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  • USA  The Long Haul Trucker.Conrad Tolby, an American long-distance truck driver, photographed with a typical day's worth of food on the cab hood of his semi tractor trailer at the Flying J truck stop in Effingham, Illinois. The caloric value of his meals this working weekday was 5,400 kcals. At the time of the photograph Tolby was 54 years of age; 6 feet, 2 inches tall; and weighed 260 pounds. His meals on the road haven't changed much over the years?truck stop and fast-food fare, heavy on the grease?despite warnings from his doctor. He has more reason than most to watch his diet, as he's suffered two heart attacks?both in the cab of his truck. The trucker travels with his best friend and constant companion, a five-year-old shar pei dog, named Imperial Fancy Pants, who gets his own McDonald's burger and splits the fries with Conrad. From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets. (Please note that the calorie total is not a daily caloric average. See his chapter, and the methodology, in the book for more information). MODEL RELEASED...Note: The authors used a typical recent day as a starting point for their interviews with 80 people in 30 countries. They specifically chose not to cover daily caloric averages, as they wanted to include some extreme examples of eating, like one woman's diet on a bingeing day or the small number of calories a herder in Kenya ate during extreme drought. The texts in the book provide the context for the photographs, detailing each person's diet, culture, and circumstance at the moment they were photographed: a snapshot in time. A complete methodology is available in the book.
    USA_081004_170_xxw.jpg
  • Conrad Tolby, a long-distance truck driver and ex-biker at the Flying J truck stop in Effingham, Illinois. (Conrad Tolby is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081003_079_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
  • Peter Menzel, co-author of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, photographs truck driver Conrad Tolby at sunrise at a truckstop in Effingham, Illinois. (Conrad Tolby is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081004_194_xw.jpg
  • Conrad Tolby, a long-distance truck driver and ex-biker in the cab of his semi tractor trailer at the Flying J truck stop in Effingham, Illinois. (Conrad Tolby is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081003_162_xw.jpg
  • Conrad Tolby, a long-distance truck driver and ex-biker with his best friend and constant companion, Imperial Fancy Pants, a five-year-old shar pei that he travels with. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his typical day's worth of food in June was 5,400 kcals. He is 54; 6a feet two inches and 260 pounds. ?Those big trucks on the road with all the lights on them? Those are chicken haulers,? says Conrad. ?I used to be on the road 24-7, 300 days a year, hauling fresh-killed chickens packed in ice. I'd leave Mississippi and haul ass to California. You've only got so much time to deliver or you get fined big time.? After two heart attacks, both of them in the cab of his truck, and a divorce back in Mississippi. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_081003_153_xxw.jpg
  • Tersius "Teri" Bezuidenhout, a long-haul trucker delayed by paperwork at the Botswana-Namibia border stands next to his truck with his typical day's worth of road food. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    NAM_090316_253_xxw.jpg
  • A Walmart truck on highway in coal mining country, Kentucky.
    USA_080501_515_xw.jpg
  • A haulage truck on the trans-Kalahari highway near the Botswana border in Namibia. With no comprehensive railway networks to move cargo between countries in southern Africa, haulage trucks serve as the primary means of transport for the bulk of regional trade.
    NAM_090316_308_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
  • Grain Farmer Gordon Stine driving a truck at his leased farm in St. Elmo, Illinois.  (Gordon Stine is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_081001_193_xw.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
  • California. Sacramento River Delta flood from broken levee, Holland Tract. Drowned cattle being loaded into a truck for rendering. 1980.
    USA_CA_08_xs.jpg
  • USA_AG_BEEF_30_xs.Cattle drowned during a Sacramento River Delta flood caused by a levee break are loaded onto a truck with a crane. USA.
    USA_AG_BEEF_30_xs.jpg
  • Charles C. Mann sticking his head out of a pickup truck on the dirt road to the Mayan ruins at Rio Bec, Yucatan, Mexico.
    MEX_066_xs.jpg
  • Colonial neighborhood with red pickup truck in Oaxaca, Mexico.
    MEX_027_xs.jpg
  • British Explosive Ordinance Disposal Team in an Ahmadi Moslem graveyard loading artillery shells on a truck for disposal. Huge amounts of munitions were abandoned in Kuwait by retreating Iraqi troops in February, 1991. Also, nearly a million land mines were deployed on the beaches and along the Saudi and Iraqi border. In addition, tens of thousands of unexploded bomblets (from cluster bombs dropped by Allied aircraft) littered the desert.
    KUW_078_xs.jpg
  • The body and cab of a pickup truck lie outside Jose Angel Galaviz Carrillo's house near the village 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.)
    MEX_080821_014_xw.jpg
  • Camels from Somalia stiffly walk down the ramp from a truck at the Birqash Camel Market outside Cairo, Egypt, where camel broker Saleh Abdul Fadlallah works. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Domesticated since 2000 BC, camels are used less as beasts of burden now, and more for their meat. Because they can run up to 40 miles per hour for short bursts, dealers hobble one leg when they are unloaded at the Birqash market, forcing them to hop around on just three legs. They are marked with painted symbols to make them easier for buyers and sellers to identify. Both brokers and camels have a reputation for being surly, and the brokers don't hesitate to flail the camels with their long sticks to maintain their dominance.
    EGY_080320_025_xxw.jpg
  • Haulage trucks on the Trans-Kalahari highway near the city of Ghanzi, Botswana.
    BOT_090314_007_xw.jpg
  • A grain cart driven by Illinois farmer Gordon Stine's brother Stanton, offloads corn into one of their 10-wheel trucks, which will transport it back to their silos for drying and storage. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_081002_305_xxw.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.)
    USA_081002_220_xw.jpg
  • Titan Missile Museum, Green Valley, Arizona. When the SALT Treaty called for the de-activation of the 18 Titan missile silos that ring Tucson, volunteers at the Pima Air Museum asked if one could be retained for public tours. After much negotiation, including additional talks with SALT officials, the Green Valley complex of the 390th Strategic Missile Wing was opened to the public. Deep in the ground, behind a couple of 6,000 pound blast doors is the silo itself. The 110 foot tall missile weighed 170 tons when it was fueled and ready to fly.
    USA_071229_031.jpg
  • .Animal slaugher and rendering area behind Phousy public market in Ban Saylom Village, just south of Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120129_139_x.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
  • Tomatoes: Tomato production facility cannery, Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_08_xs.jpg
  • Military vehicles with Arabic calligraphy used for training soldiers during simulated combat conditions before deploying to Iraq at Medina Jabal, an Iraqi town at Fort Irwin, California.
    USA_080916_115_xw.jpg
  • Military vehicles with Arabic calligraphy used for training soldiers deploying to Iraq at Medina Jabal, an Iraqi town at Fort Irwin, California, in the Mojave Desert.
    USA_080916_330_xw.jpg
  • Moving two large two story houses for urban renewal in Oakland, California, 1979.
    USA_OAK_05_xs.jpg
  • The parade for the patron saint of the village of Malojloj on the South Island, U.S. Territory of Guam, an island in the Western Pacific Ocean, the largest of the Mariana Islands..
    GUM_04_xs.jpg
  • Traffic arrest and burning car at the end of a police chase in American Canyon, Napa County, CA.
    USA_CA_080829_015_x.jpg
  • Rice: rice harvest. Richvale, California, USA. 1980.
    USA_AG_RICE_19_xs.jpg
  • Coober Pedy opal mine. South Australia.
    AUS_33_xs.jpg
  • Crop dusting. Lompoc, California, USA. Spraying fields of flowers grown for seeds with pesticides.
    USA_AG_CRPD_12_xs.jpg
  • An unexploded rockeye submunition (cluster bomb), in the Al-Burgan Oil Field. After finding these rockeye submunitions all over Kuwait, the British Explosive Ordinance Disposal Team detonate them with plastic explosives from a safe distance. Nearly a million land mines were deployed on the beaches and along the Saudi and Iraqi border. In addition, tens of thousands of unexploded bomblets (from cluster bombs dropped by Allied aircraft) littered the desert. July 1991. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_095_xs.jpg
  • Kuwaitis on the Road to the Manageesh Oil Fields near the Saudi border, attempt to fix a trailer in a sandstorm. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_091_xs.jpg
  • Kuwait: Ahmadi Moslem graveyard; British explosive ordnance disposal team loading Iraqi arms/ordnance.
    KUW_085_xs.jpg
  • International Red Cross run Keysaney Hospital in Mogadishu, the war-torn capital of Somalia. March 1992.
    SOM_08_xs.jpg
  • Aftermath of the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake in Oakland, California. The highest concentration of fatalities, 42, occurred in the collapse of the Cypress Street Viaduct on the Nimitz Freeway (Interstate 880), where a double-decker portion of the freeway collapsed, crushing the cars on the lower deck. At a magnitude of 7.1, it was the worst earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1906.
    USA_CA_EQ_12_xs.jpg
  • The mud-walled Great Mosque in the African city of Djenne, in Mali was built decades ago on the ruins of a 13th-century mosque. It is often a location for temporary markets and sales people. Material World Project.
    Mal_mw_717_xs.jpg
  • The mud-walled Great Mosque in the African city of Djenne, in Mali was built decades ago on the ruins of a 13th-century mosque. It is often a location for temporary markets and sales people. Material World Project.
    Mal_mw_716_xs.jpg
  • Firefighters from the Kuwait Oil Company (called KWWK: Kuwait Wild Well Killers) pray at noon by the first oil well fire they were working on in Iraq's Rumeilah Oil Field. They did a double prayer at noon so they would not have to stop later in the day if they were at a critical phase. Later in the day they extinguished this smoky fire and the next day stopped the flow of gas and oil with drilling mud using what is called a "stinger", a tapered pipe on the end of a long steel boom controlled by a bulldozer. Drilling mud, under high pressure, is pumped through the stinger into the well, stopping the flow of oil and gas. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    KUW03_4858_xf1brw.jpg
  • USA_090113_10_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_117_x.jpg
  • Trongsa Dzong in central Bhutan, originally built in 1644, is the seat of power for the future monarch, who begins his rise to power as the governor of the Trongsa district. The Dzong?or fortress?is one of many in the country that historically provided sanctuary for the country's people during war and strife. From coverage of revisit to Material World Project family in Bhutan, 2001. Architecture. From coverage of revisit to Material World Project family in Bhutan, 2001.
    Bhu_mw2_79_xs.jpg
  • Taitung, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_085_x.jpg
  • Taitung, Taiwan
    TAI_110327_079_x.jpg
  • Seattle, WA. University of Washington.
    USA_120519_18_x.jpg
  • Poultry. Turkey slaughterhouse in Lincoln, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TURK_09_xs.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Tomatoes just harvested, in tractor-trailers at the cannery in Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_09_xs.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester at night, near Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_07_xs.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester, near Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_02_xs.jpg
  • Unloading surplus naval oranges at the Sunkist Orange Juice Factory, Lindsay, California, USA. Only a small percentage of naval oranges can be used in juice mix because it tends to separate. Other surplus naval oranges are used for cattle feed.
    USA_AG_ORAN_17_xs.jpg
  • Flowers grown for seed: Lompoc, California.
    USA_AG_FLWR_20_xs.jpg
  • Crop dusting. Lompoc, California, USA. Spraying fields of flowers grown for seeds with pesticides.
    USA_AG_CRPD_12_xs.jpg
  • Private residences in the midst of wine grape vineyards. Rural Sonoma County, California.
    USA_SNMA_03_xs.jpg
  • Napa River flood on December 31, 2005 in Napa on Soscol Ave looking north.
    USA_051231_05_rwx.jpg
  • Upstate NY near Waddinton, NY
    USA_121020_10_x.jpg
  • Upstate NY near Waddinton, NY
    USA_121020_07_x.jpg
  • Yellow row houses, Kronprinzessegade. Copenhagen, Denmark.
    DEN_20_xs.jpg
  • Driving the Stuart Highway north of Alice Springs. Australia. View through windshield with driver on right side.
    AUS_21_xs.jpg
  • Tom Beck aims a machine gun from his jeep. Attending the Soldier of Fortune Convention, Las Vegas. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_MILT_02_xs.jpg
  • Shoppers buy eggs from a street vendor in winter in Prague, Czech Republic.
    CZE_22_xs.jpg
  • Drive-in movie theater Kuwait City after the end of the Gulf War in 1991. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_100_xs.jpg
  • An unexploded rockeye submunition (cluster bomb), in the Al-Burgan Oil Field. After finding these rockeye submunitions all over Kuwait, the British Explosive Ordinance Disposal Team detonate them with plastic explosives from a safe distance. .
    KUW_088_xs.jpg
  • A worker from the Red Adair Company attempts to wash oil off his body after capping an oil well after they extinguished the fire. The burning Al Burgan oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991 were covered in oil that rained down from the clouds of oil smoke and oil shooting into the air after a fire had been extinguished. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_041_xs.jpg
  • A firefighting oil well worker employed by Safety Boss of Canada cools off in a tank of seawater in July 1991 during efforts to cap a well during the Kuwait Oil Well Fires. Ambient temperatures in the July desert exceeded 120 degrees F and often went much higher. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_026_xs.jpg
  • Road to underground storage of radioactive wastes for the Waste Isolation Pilot Project (WIPP), 700 meters below ground (salt pond in foreground). WIPP is a research project to determine the suitability of the local salt rocks as a storage site for highly- radioactive transuranic waste from atomic power stations. Such waste materials may have radioactive half-lives of thousands of years, and so must be isolated in a geologically stable environment. On the left is an experiment testing the design of containers carrying vitrified waste. The mine is located near Carlsbad, New Mexico, USA. (1988)
    USA_SCI_NUKE_18_xs.jpg
  • Aftermath of the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake in Oakland, California. The highest concentration of fatalities, 42, occurred in the collapse of the Cypress Street Viaduct on the Nimitz Freeway (Interstate 880), where a double-decker portion of the freeway collapsed, crushing the cars on the lower deck. At a magnitude of 7.1, it was the worst earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1906.
    USA_CA_EQ_11_xs.jpg
  • Aftermath of the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake in Oakland, California. The highest concentration of fatalities, 42, occurred in the collapse of the Cypress Street Viaduct on the Nimitz Freeway (Interstate 880), where a double-decker portion of the freeway collapsed, crushing the cars on the lower deck. At a magnitude of 7.1, it was the worst earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1906.
    USA_CA_EQ_10_xs.jpg
  • Sam Tucker, lobsterman and fish buyer at Portland Maine Fish Exchange with a deer he shot near his house on Great Diamond Island, Portland, Maine.  (Samuel Tucker is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED
    USA_070324_154_xw.jpg
  • The mud-walled Great Mosque in the African city of Djenne, in Mali was built decades ago on the ruins of a 13th-century mosque. It is often a location for temporary markets and sales people. Material World Project.
    Mal_mw_718_xs.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester, near Stockton, California at dusk with moon. USA
    USA_AG_TOM_05_xs.jpg
  • British troops patrol areas around burning oil wells in Iraq's Rumaila Oil Field, in southern Iraq. The wells were set on fire with explosives placed by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began. Seven or eight wells were set ablaze and at least one other was detonated but did not ignite. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. Many of the wells are 10,000 feet deep and produce huge volumes of oil and gas under tremendous pressure, which makes capping them very difficult and dangerous. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_4640_x.jpg
  • Foreign aid workers on their day off on their way to the beach with armed guards pass camels in Mogadishu, the war torn capital of Somalia. March 1992.
    SOM_05_xs.jpg
  • Aerial photograph of truck trailers full of just-harvested oranges and grapefruits ready to be made into juice at this Lindsay, California citrus juice factory. San Joaquin Valley. The factory is surrounded by orange trees.
    USA_AERL_13_xs.jpg
  • Aerial photograph of the production facility for freshly harvested tomatoes.  Seen are truck trailers of just harvested tomatoes. Tomato cannery. San Joaquin Valley, California.
    USA_AERL_26_xs.jpg
  • Heading north through the Rumaila Oil Field of Southern Iraq, convoys of fuel trucks carry the army's mechanical lifeblood past burning oil wells set ablaze by retreating Iraqi forces. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_287_rwx.jpg
  • Heading north through the Rumaila Oil Field of Southern Iraq, convoys of fuel trucks carry the army's mechanical lifeblood past burning oil wells set ablaze by retreating Iraqi forces. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. The burning wells in the Rumaila Field were ignited by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began in March 2003. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_285_rwx.jpg
  • Heading north through the Rumeilah Oil Field of Southern Iraq, convoys of fuel trucks carry the military's mechanical lifeblood past burning oil wells set ablaze by retreating Iraqi forces. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    KUW03_4678_xf1brw.jpg
  • Heading north through the Rumaila Oil Field of Southern Iraq, convoys of fuel trucks carry the army's mechanical lifeblood past burning oil wells set ablaze by retreating Iraqi forces. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. The burning wells in the Rumaila Field were ignited by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began in March 2003. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_275_rwx.jpg
  • Heading north through the Rumaila Oil Field of Southern Iraq, convoys of fuel trucks carry the army's mechanical lifeblood past burning oil wells set ablaze by retreating Iraqi forces. The Rumaila field is one of Iraq's biggest oil fields with five billion barrels in reserve. The burning wells in the Rumaila Field were ignited by retreating Iraqi troops when the US and UK invasion began in March 2003. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030324_273_rwx.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester, near Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_04_xs.jpg
  • The Harris Ranch cattle feed lot, the Harris Feeding Company, in Coalinga, California. California's largest feed lot with up to 100,000 head of cattle. Hereford cattle are being loaded into tractor-trailers to transport them to the company's slaughterhouse in nearby Selma, California. Coalinga, California. San Joaquin Valley. USA [[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_04_xs.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester, near Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_01_xs.jpg
  • Surplus oranges fed to cattle by H and E Cattle Feed Company near Bakersfield, California, USA.
    USA_AG_ORAN_06_xs.jpg
  • Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
    ARG_110111_064_x.jpg
  • Ban Saylom Village, just South of 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_120129_020_x.jpg
  • Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120128_315_x.jpg
  • Sante Fe dump on the outskirts of Mexico City, Mexico.
    MEX_130_xs.jpg
  • Scrap metal junkyard in the Kuwaiti desert with 100,000 of the 300,000 cars destroyed from the Iraqi war. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_112_xs.jpg
  • Firefighters preparing a burning oil well so that the damaged well head can be capped in the Magwa field near Ahmadi, Kuwait. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_033_xs.jpg
  • Livestock market with camels, cattle and goats in Hargeisa, Somaliland, an unrecognized breakaway Republic of Somalia. Livestock is the main source of income in Somaliland.  March 1992.
    SOM_66_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_109_x.jpg
  • Evan Menzel at Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosion on July 16, 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) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_101002_028_x.jpg
  • Evan Menzel at Site Trinity, ground zero, on the White Sands Missile Range in S. New Mexico. Site of the world's first atomic explosion n July 16, 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) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_101002_027_x.jpg
  • Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta, New Mexico. Mass assencion on Sunday morning at dawn of 500 hot air balloons.
    USA_101003_281_x.jpg
  • Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta, New Mexico. Mass assencion on Sunday morning at dawn of 500 hot air balloons.
    USA_101003_180_x.jpg
  • Tomatoes: Blackwelder tomato harvester, near Stockton, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TOM_03_xs.jpg
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Peter Menzel Photography

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