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  • A man climbs out of a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle in use at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110829_4162.JPG
  • Early morning light strikes the farm buildings, where the ducks are born and raised, and the forests of the Catskills surrounding Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008.
    081012_0035.JPG
  • A worker pushes a cart down the aisle between the duck pens carrying buckets of grain used for force-feeding the birds at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008. Migratory birds, including ducks, are capable of storing large amounts of fat in their liver. Forced overeating replicates the effect, producing the enlarged, fatty livers used for Foie Gras.
    081011_0344.JPG
  • Duck carcasses, dripped, feathered and washed, lay in a pile in the cutting room where workers manually remove the enlarged livers (foie gras) at the Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008.
    081011_0180.JPG
  • Eduardo Leon dresses for work at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008. Leon, who immigrated from Puebla state, Mexico to upstate New York to join his parents and siblings, works every day at the factory to support his wife who stays home while expecting a child.
    081012_0099_crop.JPG
  • A floating Vietnamese mechanical gold dredge leaves a wake of tailing piles in the Nam Ou River, Laos.
    140128_145519.JPG
  • Gas Works Park in Seattle, Washington.
    070828_0044_bw.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay abandoned in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_2032.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay abandoned in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_2017.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay abandoned in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_2007.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay abandoned in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_1996.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay abandoned in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_1992.JPG
  • A worker further cleans the duck carcasses of remnants of feathers as they pass by on a conveyor belt at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on Octoer 11, 2008. Mexican music booms from the stereo - most of the employees in the factory are Mexican immigrants.
    081012_0052.JPG
  • Fatty, enlarged duck livers (foie gras) are carefully laid out in a shipping crate at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008.
    081012_0031.JPG
  • Fans circulate the air in the large hangar where the ducks, held in pens, are force-fed meals by workers a few times daily at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008. Migratory birds, including ducks, are capable of storing large amounts of fat in their liver. Forced overeating replicates the effect, producing the enlarged, fatty livers used for Foie Gras.
    081011_0364.JPG
  • A worker uses a special machine to force-feed ducks at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York. Migratory birds, including ducks, are capable of storing large amounts of fat in their liver. Forced overeating replicates the effect, producing the enlarged, fatty livers used for Foie Gras.
    081011_0275.JPG
  • Remains of the El Boleo French mining company, never dismantled, lay in ruins in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico on January 26, 2009. The company founded Santa Rosalia in 1884 and operated a large copper mine till 1954. Korea Exim bank and Baja Mining Corporation, a Canadian mining company, joined together in 2008 to redevelop Mexico's largest copper mine, which also contains reserves of cobalt, zinc and other minerals. Production is expected to begin in 2010.
    090126_1979.JPG
  • Eduardo Leon, a Mexican immigrant from Puebla now living in Swan Lake, stands in a passageway holding out the blade he uses to cut out the duck livers at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 12, 2008.
    081012_0107.JPG
  • A worker places foie gras (enlarged duck livers) into a red pale at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on October 11, 2008.
    081011_0175.JPG
  • Workers process the duck carcasses, removing the foie gras (enlarged duck liver) at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in Ferndale, New York on Octoer 11, 2008. Mexican music booms from the stereo - most of the employees in the factory are Mexican immigrants.
    081011_0162.JPG
  • Rows of fuel drums outside the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4171.JPG
  • Remains of a narrow gauge railway with a rusted carriage on the beach at Calypsobyen, Svalbard, site of a coal mining operation erected by the British Northern Exploration Company in the early 1900s. Structures and a barge are visible in the distance.
    110817_0258.JPG
  • River outwash plain in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110911_5870.JPG
  • Streets and buildings of Longyearbyen, Svalbard shrouded in fog.
    110911_5863.JPG
  • Adam Nawrot (right) and Franciszek Krzeminski take pictures during a scenic storm break at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110907_4893.JPG
  • Electrical engineer Jacek Renkas scrubs rust from the hull of a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle still in use at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110906_4819.JPG
  • Grzegorz Karasinski (l-r), Robert Zmuda, Krysztof Herman, and Lukasz Gryglicki pump gasoline delivered by amphibious vehicle to storage tanks at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4140.JPG
  • Soviet-era amphibious vehicles are used to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4096.JPG
  • A Soviet-era amphibious vehicle is used to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4039.JPG
  • Inside the abandoned Coal Mine no. 2 on a hillside above Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110814_9934.JPG
  • Mining infrastructure above Sveagruva, site of the Svea Nord longwall mine, the largest coal mine on the Svalbard archipelago.
    110814_9906.JPG
  • Anna Reiser sits among graffiti art in an abandoned warehouse in Blakely Harbor Park on Bainbridge Island, Washington. The park is the former site of Port Blakely Mill, which was one of the world's largest sawmills in the late 19th century.
    090114_0388.JPG
  • A man inspects the quality of the sheep leather skins hanging to dry on a wall in the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7842.JPG
  • The smokestack of the coal-fired power plant (Norway's only coal plant) dwarfs a ship in the harbor of Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110911_5866.JPG
  • Lukasz Gryglicki rolls a fuel drum, pushed inland by high winds during a violent storm, back towards the shore at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110907_4841.JPG
  • Lukasz Gryglicki rolls a fuel drum, pushed inland by high winds during a violent storm, back towards the shore at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110907_4836.JPG
  • Rafal Flieger walks past as electrical engineer Jacek Renkas scrubs rust from the hull of a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle still in use at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110906_4797.JPG
  • Marta Bania (left) and Robert Zmuda play ping pong in the storage warehouse at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110901_4680.JPG
  • Lukasz Gryglicki, Krysztof Herman, and Robert Zmuda operate a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4117.JPG
  • Lukasz Gryglicki, Krysztof Herman, and Robert Zmuda operate a Soviet-era amphibious vehicle to shuttle gasoline from a delivery ship to the storage tanks on land at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard. The station operates year round and uses 90,000 liters of gasoline per year to operate generators, boats, snowmobiles, and heavy machinery.
    110829_4049.JPG
  • Retired caterpillar track for an amphibious vehicle used for hauling large loads at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110826_1906.JPG
  • Retired caterpillar tracks of an amphibious vehicle used for hauling large loads at the Polish Polar Station in Hornsund, Svalbard.
    110826_1903.JPG
  • Remains of the abandoned Coal Mine no. 2 on a hillside above Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110815_9941.JPG
  • Buildings (mostly student dormitories of the University Center) in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110815_9940.JPG
  • A plane lands at the airport in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    110814_9928.JPG
  • Anna Reiser walks among graffiti art in an abandoned warehouse in Blakely Harbor Park on Bainbridge Island, Washington. The park is the former site of Port Blakely Mill, which was one of the world's largest sawmills in the late 19th century.
    090114_0344.JPG
  • Anna Reiser looks out a window, towards a large mansion, in an abandoned warehouse covered in graffiti in Blakely Harbor Park on Bainbridge Island, Washington. The park is the former site of Port Blakely Mill, which was one of the world's largest sawmills in the late 19th century.
    090114_0377.JPG
  • A man walks among the lime pits at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7801.JPG
  • A flock of Common Ravens (Corvus corax) fly among the metal structures of the Lakeside Industries asphalt plant on the industrial waterfront of the Fremont neighborhood in Seattle, Washington.
    061013_9624.JPG
  • Salinas salt pans of Maras, Sacred Valley, Peru on September 22, 2005. Natives of Maras own and harvest the salt pans for sale to the cooperative which distributes it to the region's markets as industrial to table salt.
    050922_9750.JPG
  • A woman works in her plot at the Salinas salt pans of Maras, Sacred Valley, Peru on September 22, 2005. Natives of Maras own and harvest the salt pans for sale to the cooperative which distributes it to the region's markets as industrial to table salt.
    050922_9785.JPG
  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_9034.JPG
  • Stockfish hanging to dry in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_8956.JPG
  • Stockfish hanging to dry in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_8857.JPG
  • An off-duty fish factory employee (who came from Poland looking for work) hooks a fish at the commercial port in Sorland, Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_7131.JPG
  • A carpenter frames a house while a dog stands guard at a new housing development in Tacoma, Washington.
    080430_9214.JPG
  • Men clean sheep skins at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7661.JPG
  • St. Elias Alpine Guides tour guide Ben Wilcox points enthusiastically during a tour of the impressive mill building in Kennecott, Alaska, site of the historic Kennecott Copper Mine.
    100804_7068.JPG
  • Eric Ross stands proudly with a mock wind turbine on top of the large coal mound at the Valmont Power Plant in Boulder, Colorado on April 27, 2010. During the protest for more renewables, Ross and three other climate activists claimed the coal mound for over an hour before being arrested for trespass.
    100427_0552.JPG
  • Workers at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, carve and clean the edges of sheep skins on October 31, 2007.
    071031_7635.JPG
  • Robert Hahn (center) chats with Vietnamese workers, while drinking a Vietnamese beer, on a mechanical gold dredge floating on the Nam Ou River, Laos. Six men live on the vessel for months, rotating throughout the day and working in pairs to keep the machine in constant operation.
    140128_140745A.JPG
  • A Chinese worker with a SinoHydro helmet flashes the peace (V) sign for a photo at the construction site for Dam #5 on the Nam Ou River, Laos.
    140124_112004.JPG
  • Ruins of mine scaffolding in Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
    140308_2643.JPG
  • A man stands alone facing an abandoned utility pole on Sverdruphamaren, Svalbard.
    140209_9768.JPG
  • UNIS students from nearby Longyearbyen hike together across Sverdruphamaren, Svalbard, past abandoned utility poles.<br />
<br />
Pictured: Alistair Everett, Mylène Jacquemart, Stephen Jennings, Marianne Andresen
    140209_9732.JPG
  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_9031.JPG
  • A young man pulls stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_8945.JPG
  • Workers pull stockfish from drying racks in Å, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110921_8888.JPG
  • Africa (tertiary) grade cod stockfish stacked in a fish factory on Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_7333.JPG
  • Cod (Gadus sp.), caught by clients of a commercial fishing charter, are processed by an employee at the fishing port on Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_7234.JPG
  • The commercial fishing port in Sorland at sunset, Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_7175.JPG
  • Traditional wood racks used for drying fish in Sorland, Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_7074.JPG
  • Detail of commercial fishing boats and warehouses in Sorland, Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway.
    110917_6778.JPG
  • Commercial fishing boats and warehouses in Sorland, Vaeroy Island, Lofoten Islands, Norway. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) naval military radar is visible on the plateau above.
    110917_6773.JPG
  • Ships in the Pacific Ocean illuminate the horizon at night, seen from the West Coast Trail, British Columbia, Canada.
    110731_0926.JPG
  • Parmenter Welty explores the power plant in Kennecott, Alaska, site of the historic Kennecott Copper Mine.
    100804_7164.JPG
  • A young man lifts up sheep leather skins, coming from the tanneries, from the back of his  horse to set on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7744.JPG
  • A worker at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, throws sheep skin leathers into a pile. They are coated in lime to make the hair easier to remove.
    071031_7902.JPG
  • A young man lays out leather sheep skins on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7771.JPG
  • A young man unloads sheep leather skins, coming from the tanneries, from the back of his  horse to set on the ground to dry on a hill overlooking Fes El-Bali, Morocco.
    071031_7745.JPG
  • A mule stands outside the door to the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali with a new delivery of unwashed sheep skins.
    071031_7676.JPG
  • Eric Ross (l-r), Erik Bonnett, Kate Clark and Tom Weiss reenact the "Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima" with a mock wind turbine on the coal pile at the Valmont Power Plant in Boulder, Colorado on April 27, 2010. The four climate activists claimed the coal mound for over an hour before they were arrested for trespass...
    100427_0582.JPG
  • Kate Clark (l-r),  Eric Ross, Erik Bonnett and Tom Weiss stage a protest with mock wind turbines and a giant "Renewables Now" banner on the coal pile at the Valmont Power Plant in Boulder, Colorado on April 27, 2010. The four climate activists claimed the coal mound for over an hour before they were arrested for trespass.
    100427_0565.JPG
  • Kate Clark (l-r),  Eric Ross, Erik Bonnett and Tom Weiss stage a protest with mock wind turbines and a giant "Renewables Now" banner on the coal pile at the Valmont Power Plant in Boulder, Colorado on April 27, 2010. The four climate activists claimed the coal mound for over an hour before they were arrested for trespass.
    100427_0561.JPG
  • The Mars Petcare US factory at dawn on the shores of the Truckee River near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The disrupted ecology of the lower Truckee River is the focus of a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million restoration effort by the Nature Conservancy.
    100216_8962.JPG
  • Three tugboats pull barges across the Strait of Juan de Fuca at sunset, with Mount Rainier in the background, as seen from Fort Ebey State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington.
    080411_8806.JPG
  • A worker at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, pulls sheep wool off skins coated with lime on October 31, 2007. Chemical lime reacts with the wool, making it easier to remove. The wool is washed in the drainage canal behind the tannery.
    071031_8179.JPG
  • Tanning and lime pits at a leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco on October 31, 2007.
    071031_8175.JPG
  • Tanning and lime pits at a leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco on October 31, 2007. The tanneries are set within the tightly packed buildings of the Medieval city and have not changed for centuries.
    071031_8161.JPG
  • A young man stands on the edge of colorful red dyeing pits at a leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco on October 31, 2007.
    071031_8157.JPG
  • Men work in red dyeing pits at a leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco on October 31, 2007. Yellow sheep skins dry on the surrounding rooftops.
    071031_8148.JPG
  • A worker holds the large blade which he uses to file down the rough side of yellow dyed sheep skins at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
    071031_7859.JPG
  • Workers file down the rough side of yellow dyed sheep skins at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
    071031_7852.JPG
  • Sheep skins dyed bright yellow hang to dry on a wall in the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, on October 31, 2007.
    071031_7819.JPG
  • Workers at the Berber leather tannery in Fes El-Bali, Morocco, carve and clean the edges of sheep skins and coat them with lime on October 31, 2007. Chemical lime helps separate the wool from the leather.
    071031_7633.JPG
  • An airport employee fixes an outdoor light fixture at Boise International Airport in Boise, Idaho as the sun sets on September 11, 2007.
    070911_3040.JPG
  • Robert Hahn carries his packraft down the original river channel - now a construction site for Dam #5 - on the Nam Ou River, Laos.
    140124_121535.JPG
  • A Svalbard rock ptarmigan (Lagopus muta hyperborea) walks along the road and utility pipes to Huset in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. It is the only land bird which resides in the archipelago year-round. The water pipes are heated and above ground to prevent freezing and protect the permafrost.
    140308_2469.JPG
  • Utility pipes and pump station in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. The water pipes are heated and above ground to prevent freezing and protect the permafrost.
    140219_0116.JPG
  • Huset and utility pipes in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. The building, built in 1951 as the town hall, now holds a restaurant. The water pipes are heated and above ground to prevent freezing and protect the permafrost.
    140219_0115.JPG
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