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  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Emil and Erika Madsen's nephew Julian bites down on an Arctic char, half in jest, for the camera because the fish is large, but locals say that children often eat small fish raw. It's said to "tickle their bellies." After chopping holes in the ice with a pike, family members lower down hooks baited with seal fat. When the char bite, they yank them out of the hole with a practiced motion. (From a photographic gallery of fish images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 204).
    GRE04_0013_xxf1.jpg
  • Master butcher Markus Dirr's employees hard at work at his shop in Endingen, near Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. (Marcus Dirr is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Germans are among the biggest meat eaters in Europe, but eat slightly less meat than in decades past.
    GER_080313_028_xw.jpg
  • Village near the international Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam. Market across from Avi Airport Hotel.
    VIE_120119_027_x.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_800_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_748_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0925_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0855_rwx.jpg
  • Lamb meat in Chef Dan Barber kitchen at the Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture in Pocantico Hills, New York. The restaurant produces and grows much of the fresh food it serves.  (Chef Dan Barber is mentioned in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_080716_058_xw.jpg
  • Chickens packaged with eggs in the Santa Carolina Market, Quito, Ecuador. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    ECU04_5178_xf1brw.jpg
  • Buyers wait for their meat purchases in the Agromercado open agricultural market. A sign of the government's willingness to experiment with modest levels of free enterprise in the 1990s, the markets may not exist for much longer. In 2004 and 2005, Castro reined back the number of farmers allowed to work for themselves, stopped issuing many types of licenses for self-employment, and eliminated all traffic in U.S. dollars. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 103).
    CUB01_0007_xxf1s.jpg
  • Ducks for sale in the old Qingping market, Guangzhou, China. (From a photographic gallery of meat and poultry images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 164). Although meat in the United States and Europe mainly comes from factory farms and is sold in shrink-wrapped packages, most animal products elsewhere (as these photographs demonstrate) come from small-scale producers and are sold by butchers.
    CHI97_0014_xxf1s.jpg
  • During their expedition to Ito Yokado, a Japanese supermarket chain, the Dongs (Mr. Dong at right) of Beijing, China, inspect fresh meat at the butcher counter. In other ways too, the supermarket hews closely to Western models, right down to the workers offering samples. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats). The Dong family of Beijing, China, is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    CHI103_0084_xf1b.jpg
  • Village near the international Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam. Market across from Avi Airport Hotel.
    VIE_120119_035_x.jpg
  • Poultry. Turkey slaughterhouse in Lincoln, California, USA.
    USA_AG_TURK_04_xs.jpg
  • Fresh seafood featured at the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_862_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood featured at the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_840_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood featured at the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_828_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_786_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_737_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_700.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish..
    USA_GoFish_060809_699_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_691_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_683_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh squid dish prepared by Cindy Pawlcyn for her Go Fish restaurant in the Napa Valley, CA
    USA_GoFish_060809_443_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh squid dish prepared by Cindy Pawlcyn for her Go Fish restaurant in the Napa Valley, CA
    USA_GoFish_060809_424_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh squid dish prepared by Cindy Pawlcyn for her Go Fish restaurant in the Napa Valley, CA
    USA_GoFish_060809_422_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_1003.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0986_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0932_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA..
    USA_GoFish_060809_0823_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA..
    USA_GoFish_060809_0811_rwx.jpg
  • Freshly caught fish on the bbq grill at summer home on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.
    USA_030615_001B_x.jpg
  • Fish vendor in the Mercado del Ninot, Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_206_xs.jpg
  • Twin fishmongers in the Mercado del Ninot, Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_205_xs.jpg
  • Retail public fish market near the Tsukiji wholesale fish market in Tokyo, Japan.
    Japan_JAP_22_xs.jpg
  • Tables of beef viscera for sale in a market in N'Djamena, the capital of Chad. Although meat in the United States and Europe mainly comes from factory farms and is sold in shrink-wrapped packages, most animal products elsewhere (as these photographs demonstrate)come from small-scale producers and are sold by butchers.
    CHA04_0014_xxf1rww.jpg
  • Qing Ping market, Guangzhou, China. The sign for that stall says it sells pork. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHI96_0015_xf1bs.jpg
  • Shopping for the week's worth of food in the family portrait, Li Jinxian and Cui Haiwang buy chicken, lamb, and pork at the Luckybird Meat Store No. E0001 in the market town nearest their small village of Weitaiwu, which is located in the Beijing Province of China. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 86). The Cui family of Weitaiwu village, Beijing Province, China, is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    CHI204_0003_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Tables of beef viscera for sale in N'Djamena, Chad. (From a photographic gallery of meat and poultry images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 164).
    CHA04_0014_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Fresh seafood featured at the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_816_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_714_rwx.jpg
  • Fresh seafood from the Napa Valley restaurant Go Fish.
    USA_GoFish_060809_697_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0999.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0979_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA.
    USA_GoFish_060809_0972_rwx.jpg
  • Sushi chef Ken Tominaga of Hana and Go Fish restaurants prepares sushi at the home of Go Fish partner and chef Cindy Pawlcyn in the Napa Valley, CA..
    USA_GoFish_060809_0913_rwx.jpg
  • USA_060106_Yan15_rwx.tif.Martin Yan, chef, at Copia: The American Center for Food, Wine, and the Arts. Martin Yan gave a cooking demonstration of 'fire cracker chicken' at Copia's Meyer Food Forum cooking amphitheater. Napa, California. Napa Valley..
    USA_060106_Yan15_rwx.jpg
  • Fish still pulsing with life are sliced open for display and sale to Chinese customers, for whom freshness is very important. Qing Ping market, Guangzhou. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats)
    CHI96_0021_xf1bs.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio eats shellfish at a seaside restaurant at Collioure, France. MODEL RELEASED.
    FRA_058_xs.jpg
  • Namibians gather for their favorite snack, kapana (strips of freshly butchered beef) at the busy Oshetu Market near the Katutura area of Windhoek, Namibia. Vendors grill the popular snack over wood fires and serve it up by the handful in a piece of newspaper for about $0.50 (USD).
    NAM_090318_071_xw.jpg
  • Raw food at Bruno Comby's hotel and restaurant outside of Paris, France. Guests staying at the Chateau Montrame smell a number of fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, fish, nuts, and insects (all raw) before eating as much of them as they feel comfortable doing. Bruno Comby, author of "Delicious Insects" (in French) lives and works in the Orkos Institute in the 17th century Chateau Montrame. His institute serves a raw diet he calls "instinctology" and describes as the Paleolithic nutritional practice by early human hunter-gatherer ancestors. Comby grows insects in cages for food. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Fra_meb_700_xs.jpg
  • Guests staying at Bruno Comby's hotel and restaurant in the Chateau Montrame outside of Paris, France smell a number of fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, fish, nuts, and insects (all raw) before eating them. Bruno Comby, author of "Delicious Insects" (in French) lives and works in the Orkos Institute in the 17th century Chateau Montrame. His institute serves a raw diet he calls "instinctology" and describes as the Paleolithic nutritional practice by early human hunter-gatherer ancestors. Comby grows insects in cages for food. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Fra_meb_123_xs.jpg
  • Bruno Comby, author of "Delicious Insects" (in French) holds a grasshopper before eating it. Comby lives and works in the Orkos Institute in the 17th century Chateau Montrame outside of Paris. His institute serves a raw diet  he calls "instinctology" and describes as the Paleolithic nutritional practice by early human hunter-gatherer ancestors. Comby grows insects in cages for food. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Fra_meb_101_xs.jpg
  • Bruno Comby, author of "Delicious Insects" (in French) holds a grasshopper before eating it. Comby's lives and works in the Orkos Institute in the 17th century Chateau Montrame outside of Paris. His institute which serves a raw diet that is the basis of an eating discipline he calls "instinctology" and describes as the Paleolithic nutritional practice by early human hunter-gatherer ancestors. Comby grows insects in cages for food. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Fra_meb_701_xs.jpg
  • A factory worker carries a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_631_xw.jpg
  • A brick hauler loads a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_397_B_xxw.jpg
  • Factory workers operate machinery at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_449_xw.jpg
  • A boy prepares to carry his next load of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_377_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_354_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_351_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_334_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_329_xw.jpg
  • Girls carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_324_xw.jpg
  • A child receives a token for carrying bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_311_xw.jpg
  • Workers mold bricks at JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_277_xw.jpg
  • A man sleeps on a canoe on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081211_285_xw.jpg
  • Vendors sell fruits and vegetables to travellers at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081210_037_xw.jpg
  • A young boy walks by two goats and a stream of raw sewage flowing through a street, Djenne, Mali. The culprit seems to be incremental progress; running water has been introduced into households in Djenne, but there is no sewage system to take care of the resulting effluent. Africa.
    Mal_mw2_87_xs.jpg
  • Travelers crowd onto ferries at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081210_024_xxw.jpg
  • A factory worker takes a break at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_654_xw.jpg
  • A man carries a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_652_xw.jpg
  • A factory worker carries a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_638_xw.jpg
  • Children and adult workers the carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_623_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_431_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_421_xw.jpg
  • Child workers take a break at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. Unlike the garment industry, where child labor restrictions are more closely monitored, rural agriculture and industry are less regulated and there is little if any oversight or enforcement. When queried, some laborers at a nearby site defended the use of child workers, saying poor families need their children to be breadwinners now if they are to have any kind of future. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns.
    BAN_081214_411_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_405_xw.jpg
  • A brick hauler loads a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_397_xw.jpg
  • A brick hauler loads a stack of bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_395_xw.jpg
  • Factory workers carry bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_325_xw.jpg
  • A factory worker carries clay at JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_275_xw.jpg
  • Travelers disembark from a ferry at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081211_271_xw.jpg
  • Travelers crowd onto ferries at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081211_268_xw.jpg
  • Travelers crowd onto ferries at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into the river.
    BAN_081211_263_xw.jpg
  • Vendors sell fruits and vegetables to travellers at the Sadarghat dock on the Buriganga River in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The river acts as both a highway and a sewer, with 80 percent of the city's raw sewage draining into it from different parts of the city.
    BAN_081210_034_xw.jpg
  • Solomon Mintiani and child (Machigüenga indians) eat sun-warmed raw palm grubs, on the Alta Urubamba River, Yaneriato, Peru. (Man Eating Bugs page 162 Bottom)
    PER_meb_86_cxxs.jpg
  • A child receives a token for carrying bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_315_xw.jpg
  • A child receives a token for carrying bricks at the JRB brick factory near Sonargaon, outside Dhaka, Bangladesh. The heavy clay soils along the river near the market town of Sonargaon are well suited for making bricks. At the JRB brick factory, workers of all ages move raw bricks from long, stacked rows, where they first dry in the sun, to the smoky coal-fired kilns. After being fired, the bricks turn red. A foreman keeps tally, handing the workers colored plastic tokens corresponding to the number of bricks they carry past him. They cash in the chips at the end of each shift, taking home the equivalent of $2 to $4 (USD) a day.
    BAN_081214_301_xw.jpg
  • Western Samoans hunting for palolo reef worms at night near Apia, Western Samoa. The rich taste of palolo is enjoyed raw or fried with butter, onions or eggs, or spread on toast. Palolo is the edible portion of a polychaete worm (Eunice viridis) that lives in shallow coral reefs throughout the south central Pacific. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Wsa_meb_72_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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