency) #

A Filipino boy lifts his bandaged hand as he is treated for injuries from a firecracker explosion at the East Avenue Medical Center in suburban Quezon city, north of Manila, Philippines on Jan. 1. Despite a ban by authorities on certain firecrackers due to injuries and death, many Filipinos still welcome the New Year with fireworks in the belief that it will drive away evil spirits and bring in good luck. (Aaron Favila/Associated Press) #

Over 1,000 New Year swimmers, many in costume, braved freezing conditions in the River Forth in front of the Forth Rail Bridge during the annual Loony Dook Swim on Jan. 1 in South Queensferry, Scotland. Thousands of people gathered last night to see in the New Year at Hogmanay celebrations in towns and cities across Scotland. (Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images) #

A worshiper prays at a temple in Colombo on Jan. 1 to welcome in the New Year. Asian cities brought in the New Year in spectacular style the night before after Sydney set off a global wave of fireworks, with long-isolated Yangon joining the pyrotechnic celebrations for the first time. (Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images) #

Gary Marion, portraying female impersonator Sushi, hangs in an oversized replica of a women's red high heel over Duval Street, late Monday night, Dec. 31 at the Bourbon Street Pub Complex in Key West, Fla. The Red Shoe Drop has become a Key West tradition and is one of five Florida Keys warm-weather takeoffs on New York City's Times Square ball drop marking the beginning of the new year. (Andy Newman/AFP/Getty Images) #

A reveler stands beside emptied barricades, confetti, and debris in Times Square after midnight in New York City. With fireworks, concerts and celebrations from Hong Kong to New York, revelers welcomed 2013 with hope for a better future after a year that came to a close with a disastrous storm, gun violence, and talk of economic turmoil from the looming fiscal cliff. (John Minchillo/Associated Press) #





























