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  • Surplus oranges chopped up and dried in the sun for cattle feed by the Sungro Company on an old airfield runway in Famoso, California, USA. Don Smith's cattle feed drying lot.
    USA_AG_ORAN_01_xs.jpg
  • Surplus oranges chopped up and dried in the sun for cattle feed by the Sungro Company on an old airfield runway in Famoso, California, USA. Don Smith's cattle feed drying lot.
    USA_AG_ORAN_10_xs.jpg
  • Surplus oranges chopped up and dried in the sun for cattle feed by the Sungro Company on an old airfield runway in Famoso, California, USA. Don Smith's cattle feed drying lot.
    USA_AG_ORAN_02_xs.jpg
  • House with drying red peppers and laundry in the Casco Antiguo (old town) of Haro, Rioja, Spain.
    SPA_086_xs.jpg
  • Clothes drying on washing lines in the village of Bari Majlish, an hour outside Dhaka.
    BAN_081213_575_xw.jpg
  • Chunks of meat hung out to dry on hooks in the northwestern town of Opuwo, Namibia.
    NAM_090307_014_xw.jpg
  • Mopane worms dry in the sun after being cleaned and boiled in salted water. The harvest of mopane worms (dried, they have three times the amount of protein as beef) is a major economic event in Botswana. Whole families move into the countryside and set up camp in order to collect the worms. While mopane worms are eaten in Botswana, they are a coveted form of protein in South Africa as well and have been largely over-harvested there. (page 126)
    BOT_meb_44_xxs.jpg
  • Hanging dried red peppers. Ausejo, La Rioja, Spain.
    SPA_199_xs.jpg
  • A village woman arranges rice noodles on racks to dry in So village, southwest of Hanoi, Vietnam.
    VIE_081222_075_xw.jpg
  • Noodles are set out to dry on racks in So village, southwest of Hanoi, Vietnam.
    VIE_081222_014_xw.jpg
  • A woman places rice noodles on racks and sets them out dry in So village, SW of Hanoi, Vietnam. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    VIE_081222_320_xxw.jpg
  • Vilagarcia port  with mussel mud flats, Galicia, North West Spain.
    SPA_172_xs.jpg
  • Vilagarcia port with mussel mud flats, Galicia, North West Spain.
    SPA_170_xs.jpg
  • Harvesting mussels at low tide at Vilagracia, Galicia, North West Spain.
    SPA_114_xs.jpg
  • Above the municipal market in Bhutan, a shopkeeper's TV satellite dish doubles as a dehydration rack for red chili peppers. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 41). This image is featured alongside the Namgay family images in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    BHU01_0005_xxf1s.jpg
  • Kibet Serem hangs up laundry that he has just washed.  (Kibet Serem is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets. He is 25 years of age.) He cares for a small tea plantation that his father planted on their property near Kericho, Kenya when Kibet was a young boy and he is responsible for milking the cows that his family owns. He is 25 years of age. He sells extra milk to a nearby school for a government feeding program and gives some to his mother who makes yogurt and sells it.
    KEN_090227_231_xw.jpg
  • A sky scrapper under construction looms above the rows of dormitories in which Huang Neng shares a room with nine other workers in Shanghai, China. (Huang Neng is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    CHI_060603_067_xxw.jpg
  • Mekong Estates guest house complex in Ban Saylom, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120122_023_x.jpg
  • An extended family's simple rural home and yard in Horcon, Chile.
    CHL_06_xs.jpg
  • Meat Market, Valencia, Spain.
    SPA_202_xs.jpg
  • Typical round homes in Ha-Matiyane Village, Venda (North Transvaal) South Africa.
    SAF_06_xs.jpg
  • Chomphet District across the Mekong River from Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120125_915_x.jpg
  • Small village near Avila, Spain.
    SPA_070406_008_rwx.jpg
  • Laundry hanging on balconies and across a narrow street in Naples, Italy.
    ITA_25_xs.jpg
  • A gray haired woman airs bedding by hanging it out of a window in Weilheim, Bavaria, Germany.
    GER_28_xs.jpg
  • Pima farmer Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo prepares to tie a cow while milking at his home in Maycoba, in the state of Sonora, Mexico. (Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    MEX_080822_005_xw.jpg
  • High-rise apartment with laundry hanging from windows in Caracas, Venezuela.
    VEN_10_xs.jpg
  • The potter's workshop of Armando Torrado, in Navarette, La Rioja, Spain.
    SPA_083_xs.jpg
  • Flies feasting on kapana (strips of freshly butchered beef) don't seem to bother customers at the busy Oshetu Market near the Katutura area of Windhoek, Namibia. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    NAM_090318_107_xxw.jpg
  • Surplus oranges and lemons are chopped up and dried in the sun for cattle feed by the Sungro Company on an old airfield runway in Famoso, California, USA. Don Smith's cattle feed drying lot.
    USA_AG_ORAN_12_xs.jpg
  • In the remote mountain village of Shingkhey, Bhutan, meat is preserved by drying it in the sun. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 40). This image is featured alongside the Namgay family images in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    BHU01_0004_xxf1s.jpg
  • Carlo and Marie Paule Kutten-Kass clothes drying on a line in the back garden of house in the town of Erpeldange in Bous, southeast of Luxembourg City, near the German border. Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. The image is part of a collection of images and documentation for Hungry Planet 2, a continuation of work done after publication of the book project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    LUX_070411_039_rwx.jpg
  • A boy digs for water from a nearly dry riverbed (called a wadi) in the Breidjing Refugee Camp in Eastern Chad. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp, home to 30,000 refugees from Darfur, Sudan. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. in the month of November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper.
    CHA_04_CRW_8228_xw.jpg
  • In the Breidjing Refugee Camp in Eastern Chad, women wash clothes and themselves in water from the nearly dry riverbed, called a wadi. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp, home to 30,000 refugees from Darfur, Sudan. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. In November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8645_xf1brw.jpg
  • Oranges: near Bakersfield, California, USA. Surplus oranges are chopped up and dried in the sun for cattle feed by Sungro Co. near Bakersfield, California, USA.
    USA_AG_ORAN_16_xs.jpg
  • Old women removing the stigmas from Freshly picked saffron flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_062_xs.jpg
  • Freshly picked saffron crocus flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_061_xs.jpg
  • Store with non-perishables and dry goods in Djenne, Mali. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats).
    MAL01_0031_xf1bs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting outside her UNHCR donated tent with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane serves a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9313_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9174_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9070_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting near the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane serves out aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8982_xf1brw.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits- in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. In November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper..(Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)..
    CHA104_8517_xf1brw.jpg
  • Flowers growing out of a pahoehoe lava flow. Pahoehoe is formed when lava bubbles to the surface and partially dries creating a semi-hardened outer layer. The underlying molten lava continues flowing, pushing the pahoehoe into a bubbly form. Big Island, Hawaii. USA.
    USA_HI_05_xs.jpg
  • Freshly picked saffron crocus flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_068_xs.jpg
  • Two women removing the stigmas from Freshly picked saffron flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_067_xs.jpg
  • Two women removing the stigmas from Freshly picked saffron flowers in Consuegra, La Mancha, Spain. Saffron has been the world's most expensive spice by weight for decades. The flower has three stigmas, which are the distal ends of the plant's carpels. These are separated from the petals by hand and dried to make saffron spice.
    SPA_065_xs.jpg
  • A woman hangs her laundry out to dry on a barbed wire  fence near the home of José Angel Galaviz, a rancher of Pima heritage who lives in the Sierra Mountains  near Maycoba, in the Mexican state of Sonora. (José Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    MEX_080823_206_xw.jpg
  • Dried fish on sale at the Sonargaon market in the town of Sonargaon outside Dhaka, Bangladesh.
    BAN_081214_236_xw.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, located in Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border, shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. in the month of November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper.
    CHA104_8683_xf1brww.jpg
  • Behind a courtyard wall of stacked and dried millet stalks, Khadidja Baradine begins her morning by scooping an ember from the previous night's fire onto a handful of straw. When the straw begins to smoulder, she blows on it to start a cooking fire. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 72).
    CHA204_0004_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Wadis in the central part of Chad are dry nine months of the year. During that time, villagers must dig down to the water, shoring up the wells with millet stalks to keep them from collapsing. In the morning, the wadis are furiously active. One after another, teams of two or three girls fill the pools as wave after wave of animals come to drink. It's hard work: the water rapidly evaporates, sinks into the sand, and vanishes down the animals, and the girls have to keep refilling the pools. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 71).
    CHA204_0003_xxf1rw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9141_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting near the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane serves out aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8979_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. In November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8670_xf1brw.jpg
  • Environs. Flowering "Desert Rose" bush/tree in a dry steam bed area of the Sahel in Eastern Chad, near the Breidjing Refugee Camp. The Adenium or "Desert Rose" is an extraordinary tropical plant. Coming essentially from East Africa, where it is found under different "subspecies" in countries like Sudan, Yemen, Socotra , Namibia, South Africa, Zimbabwe. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.).
    CHA04_8432_xf1brw.jpg
  • Cattle herder with his animals on the dry river plain near the village of Kouakourou, Mali.  Material World Project.
    Mal_mw_708_xs.jpg
  • In Dar es Salaam village, eastern Chad, two young girls pause during the daily livestock watering in the dry river wadi. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA204_9216_xf1brw.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. Water is a constant preoccupation in the Breidjing Refugee Camp. Every day, lines of women and children carry jugs and pots of drinking and cooking water from distribution points to their tents. To get extra water to wash clothes, families dig pits in nearby wadis (seasonal river beds), creating shallow pools from which they scoop out water. In November, the camp wadi had water three feet below the surface. As the dry season advances, the sand pits get deeper and deeper. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8683_xf1brw.jpg
  • Page, Arizona. Lower Antelope Canyon, slot canyon
    USA_100529_087_x.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    USA_100528_070_x.jpg
  • Qat trees outside the city of Sanaa, Yemen. The growing of qat trees in areas surrounding Yemen's cities has led to the depletion of water resources, threatening the water supplies some cities.
    YEM_080404_124_xw.jpg
  • Dead Vlei is a clay pan located near the more famous salt pan of Sossusvlei in southwestern Namibia. Dead Vlei is surrounded by the highest sand dunes in the world, some reaching up to 300 meters, which rest on a sandstone terrace. The clay pan was formed after rainfall, when the Tsauchab river flooded, creating temporary shallow pools where the abundance of water allowed camel thorn trees to grow. When the climate changed, drought hit the area, and sand dunes encroached on the pan, which blocked the river from the area. The trees died, as there no longer was enough water to survive. Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay. - from Wikipedia
    NAM_090312_222_xw.jpg
  • Dead Vlei is a clay pan located near the more famous salt pan of Sossusvlei in southwestern Namibia. Dead Vlei is surrounded by the highest sand dunes in the world, some reaching up to 300 meters, which rest on a sandstone terrace. The clay pan was formed after rainfall, when the Tsauchab river flooded, creating temporary shallow pools where the abundance of water allowed camel thorn trees to grow. When the climate changed, drought hit the area, and sand dunes encroached on the pan, which blocked the river from the area. The trees died, as there no longer was enough water to survive. Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay. -Wikipedia
    NAM_090312_189_xw.jpg
  • A vendor fries fish for sale in the Kibera slum, Africa's largest slum settlement with nearly one million inhabitants, the majority of whom have no access to running water and ablution facilities.
    KEN_090301_190_xw.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    USA_100528_113_x.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    USA_100528_061_x.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    USA_100528_056_x.jpg
  • Irrigation: Cornfields are irrigated by water drawn from a small canal with siphon hoses. Kern county, California. USA.
    USA_AG_IRR_04_xs.jpg
  • Springbok at Sossusvlei in southwestern Namibia. Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay. (from Wikipedia).
    NAM_090312_343_xw.jpg
  • Dead Vlei is a clay pan located near the more famous salt pan of Sossusvlei in southwestern Namibia. Dead Vlei is surrounded by the highest sand dunes in the world, some reaching up to 300 meters, which rest on a sandstone terrace. The clay pan was formed after rainfall, when the Tsauchab river flooded, creating temporary shallow pools where the abundance of water allowed camel thorn trees to grow. When the climate changed, drought hit the area, and sand dunes encroached on the pan, which blocked the river from the area. The trees died, as there no longer was enough water to survive. Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay. - from Wikipedia
    NAM_090313_138_xw.jpg
  • A tourist takes pictures in the Dead Vlei, a clay pan located near the more famous salt pan of Sossusvlei, southwestern Namibia. Dead Vlei is surrounded by the highest sand dunes in the world, some reaching up to 300 meters, which rest on a sandstone terrace. The clay pan was formed after rainfall, when the Tsauchab river flooded, creating temporary shallow pools where the abundance of water allowed camel thorn trees to grow. When the climate changed, a drought hit the area, and sand dunes encroached on the pan, which blocked the river from the area. The trees died, as there no longer was enough water to survive. Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay. -Wikipedia
    NAM_090312_080_xw.jpg
  • North Rim of the Grand Canyon, AZ
    USA_100526_230_x.jpg
  • Bryce Canyon National Park, UT
    USA_100527_326_x.jpg
  • Riders take camels to an early morning training workout for camels at the racetrack in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Mosque tower and skyline in the background.
    DUB_030522_025_x.jpg
  • A herd of oryx antelope near the Halali restcamp at Etosha National Park in northern Namibia.
    NAM_090311_018_xw.jpg
  • The Mustapha family in their courtyard in Dar es Salaam village, Chad, with a week's worth of food. Gathered around Mustapha Abdallah Ishakh, 46 (turban), and Khadidja Baradine, 42 (orange scarf), are Abdel Kerim, 14, Amna, 12 (standing), Nafissa, 6, and Halima, 18 months. Lying on a rug are (left to right) Fatna, 3, granddaughter Amna Ishakh (standing in for Abdallah, 9, who is herding), and Rawda, 5. From the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (Model Released)
    CHA204_0001_xxf1rw.jpg
  • USA_100822_07_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_342_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_322_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_318_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_313_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_267_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_255_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_254_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_250_x.jpg
  • Lower Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon. Page, AZ
    USA_100529_249_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_246_x.jpg
  • Upper Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon, Page, AZ
    USA_100529_203_x.jpg
  • Upper Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon, Page, AZ
    USA_100529_205_x.jpg
  • Upper Antelope Canyon, Slot Canyon, Page, AZ
    USA_100529_191_x.jpg
  • Page, Arizona. Lower Antelope Canyon, slot canyon
    USA_100529_093_x.jpg
  • Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powel, UT
    USA_100528_162_x.jpg
  • Glen Canyon Dam Bridge, Lake Powel, UT
    USA_100528_160_x.jpg
  • Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powel, UT
    USA_100528_159_x.jpg
  • Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powel, UT
    USA_100528_132_x.jpg
  • North Rim of the Grand Canyon, AZ
    USA_100527_269_x.jpg
  • North Rim of the Grand Canyon, AZ
    USA_100527_233_x.jpg
  • North Rim of the Grand Canyon, AZ
    USA_100527_052_x.jpg
  • North Rim of the Grand Canyon, AZ
    USA_100527_039_x.jpg
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Peter Menzel Photography

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