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  • A rainbow of colorful dye powder and incense in a vendor's stall in the market at Mysore, South India.
    IND_047_xs.jpg
  • The CN Tower dominates the Toronto skyline in Ontario, Canada. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The 1,815-foot tower is illuminated by a recent multimillion-dollar lighting upgrade, and its nightly hues mirror the Canadian flag's colors of red and white. On Lake Ontario.
    CAN_080621_491_xxw.jpg
  • Brilliantly colored parrotfish dominate a stall in the Makishi public market in the Okinawan town of Naha. Meticulously clean, Japanese markets are a testament to the affluence of this island nation. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 190).
    JOK03_0003_xxf1.jpg
  • A boy whose face is stained with colored dye during the Holi festival, a Hindu spring festival, also called the Festival of Colors. On the second day, known as Dhulandi, people spend the day throwing colored powder and water at each other. New Delhi, India.
    IND_052_xs.jpg
  • Participants at Burning Man are dressed as colored naked bicycles. Burning Man is a performance art festival known for art, drugs and sex. It takes place annually in the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nevada, USA.
    USA_BMAN_05_xs.jpg
  • Brightly colored graves in a cemetery at Chichicastenango, Guatemala.
    GUA_04_xs.jpg
  • Brightly colored graves in a cemetery at Chichicastenango, Guatemala.
    GUA_03_xs.jpg
  • Copenhagen, Denmark. Dinner at Sisse Brimberg and Cotton Coulson's flat.
    DEN_110216_90_x.jpg
  • Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_127_x.jpg
  • Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_082_x.jpg
  • Quixote Winery, owned and built by Carl Doumani and designed by Friedensreich Hundertwasser, an Austrian designer. Napa Valley, CALIFORNIA.
    USA_060923_238_rwx.jpg
  • Quixote Winery, owned and built by Carl Doumani and designed by Friedensreich Hundertwasser, an Austrian designer. Napa Valley, CALIFORNIA.
    USA_060917_46_rwx.jpg
  • Rosenborg Gardens. Copenhagen, Denmark.
    DEN_16_xs.jpg
  • Visitors relax on undulating mosaic benches on an overlook in Parc Guell, architect Antonin Gaudi's imaginative park in Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_137_xs.jpg
  • Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_150_x.jpg
  • Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosiion on August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb was developed by the Manhatten Project. The Manhattan Project refers to the effort during World War II by the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other European physicists, to develop the first nuclear weapons. Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), it refers specifically to the period of the project from 1942-1946 under the control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie R. Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer. The project succeeded in developing and detonating three nuclear weapons in 1945: a test detonation on July 16 (the Trinity test) near Alamogordo, New Mexico; an enriched uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" detonated on August 6 over Hiroshima, Japan; and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man" on August 9 over Nagasaki, Japan. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project)
    USA_101002_120_x.jpg
  • Quixote Winery, owned and built by Carl Doumani and designed by Friedensreich Hundertwasser, an Austrian designer. Napa Valley, CALIFORNIA.
    USA_060917_51_rwx.jpg
  • Quixote Winery, owned and built by Carl Doumani and designed by Friedensreich Hundertwasser, an Austrian designer. Napa Valley, CALIFORNIA.
    USA_060917_48_rwx.jpg
  • Antonio Suarez's parrot bites his ear at a rest stop on the road to Chetumal, Mexico.
    MEX_113_xs.jpg
  • Casa Batlo: a Gaudi designed apartment building in Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_140_xs.jpg
  • Visitors relax on undulating mosaic benches on an overlook in Parc Guell, architect Antonin Gaudi's imaginative park in Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_136_xs.jpg
  • Visitors relax on undulating mosaic benches on an overlook in Parc Guell, architect Antonin Gaudi's imaginative park in Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_135_xs.jpg
  • Visitors relax on undulating mosaic benches on an overlook in Parc Guell, architect Antonin Gaudi's imaginative park in Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_134_xs.jpg
  • Lodz, Poland cemetery on All Saints Day. Candles in the rain make plinking and sizzling sound when hit by raindrops.
    POL_031102_001_x.jpg
  • La Boca, Buenos Aires, Argentina
    ARG_110108_223_x.jpg
  • La Boca, Buenos Aires, Argentina
    ARG_110108_199_x.jpg
  • Photographer Peter Menzel taking a meter reading of the light in the middle of fields of flowers. In Lompoc, California.
    USA_AG_FLWR_39_xs.jpg
  • The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas. Tourist boat and dinner cruise boat passing riverside dinners.
    USA_030419_022_x.jpg
  • Buddhist monks sit inside a monastery in the Tibetan Plateau.
    TIB_060621_593_xw.jpg
  • On Green Island, a former prison island off the coast of SE Taiwan where political prisoners were incarcerated and re-educated during the unnervingly recent White Terror. There's actually still a high-security prison on the island, but it only holds 200 inmates (actual felons, not polital prisoners), as opposed to the couple thousand of earlier decades..Now it's mostly a tourist destination. We visited in the off season in March, thereby avoiding the 5,000-10,000 tourists that inundate the little place daily, though, being the off season, we had to contend instead with intermittent cold rain and high winds.
    TAI_110326_115_x.jpg
  • On the boardwalk in Venice Beach, California. Two dogs wait for their owner to have a drink.
    USA_021117_12_x.jpg
  • Thanksgiving time, Napa CA
    USA_091127_020_x.jpg
  • Thanksgiving time, Napa CA
    USA_09112714_x.jpg
  • Thanksgiving time, Napa CA
    USA_09112709_x.jpg
  • Hot air balloon with tourists in the Napa Valley, California.
    USA_02102604_01_x.jpg
  • Schroon Lake in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121023_015_x.jpg
  • Czestochowa, Poland. Jasna Gora Monastery (Black Madonna) mosaic.
    POL_031107_006_x.jpg
  • Buddhist monks sit inside a monastery in the Tibetan Plateau.
    TIB_060621_211_xw.jpg
  • Performers at the Peking Opera in downtown Shanghai, China.
    CHI_060610_768_xw.jpg
  • A woman pays a rickshaw driver at the Kamalapur Railway Station in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
    BAN_081212_284_xw.jpg
  • Travelers crowd on top of a train at the main train station in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
    BAN_081211_344_xw.jpg
  • Snapper, parrotfish, and other fresh fish in the Naha City Makishi public market. Purchasers can bring their fish upstairs to the restaurants to have their fish cooked to order. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    JOK03_4323_xf1b.jpg
  • Snapper, Ginowan City, Okinawa. (From a photographic gallery of fish images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 204).
    JOK03_0009_xxf1.jpg
  • Thanksgiving time, Napa CA
    USA_09112706_x.jpg
  • Schroon Lake in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121023_017_x.jpg
  • Schroon Lake in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121023_014_x.jpg
  • Tourist dinner boat. The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas.
    USA_030419_030_x.jpg
  • Tsul Tim Lhamu, head nun at the Lhasaani Tsang Kung Nunnery, Lhasa, Tibet, taking her early morning walk around the city. (Tsul Tim Lhamu was photographed for the book project What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    TIB_060622_197_xw.jpg
  • Buddhist monks sit inside a monastery in the Tibetan Plateau.
    TIB_060621_195_xw.jpg
  • Snapper, parrotfish, shellfish and skinned fugu fish in the Naha City Makishi public market. Purchasers can bring their fish upstairs to the restaurants to have their fish cooked to order. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats)
    JOK03_4618_xf1b.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_141_x.jpg
  • Hot springs resort in Teitung, Taiwan.
    TAI_110327_023_x.jpg
  • On Green Island, a former prison island off the coast of SE Taiwan where political prisoners were incarcerated and re-educated during the unnervingly recent White Terror. There's actually still a high-security prison on the island, but it only holds 200 inmates (actual felons, not polital prisoners), as opposed to the couple thousand of earlier decades..Now it's mostly a tourist destination. We visited in the off season in March, thereby avoiding the 5,000-10,000 tourists that inundate the little place daily, though, being the off season, we had to contend instead with intermittent cold rain and high winds.
    TAI_110325_172_x.jpg
  • On Green Island, a former prison island off the coast of SE Taiwan where political prisoners were incarcerated and re-educated during the unnervingly recent White Terror. There's actually still a high-security prison on the island, but it only holds 200 inmates (actual felons, not polital prisoners), as opposed to the couple thousand of earlier decades..Now it's mostly a tourist destination. We visited in the off season in March, thereby avoiding the 5,000-10,000 tourists that inundate the little place daily, though, being the off season, we had to contend instead with intermittent cold rain and high winds.
    TAI_110325_170_x.jpg
  • Taipei, Taiwan
    TAI_110324_251_x.jpg
  • All Saints Day. Lodz, Poland.
    POL_031031_020_x.jpg
  • Lodz, Poland cemetery on All Saints Day.
    POL_031031_018_x.jpg
  • Santa Monica Beach and Pier. Los Angeles, CA.
    USA_110712_05_x.jpg
  • Santa Monica Beach and Pier. Los Angeles, CA.
    USA_110712_02_x.jpg
  • Santa Monica Beach and Pier. Los Angeles, CA.
    USA_110712_01_x.jpg
  • USA_100803_057_x.jpg
  • Napa Valley, CA at Thanksgiving time 2010 with Menzel and D'Aluisio family. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_101126_007_x.jpg
  • King's Chapel Burial Ground, downtown Boston, MA
    USA_120417_010_x.jpg
  • King's Chapel Burial Ground, downtown Boston, MA
    USA_120417_009_x.jpg
  • Santuario Gauchito Gil, near Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. Southermost city in the world. Legend has it that Gaucho Gil was a good-hearted outlaw who stole from the rich and gave to the poor. Before his hanging, Gil is said to have pledged to become a miracle worker. Now more than 100,000 people come to visit a shrine at the spot of his death, where they leave offerings and seek miracles of their own ? from help passing a grade in school to cures for illnesses. (from NPR)
    ARG_110122_076_x.jpg
  • Santuario Gauchito Gil, near Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. Southermost city in the world. Legend has it that Gaucho Gil was a good-hearted outlaw who stole from the rich and gave to the poor. Before his hanging, Gil is said to have pledged to become a miracle worker. Now more than 100,000 people come to visit a shrine at the spot of his death, where they leave offerings and seek miracles of their own ? from help passing a grade in school to cures for illnesses. (from NPR)
    ARG_110122_073_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_074_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_072_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_069_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_064_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_053_x.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_048_x.jpg
  • Lunch in El Cloistro Restaurant, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110110_138_x.jpg
  • La Boca, Buenos Aires, Argentina
    ARG_110108_217_x.jpg
  • Tierra Santa religious theme park, Buenos Aires
    ARG_110108_036_x.jpg
  • Chinatown, London, UK
    GBR_110222_70_x.jpg
  • Science Museum, London
    GBR_110219_23_x.jpg
  • Copenhagen, Denmark
    DEN_110217_080_x.jpg
  • Copenhagen, Denmark
    DEN_110217_077_x.jpg
  • Copenhagen, Denmark. Hungry Planet exhibit in the old town in the Round Tower.
    DEN_110216_30_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit. .
    LAO_120123_972_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit.
    LAO_120120_088_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Every morning at dawn, barefoot Buddhist monks and novices in orange robes walk down the streets collecting food alms from devout, kneeling Buddhists. They then return to their temples (also known as "wats") and eat together. This procession is called Tak Bat, or Making Merit.
    LAO_120120_086_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Evening chanting by monks and novices at the Buddhist Temple, Wat Pak Khan.
    LAO_120120_037_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Evening chanting by monks and novices at the Buddhist Temple, Wat Pak Khan.
    LAO_120120_036_x.jpg
  • Luang Prabang, Laos. Evening chanting by monks and novices at the Buddhist Temple, Wat Pak Khan.
    LAO_120120_026_x.jpg
  • Shwedagon Pagoda at dawn in Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma). The gold-leafed Buddhist Pagoda and surrounding shrines is the most important religious site in the country.
    BUR_120204_202_x.jpg
  • Shwedagon Pagoda at dawn in Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma). The gold-leafed Buddhist Pagoda and surrounding shrines is the most important religious site in the country.
    BUR_120204_182_x.jpg
  • Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma). The gold-leafed Buddhist Pagoda and surrounding shrines is the most important religious site in the country.
    BUR_120131_194_x.jpg
  • A woman walks in an apartment courtyard, near the Jokhang Monastery in Lhasa, Tibet.
    TIB_060625_032_xw.jpg
  • Fishing boats in the port of Suao, Taiwan.
    TAI_081227_381_xw.jpg
  • Page, Arizona. Lower Antelope Canyon, slot canyon
    USA_100529_093_x.jpg
  • Page, Arizona. Lower Antelope Canyon, slot canyon above ground entrance with flash flood warning and monument to those who drowned there in 1997.
    USA_100529_049_x.jpg
  • Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powel
    USA_100528_347_x.jpg
  • Old Quarter of Hanoi, Vietnam
    VIE_120205_168_x.jpg
  • On Green Island, a former prison island off the coast of SE Taiwan where political prisoners were incarcerated and re-educated during the unnervingly recent White Terror. There's actually still a high-security prison on the island, but it only holds 200 inmates (actual felons, not polital prisoners), as opposed to the couple thousand of earlier decades..Now it's mostly a tourist destination. We visited in the off season in March, thereby avoiding the 5,000-10,000 tourists that inundate the little place daily, though, being the off season, we had to contend instead with intermittent cold rain and high winds.
    TAI_110325_033_x.jpg
  • Folsom Street Fair, San Francisco, CA annual event.
    USA_100926_89_x.jpg
  • Warsaw, Poland. Powazek Cemetery on All Saints Day.
    POL_031031_019_x.jpg
  • Lodz, Poland cemetery on All Saints Day. Flower/wreath vendor.
    POL_031031_017_x.jpg
  • Vats of gumballs at US Chewing Gum factory in Oakland, California. USA.
    USA_OAK_08_xs.jpg
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