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  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado conducts maintenance work on the golf course.  (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument. Some of his work is physical, but technology makes his irrigation chores easier. From one of many rock outcrops overlooking the lush fairways and greens in the dry, high desert valley, he can control a matrix of sprinklers with a single radio controller.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080919_070_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado stands at a vantage point during a routine inspection of the golf course. (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument. Some of his work is physical, but technology makes his irrigation chores easier. From one of many rock outcrops overlooking the lush fairways and greens in the dry, high desert valley, he can control a matrix of sprinklers with a single radio controller.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080919_176_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado moves a putting hole during an early morning inspection of the golf course. (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080919_123_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado stands on the green during an early morning routine inspection of the golf course. (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080919_083_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado picks vegetables in his backyard.  (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080920_353_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado.  (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080920_276_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, an assistant golf course superintendent of The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado stands on the green during a routine inspection of the golf course. (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School.
    USA_080919_107_xw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, a golf course assistant superintendent, picks vegetables in his backyard garden at his home in Grand Junction, Colorado. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his day's worth of food on a day in the month of September was 3,600 kcals. He is 25 years of age; 5 feet,  11 inches tall and 175 pounds. Switching career paths from criminal justice to turf maintenance enabled Bob to escape a desk job and work outdoors in a picturesque Western landscape. Some of his work is physical, but technology makes his irrigation chores easier. From one of many rock outcrops overlooking the lush fairways and greens in the dry, high desert valley, he can control a matrix of sprinklers with a single radio controller. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080920_341_xxw.jpg
  • Bob Sorensen, a golf course assistant superintendent at The Golf Club at Redlands Mesa in Grand Junction, Colorado stands on the green with his typical day's worth of food in the foreground. (Bob Sorensen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He played football at Mesa State College in Grand Junction and graduated with a degree in criminal justice. Just before he took a desk job in his chosen profession he decided that he didn't want a desk job and found one that requires his constant attendance of the great outdoors, at a golf course at the foot of the majestic Colorado National Monument.  He earned a second degree in turf management, supervises a small crew of greenskeepers, and coaches high school football at Palisade High School. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080920_075_xxw.jpg
  • The swimming pool and outdoor seating area of the Gezira Club in Zamelek, Cairo, Egypt
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  • La Gacilly, France. Hungry Planet outdoor exhibit at La Gacilly Photo Festival in Brittany.
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  • A couple at an outdoor café in Segovia, Spain.
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  • La Gacilly, France. Hungry Planet outdoor exhibit at La Gacilly Photo Festival in Brittany.
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  • Gemma Sastre and  Eino Brand feeding pigeons in a park in  in Valencia, Spain. MODEL RELEASED.
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  • Gemma Sastre and Eino Brand feeding pigeons in Valencia, Spain.
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  • Miguel Ángel Martín Cerrada, a shepherd, with his typical day's worth of food, surrounded by his flock and sheep-herding mastiff in Zarzuela de Jadraque, Spain. (From the Book What I Eat: Around the Work in 80 Diets) MODEL RELEASED.
    SPA_070403_094_xxw.jpg
  • Uahoo Uahoo, a warden at Etosha National Park in northern Namibia, stands in the back of his truck with his typical day's worth of food and observes a herd of springbok. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    NAM_090310_430_xxw.jpg
  • PDVSA Oil Platform GP 19 in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela.  (Oswaldo Guterez is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Oswaldo Gutierrez, Chief of the PDVSA Oil Platform GP 19 in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, works on the platform for seven days then is off at home for seven days.
    VEN_071031_406_xw.jpg
  • A cheerleader pats the stomach and applies olive oil to one of the contestants in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square, where Joey Chestnut won the $5,000 first prize by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes.  (Joey Chestnut is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories.
    USA_NY_081012_150_xw.jpg
  • The Cross at the Crossroads in Effingham, Illinois. The cross is 198 feet tall, and stands at the intersection of Highway 57 and 70.
    USA_081002_437_xw.jpg
  • Curtis Newcomer, soldier at Fort Irwin, California speaks to one of his counterparts. (Curtis Newcomer is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  He eats his morning and evening meals in a mess hall tent, but his lunch consists of a variety of instant meals in the form of MREs. His least favorite is the cheese and veggie omelet.
    USA_080915_541_xw.jpg
  • Farmer Joel Salatin and his wife show a dead fox to his mother at their farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_071019_514_xw.jpg
  • Vendors sell fish at market in Tho Quang village, outside Hanoi, Vietnam.
    VIE_081220_196_xw.jpg
  • An elderly man with a prayer wheel and prayer beads at a small monastery near the Jokhang, Lhasa, Tibet.
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  • A view of the mustard fields in bloom in the Dingha Valley on the Tibetan Plateau.
    TIB_060619_261_xw.jpg
  • The Old City of Jerusalem and Jewish Cemetery seen from the Mount of Olives, Israel. The church at the center is the Russian church of Mary Magdalene.
    ISR_081026_260_xw.jpg
  • A herd of oryx antelope near the Halali restcamp at Etosha National Park in northern Namibia.
    NAM_090311_018_xw.jpg
  • Haulage trucks on the Trans-Kalahari highway near the city of Ghanzi, Botswana.
    BOT_090314_007_xw.jpg
  • Shahnaz Begum, a mother of four, outside her home with her microloan-financed cows and her typical day's worth of food outside her home in the village of Bari Majlish, an hour outside Dhaka. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED
    BAN_081214_187_xxw.jpg
  • Peter Menzel, co-author of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, photographing sheepherder Miguel Martinez and his flock of sheep at a farm in Zarzuela de Jadraque, Spain.  (Miguel Martinez is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    SPA_070403_186_xw.jpg
  • Sanaa, Yemen. Old City. Ahmed Swaid, qat seller, with one day's food. For Nutrtion 101 project. MODEL RELEASED.
    YEM_080329_079.jpg
  • Peter Menzel and Faith D'Aluisio co-authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, interview Viahondjera Musutua, a 23 year old Himba woman in the small village of Okapembambu in northwestern Namibia. The young woman is the mother of three children and bore her first child at age 14.  The Himba culture is polygamous and Viahondjera is the second wife of her husband. Like most traditional Himba women, she covers herself from head to toe with an ochre powder, cow butter blend.
    NAM_090308_466_xw.jpg
  • Peter Menzel, co-author of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets films game ranger Uahoo Uahoo at Etosha National Park in north-western Namibia. MODEL RELEASED.
    NAM_090310_485_xw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio, one of the authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, weighs the food items consumed by Saleh Abdul Fadlallah at Birqash Camel Market, outside Cairo, Egypt. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Contrary to popular belief, camels’ humps don’t store water; they are a reservoir of fatty tissue that minimizes heat-trapping insulation in the rest of their bodies; the dromedary, or Arabian camel, has a single hump, while Asian camels have two. Camels are well suited for desert climes: their long legs and huge, two-toed feet with leathery pads enable them to walk easily in sand, and their eyelids, nostrils, and thick coat protect them from heat and blowing sand. These characteristics, along with their ability to eat thorny vegetation and derive sufficient moisture from tough green herbage, allow camels to survive in very inhospitable terrain.
    EGY_080322_041_xxw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio, one of the authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets surrounded by camels at the  Birqash Camel Market outside Cairo, Egypt. Contrary to popular belief, camels’ humps don’t store water; they are a reservoir of fatty tissue that minimizes the need for heat-trapping insulation in the rest of their bodies; the dromedary, or Arabian camel, has a single hump, while Asian camels have two. Camels are well suited for desert climes: their long legs and huge, two-toed feet with leathery pads enable them to walk easily in sand, and their eyelids, nostrils, and thick coat protect them from heat and blowing sand. These characteristics, along with their ability to eat thorny vegetation and derive sufficient moisture from tough green herbage, allow camels to survive in very inhospitable terrain.
    EGY_080321_037_x.jpg
  • Caracas, Venezuela. Hungy Planet exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts and adjoining park.
    VEN_071103_067.jpg
  • Lenard Sturm and his brother Malte Erik, on skate board leaving an icecream shop near their apartment in Hamburg, Germany after school. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food in June. Model Released.
    GER_130614_171_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_159_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_140_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_102_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_086_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_074_x.jpg
  • The Hollmann Sturm family in Hamburg, Germany at the city garden small house that they rent. They were photographed for the Hungry Planet: What I Eat project with a week's worth of food. Model Released.
    GER_130613_159_x.jpg
  • Students protest constitutional reforms proposed by President Hugo Chavez in Caracas, Venezuela in November 2007. The reforms would enhance Chavez's power enabling him to run for another term.
    VEN_071101_017_xw.jpg
  • View of lake and oil drilling rigs from PDVSA oil drilling yard on Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela.
    VEN_071031_291_xw.jpg
  • Maria Ermelinda Ayme Sichigalo, a farmer and mother of eight, fixes one of her daughters' hair outside her adobe house in Tingo village, central Andes, Ecuador. (Maria Ermelinda Ayme Sichigalo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food in the month of September was 3800 kcals. She is 37 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall and 119 pounds. With no tables or chairs or stove, Ermelinda cooks all the family's meals while kneeling over the hearth on the earthen floor, tending an open fire of sticks and straw. Guinea pigs that skitter about looking for scraps or spilled grain will eventually end up on the fire themselves when the family eats them for a holiday treat. Because there is no chimney, the beams and thatch roof are blackened by smoke. Unvented smoke from cooking fires accounts for a high level of respiratory disease and, in one study in rural Ecuador, was accountable for half of infant mortality.  MODEL RELEASED.
    ECU04_crw_5659_822_x.jpg
  • Joey Chestnut, the world's most successful competitive eater, with 66 Nathan's Famous hot dogs and a gallon of water at Coney Island, New York City.  (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) This represents what Joey ate (and drank) in 12 minutes on July 4, 2007, to claim the title of world champion hot dog eater. The 66 hot dogs weighed 14.5 pounds and totaled 19,602 calories. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_NY_081012_569_xw.jpg
  • A competitive eating contestant licks his lips at the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Time Square.
    USA_NY_081012_426_xw.jpg
  • Competitive eater Joey Chestnut works his way through 45 slice of pizza in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square. (Joey Chestnut is included in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) He won the $5,000 first prize after eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes.  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_NY_081012_348_xw.jpg
  • Competitive eater Joey Chestnut, who won $5,000 first prize in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes. (Joey Chestnut is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories. Joey is on the stage between the man in the blue cap and the man with the mohawk hairstyle.
    USA_NY_081012_219_xw.jpg
  • Competitive eater Joey Chestnut, who won $5,000 first prize in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes. (Joey Chestnut is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories. Joey is on the stage between the man in the blue cap and the man with the mohawk hairstyle.
    USA_NY_081012_212_xw.jpg
  • Competitive eater Joey Chestnut, who won $5,000 first prize in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes. (Joey Chestnut is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories. Joey is on the stage between the man in the blue cap and the man with the mohawk hairstyle.
    USA_NY_081012_182_xw.jpg
  • Competitive eater Joey Chestnut, who the first prize of $5,000 in the Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes. (Joey Chestnut is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_NY_081012_140_xw.jpg
  • Performers entertain the audience at the  Famous Famiglia world championship pizza eating contest in New York City's Times Square before the eating contest by throwing pizza dough in the air. Joey Chestnut won the competition by eating 45 slices of cheese pizza in 10 minutes. Each slice weighed 109 grams (3.84 ounces) and contained 260 calories. In ten minutes Joey consumed 10.81 pounds (4.9 kilograms) of pizza and drank a gallon of water. The pizza contained 11,700 calories.
    USA_NY_081012_080_xw.jpg
  • Truck driver and former biker Conrad Tolby at a truck stop at the intersection of I-70 and I-57 in Effingham, Illinois. (Conrad Tolby is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081003_061_xw.jpg
  • Conrad Tolby walks back to his truck with dinner in a bag at a truck stop at intersection of I-70 and I-57 in Effingham, Illinois.  (Conrad Tolby is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081003_044_xw.jpg
  • A biodiesel pump at a truck stop at the intersection of I-70 and I-57 in Effingham, Illinois.
    USA_081003_043_xw.jpg
  • The Cross at the Crossroads in Effingham, Illinois. The cross is 198 feet tall, and stands at the intersection of Highway 57 and 70.
    USA_081002_440_xw.jpg
  • Grain Farmer Gordon Stine (far left) and his brother harvest corn with his John Deere eight-row combine on leased land in St. Elmo, Illinois.   (Gordon Stine is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Illinois farmer Gordon Stine checks a mechanical circuit breaker on a drier fan in a silo at his leased farm in St. Elmo, Illinois. MODEL RELEASED.  (Gordon Stine is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_081002_204_xw.jpg
  • The Cross at the Crossroads in Effingham, Illinois. A 198 foot tall cross at the intersection of Highways 57 and 70.
    USA_081002_087_xw.jpg
  • Illinois farmer Gordon Stine's house on his farm in St. Elmo, Illinois.   (Gordon Stine is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_081001_144_xw.jpg
  • Lourdes Alvarez's Mexican Restaurant, El Coyote in Alsip, a Chicago suburb. (Lourdes Alvarez is featured in the book What I Eat;  Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Los Dos Loredos, the Mexican family restaurant owned by Lourdes Alvarez' family in Chicago, Illinois.  (Lourdes Alvarez is featured in the book What I Eat;  Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_080925_182_xw.jpg
  • Painted rocks in California's Mojave Desert, near the military training center at Fort Irwin.
    USA_080916_318_xw.jpg
  • Village life inside the fabricated village of Medina Jabal at Fort Irwin, California in the Mojave Desert. The village is used for training soldiers about to deploy to Iraq.
    USA_080916_204_xw.jpg
  • Medina Jabal Iraqi town at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California, used for training soldiers about to deploy to Iraq.
    USA_080916_199_xw.jpg
  • Iraqi police officers and their U.S counterparts patrol a street in a fabricated Iraqi village at Fort Irwin, California. The sets are used for combat training exercises before the troops deploy to Iraq.
    USA_080916_075_xw.jpg
  • Fort Irwin, California, one of the places used by the U.S. Army to train soldiers before they are deployed to Iraq.
    USA_080915_643_xw.jpg
  • Curtis Newcomer, a U.S. Army soldier, at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin in California's Mojave Desert. (Curtis Newcomer is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  He eats his morning and evening meals in a mess hall tent, but his lunch consists of a variety of instant meals in the form of MREs. His least favorite is the cheese and veggie omelet. "Everybody hates that one. It's horrible," he says. A mile behind him, toward the base of the mountains, is Medina Wasl, a fabricated Iraqi village (one of 13 built for training exercises), with hidden video cameras and microphones linked to the base control center for performance reviews.  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080915_424_xw.jpg
  • One of the actors in crisis simulations at Medina Wasl, a fabricated Iraqi town at Camp Irwin in California.
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  • Women walk on the street in a fabricated Iraqi village of Medina Wasl, at Camp Irwin,  California.
    USA_080915_387_xw.jpg
  • A soldier with a feigned injury at Medina Wasl, a fabricated Iraqi town used for training Iraq-bound U.S. soldiers at Camp Irwin, California, in the Mojave Desert.
    USA_080915_244_xw.jpg
  • Actors stage a crisis situation in Medina Wasl, a fabricated Iraqi village  at Camp Irwin, in California's Mojave Desert. The village is used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq.
    USA_080915_153_xw.jpg
  • Actors stage a crisis situation in Medina Wasl, a fabricated Iraqi village  at Camp Irwin, in California's Mojave Desert. The village is used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq.
    USA_080915_150_xw.jpg
  • Women walk past a mosque in the fabricated Iraqi village of Medina Wasl at Camp Irwin, California. The village is used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq.
    USA_080915_138_xw.jpg
  • Actors dressed as Iraqi men sit at a market stall in the fabricated Iraqi village if Medina Wasl at Camp Irwin, California. The village is used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq.
    USA_080915_117_xw.jpg
  • A severed leg in military boots, one of the tell-tell signs of a staged meltdown in the fabricated Iraqi village town of Medina Wasl at Camp Irwin, California. The village is used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq.
    USA_080915_078_xw.jpg
  • After the second of three mock battles of the day in the fabricated Iraqi village of Medina Wasl, built by set coordinators from Paramount Pictures at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California, Iraqis and Americans playing soldiers, victims, and insurgents relax together in the shade until the next 20 minutes of choreographed crisis. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Surfer Ernie Johnson grills fish on his 38 foot sailboat moored at Dana Point Harbor in California. (Ernie Johnson is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
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  • Filipe Adams, an Iraqi war vet who was paralyzed by a sniper's bullet in Baghdad, Iraq, wheels himself down a sidewalk near his home in Los Angeles, California. (Felipe Adams is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Felipe was shot in Baghdad while serving his second tour of duty in September of 2006 and his spine was shattered leaving him unable to feel his lower body, although he is still wracked with periodic pain.
    USA_080910_027_xw.jpg
  • Surfer Ernie Johnson (on wave at right) surfs on the Pacific near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, California.  (Ernie Johnson is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
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  • The San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in California.
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  • The San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in California.
    USA_080909_058_px_xw.jpg
  • Ricki the chimp takes a moment to appreciate nature through his sunglasses at the Bailiwick Ranch and Discovery Zoo, in Catskill, New York. (Ricki the chimp is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  His owners, Pam Rosaire-Zoppe and Roger Zoppe say that he likes fresh fruits and vegetables, and an occasional yogurt drink, far more than packaged monkey chow. (MODEL RELEASED).
    USA_080623_234_xw.jpg
  • Ricki the chimp listens attentively as his owner Pam Rosaire-Zoppe gives him instructions at the Bailick Ranch and Discovery Zoo in Catskill, NY. (Ricki the chimp is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_080623_226_xw.jpg
  • A barge ferries a load of gravel on the upper Mississippi river in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
    USA_080530_021_xw.jpg
  • Assistant carpenter and tattooist Louie Soto with his family at his new home in Sacaton, Arizona. (Louie Soto is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Soto built a new home, financed by casino profits and built by the Gila River Indian Community.
    USA_080524_225_xw.jpg
  • Emerging from the portal after a 10-hour shift, a dozen of coal miner Todd Kincer's colleagues lounge on the "man car" that transports them to and from the coal face, several miles into the mountain, at the Advantage One Mine outside Whitesburg, Kentucky. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Todd Kincer, a coal miner, with his face blackened with coal dust after an industrious day at work in a coal mine located deep inside a mountain in the Appalachians near the town of Whitesburg, Kentucky. (Todd Kincer is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) After showering and scrubbing off the day's coal dust, Todd gets ready to dig in to one of his favorite meals: Hamburger Helper with double noodles. A college graduate drawn to the coal mine by the relatively high pay, Todd spends a 10-hour shift mining underground, driving a low-slung electric shuttle car that carries coal from the face of the coal seam, where it's being chewed up by a deafening, dusty mining machine, to a conveyer belt. The coal mine in which Kincer works is pitch-black, except for headlights and headlamps. During winter months, Todd never sees daylight during the workweek. MODEL RELEASED.
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  • Conveyor and piles of coal at a mine near the town of Appalachia, Virginia near the Kentucky border.
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  • Chickens and ducks feed in an open area outside the eggmobile at Joel Salatin's farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • An apprentice at  Joel Salatin's farm tends to pigs as they feed in an open area at the farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley.  (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Chickens in an eggmobile at Joel Salatin's farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • A farmhouse at Joel Salatin's farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Joel Salatin, a farmer and author, in an eggmobile (portabled henhouse) at his farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Much of his daily fare is from his own farm, including applesauce and apple cider canned by his wife, Teresa, who fills the basement larder with the bounty of their farm each year.  MODEL RELEASED.
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  • Sam Tucker, lobsterman and fish buyer at Portland Maine Fish Exchange on Great Diamond Island in Portland, Maine, with his lobster boat.  (Samuel Tucker is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED
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  • Lobsterman and fish buyer Sam Tucker leaves his home on Great Diamond Island, Maine to walk to the ferry that will take him to Portland for work. (Samuel Tucker is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_070321_135_xw.jpg
  • Calves wait to be released as rancher José Angel Galaviz prepares to milk at his home in the Sierra Mountains near Maycoba, in the Mexican state of Sonora.   (Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
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  • Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo's oldest son drives cows into the corral at rancher Jose Angel Galaviz' home in the Sierra Mountains near Maycoba, in the Mexican state of Sonora.   (Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    MEX_080822_156_xw.jpg
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Peter Menzel Photography

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