Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 58 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Solange Da Silva Correia helps her grandchildren get ready for school in their bedroom of her riverside home near the town of Caviana in Amazonas, Brazil. (Solange Da Silva Correia is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The children load up their backpacks and use one of the family's outboard canoes to get to school in nearby Caviana, 20 minutes downriver.
    BRA_071108_348_xxw.jpg
  • Tobacco - Clifton Walton smoking a cigarette while overseeing preparation for tobacco seedling ground by burning off oak lumber mill scraps and brush on his farm in Charlotte, Tennessee. MODEL RELEASED. USA.
    USA_AG_TOB_02_xs.jpg
  • A girl brushes her teeth outside Ruma Akhter's home in Dhaka, Bangladesh.  (Ruma Akhter is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    BAN_081216_051_xw.jpg
  • Wild Elk roaming the Lava beds National Monument, Tule Lake, California.
    USA_CA_11_xs.jpg
  • Barrel Cactus at Gates Pass near Tucson, Arizona, USA.
    USA_AZ_08_xs.jpg
  • Arnedillo, La Rioja Region, Spain.
    SPA_169_xs.jpg
  • Man making charcoal in the traditional way in Viloria. They pile seasoned oak logs into a pyramid, cover it with earth and slowly monitor its burning for several days to make charcoal.  Viloria, Navarra, Spain.
    SPA_084_xs.jpg
  • Spit-roasted cuy (guinea pig) is a popular food all over Ecuador, but are an especial treat in Ambato, Ecuador, where plump roasted cuy are served in great numbers in shops around the city. Cuy are also raised by families in their homes and are eaten for special occasions, like Easter. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    ECU04_5271_xf1brw.jpg
  • Temple of Literature during National Poetry Day, Hanoi, Vietnam
    VIE_120205_202_x.jpg
  • Cholla cacti, Joshua Tree National Monument, California.
    USA_CA_31_xs.jpg
  • Route 395 runs through the town of Independence, California in the Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountain region. Near Independence.
    USA_CA_ES_01_xs.jpg
  • Sat Cong Village war games paintball combat park near Los Angeles, California, USA. A player who was shot surrenders.
    USA_MILT_11_xs.jpg
  • On the desert shooting range, a young woman competes in the 3-gun match.  Soldier of Fortune Convention, Las Vegas.
    USA_MILT_04_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
  • Yoga/Meditation classes with Global Fitness Adventures Health Spa, Sedona, Arizona..
    USA_AZ_23_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
  • Art restorer Vyacheslav Grankovskiy's tools in his home studio in Schlisselburg, outside St. Petersburg, Russia. (Vyacheslav Grankovskiy is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    RUS_081016_334_xw.jpg
  • Scotty's Castle, a one-time ranch is now a tourist attraction in Death Valley National Monument California. USA.
    USA_DVAL_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_01_xs.jpg
  • Eureka Dunes, California - the tallest dunes in the United States. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_14_xs.jpg
  • Tumon Bay, U.S. Territory of Guam, an island in the Western Pacific Ocean, the largest of the Mariana Islands. Many of the palm trees were damaged by a recent typhoon.
    GUM_02_xs.jpg
  • Armored Combat earthmover (ACE) at Fort. Ord, California,USA.
    USA_MILT_20_xs.jpg
  • Combatants playing war at "Quest" paintball combat park, Malibu, California, USA.
    USA_MILT_10_xs.jpg
  • Tom Beck with scar from shooting accident (self inflicted gun shot wound). Attending the Soldier of Fortune Convention, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. MODEL RELEASED..
    USA_MILT_03_xs.jpg
  • Yoga/Meditation classes with Global Fitness Adventures Health Spa, Sedona, Arizona..
    USA_AZ_24_xs.jpg
  • MEX_114_xs.Painter of flat dinner plates in a workshop in Tonala, Mexico..
    MEX_114_xs.jpg
  • Basque artist Vincente Ameztoy, painter in residence at the Remelluri Winery, painting in an 11th century chapel.  Rioja, Spain.
    SPA_012_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
  • Barstow, California telephone and power lines across the desert.
    USA_DSRT_08_xs.jpg
  • Cholla cacti, Joshua Tree National Monument, California.
    USA_CA_30_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
  • Bristlecone Pines in White Mountains, California. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_49_xs.jpg
  • On the desert shooting range before a live fire weapons demonstration at the Soldier of Fortune Convention, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. Iranian Ayatollah Khomeini figure was later shot and burned.
    USA_MILT_05_xs.jpg
  • Global Fitness Adventures Health Spa clients meditate on a sandstone arch, Sedona, Arizona..
    USA_AZ_22_xs.jpg
  • Global Fitness Adventures Health Spa clients do stretches on a sandstone arch, Sedona, Arizona..
    USA_AZ_21_xs.jpg
  • Painting plastic food samples at the factory of Iwasaki Co. Ltd, Tokyo, Japan.
    Japan_JAP_14_xs.jpg
  • Landscape decimated by camels, in Berbera, Somaliland. March 1992.
    SOM_64_xs.jpg
  • Shoeshine man napping, leaning against a car, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    ARG_04_xs.jpg
  • Guerrino Lovato, mask maker, in his studio in Venice, Italy during Winter Carnival.
    ITA_39_xs.jpg
  • Nuclear Winter test fire: brush fires deliberately started to study the potential climatic effects of a nuclear war. The nuclear winter theory predicts that smoke from fires burning after a nuclear war would block sunlight, causing a rapid drop in temperature that would trigger serious ecological disturbance. The test burn took place in December 1986 on 500 acres of brush in Lodi Canyon, Los Angeles. Dripping napalm from a helicopter ignited the fire. Ground-based temperature sensors were used to study soil erosion. Various airborne experiments included smoke sampling & high-altitude infrared imaging from a converted U-2 spy plane.
    USA_SCI_NUKE_24_xs.jpg
  • Nuclear Winter test fire: brown smoke rises from smoldering brush fires, deliberately started to study the potential climatic effects of a nuclear war. The nuclear winter theory predicts that smoke from fires burning after a nuclear war would block sunlight, causing a rapid drop in temperature that would trigger serious ecological disturbance. The test burn took place in December 1986 on 500 acres of brush in Lodi Canyon, Los Angeles. Dripping napalm from a helicopter ignited the fire. Ground-based temperature sensors were used to study soil erosion. Various airborne experiments included smoke sampling & high-altitude infrared imaging from a converted U-2 spy plane.
    USA_SCI_NUKE_22_xs.jpg
  • Nuclear Winter test fire: brown smoke rises from smoldering brush fires, deliberately started to study the potential climatic effects of a nuclear war. The nuclear winter theory predicts that smoke from fires burning after a nuclear war would block sunlight, causing a rapid drop in temperature that would trigger serious ecological disturbance. The test burn took place in December 1986 on 500 acres of brush in Lodi Canyon, Los Angeles. Dripping napalm from a helicopter ignited the fire. Ground-based temperature sensors were used to study soil erosion. Various airborne experiments included smoke sampling & high-altitude infrared imaging from a converted U-2 spy plane.
    USA_SCI_NUKE_21_xs.jpg
  • Dave Archer, Novato, California-based artist, in his studio creating space art on glass using the 7-foot "lightning brush" of his 1.5-million-volt Tesla coil. Paint is applied and then zapped with the point of a "lightning brush" for nebulae effect; then he hand paints planets and stars. Methyl alcohol makes paint burst into flames and vaporize on the glass. MODEL RELEASED (1992)
    USA_SCI_LIG_27_xs.jpg
  • Nuclear Winter test fire: fire crews rest while monitoring the brown smoke rising from smoldering brush fires, deliberately started to study the potential climatic effects of a nuclear war. The nuclear winter theory predicts that smoke from fires burning after a nuclear war would block sunlight, causing a rapid drop in temperature that would trigger serious ecological disturbance. The test burn took place in December 1986 on 500 acres of brush in Lodi Canyon, Los Angeles. Dripping napalm from a helicopter ignited the fire. Ground-based temperature sensors were used to study soil erosion. Various airborne experiments included smoke sampling & high-altitude infrared imaging from a converted U-2 spy plane.
    USA_SCI_NUKE_23_xs.jpg
  • Brush fire near Silverado Country Club, Napa Valley, California, USA.
    USA_061025_04_rwx.jpg
  • Scientist Richard Turco and Carl Sagan were on the scientific team that devised the concept of nuclear winter. Turco is seen here at the Nuclear Winter test fire: where a canyon outside Los Angeles was deliberately set on fire to study the potential climatic effects of a nuclear war. The nuclear winter theory predicts that smoke from fires burning after a nuclear war would block sunlight, causing a rapid drop in temperature that would trigger serious ecological disturbance. The test burn took place in December 1986 on 500 acres of brush in Lodi Canyon, Los Angeles. Dripping napalm from a helicopter ignited the fire. Ground-based temperature sensors were used to study soil erosion. Various airborne experiments included smoke sampling & high-altitude infrared imaging from a converted U-2 spy plane.
    USA_SCI_NUKE_25_xs.jpg
  • Lan Guihua (right), a widowed farmer, and her neighbor bleed a freshly killed chicken at her home in Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China. (She is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets). The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in June was 1900 kcals. She is 68 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her farmhouse is tucked into a bamboo-forested hillside beneath her husband's grave, and the courtyard opens onto a view of citrus groves and vegetable fields. Chickens and dogs roam freely in the packed-earth courtyard, and firewood and brush for her kitchen wok are stacked under the eaves. Although homegrown vegetables and rice are her staples, chicken feathers and a bowl that held scalding water for easier feather plucking are clues to the meat course of a special meal for visitors. In this region, each rural family is its own little food factory and benefits from thousands of years of agricultural knowledge passed down from generation to generation.  She lives in the area of Production Team 7 of Ganjiagou Village, 1.5 hours south of the provincial capital of Sichuan Province?Chengdu.
    CHI_060613_768_xxw.jpg
  • Lan Guihua, a widowed farmer, at her home in Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China. (Lan Guihua is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets. The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in June was 1900 kcals. She is 68 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her farmhouse is tucked into a bamboo-forested hillside beneath her husband's grave, and the courtyard opens onto a view of citrus groves and vegetable fields. Chickens and dogs roam freely in the packed-earth courtyard, and firewood and brush for her kitchen wok are stacked under the eaves. Although homegrown vegetables and rice are her staples, chicken feathers and a bowl that held scalding water for easier feather plucking are clues to the meat course of a special meal for visitors. In this region, each rural family is its own little food factory and benefits from thousands of years of agricultural knowledge passed down from generation to generation.  She lives in the area of Production Team 7 of Ganjiagou Village, 1.5 hours south of the provincial capital of Sichuan Province?Chengdu. MODEL RELEASED.
    CHI_060613_031_xw.jpg
  • Wielding a paint brush, a robot touches up its human master in this photo-illustration at the SARCOS robot company in Salt Lake City, UT. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 20-21.
    USA_rs_142_120_qxxs.jpg
  • Lan Guihua, a widowed farmer, oversees the cooking of lunch for guests and neighbors at her home in Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China. (She is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets). The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in June was 1900 kcals. She is 68 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her farmhouse is tucked into a bamboo-forested hillside beneath her husband's grave, and the courtyard opens onto a view of citrus groves and vegetable fields. Chickens and dogs roam freely in the packed-earth courtyard, and firewood and brush for her kitchen wok are stacked under the eaves. Although homegrown vegetables and rice are her staples, chicken feathers and a bowl that held scalding water for easier feather plucking are clues to the meat course of a special meal for visitors. In this region, each rural family is its own little food factory and benefits from thousands of years of agricultural knowledge passed down from generation to generation.  She lives in the area of Production Team 7 of Ganjiagou Village, 1.5 hours south of the provincial capital of Sichuan Province?Chengdu.
    CHI_060613_724_xw.jpg
  • Lan Guihua, a widowed farmer, prepares a chicken for her guests and neighbors at her home in Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China.  (She is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in June was 1900 kcals. She is 68 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her farmhouse is tucked into a bamboo-forested hillside beneath her husband's grave, and the courtyard opens onto a view of citrus groves and vegetable fields. Chickens and dogs roam freely in the packed-earth courtyard, and firewood and brush for her kitchen wok are stacked under the eaves. Although homegrown vegetables and rice are her staples, chicken feathers and a bowl that held scalding water for easier feather plucking are clues to the meat course of a special meal for visitors. In this region, each rural family is its own little food factory and benefits from thousands of years of agricultural knowledge passed down from generation to generation.
    CHI_060613_097_xw.jpg
  • Lan Guihua, a widowed farmer, in front of her home with her typical day's worth of food in Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her day's worth of food on a typical day in June was 1900 kcals. She is 68 years of age; 5 feet, 3 inches tall; and 121 pounds. Her farmhouse is tucked into a bamboo-forested hillside beneath her husband's grave, and the courtyard opens onto a view of citrus groves and vegetable fields. Chickens and dogs roam freely in the packed-earth courtyard, and firewood and brush for her kitchen wok are stacked under the eaves. Although homegrown vegetables and rice are her staples, chicken feathers and a bowl that held scalding water for easier feather plucking are clues to the meat course of a special meal for visitors. In this region, each rural family is its own little food factory and benefits from thousands of years of agricultural knowledge passed down from generation to generation. MODEL RELEASED.
    CHI_060613_155_xxw.jpg
  • Entertainer android robot. View of SARCOS, an android (human-like) entertainment robot, posing as if about to contemplate his next brush stroke on a life-like robot mask. SARCOS was developed at SARCOS Research Corporation in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Photo-Illustration. Robo sapiens Project.
    Usa_rs_448_120_xs.jpg
  • IND.MWdrv04.228.x..Mishri Yadav brushes her teeth in the courtyard of her family's home. Revisit with the family, 2004. The Yadavs were India's participants in Material World: A Global Family Portrait, 1994 (pages: 64-65), for which they took all of their possessions out of their house for a family-and-possessions-portrait. Health..
    IND_MWdrv04_228_x.jpg
  • A worker emasculates blossoms in the Zaiger's greenhouse. Flower petals and buds are removed to leave the pistol exposed, which is then hand-pollinated with brushes or cotton swabs. Blossoms are collected by hand from specific trees in the orchards and pollen is extracted from them by cutting the flower up with small scissors and sifting the parts. The pollen goes into a small plastic bottle that is numbered and stored in ice chests. Many trees are grown in barrels that are moved into the greenhouse to be worked on or to speed up or slow down pollination and development..Floyd Zaiger (Born 1926) is a biologist who is most noted for his work in fruit genetics. Zaiger Genetics, located in Modesto, California, USA, was founded in 1958. Zaiger has spent his life in pursuit of the perfect fruit, developing both cultivars of existing species and new hybrids such as the pluot and the aprium. -MODEL RELEASED. 1983.
    USA_AG_ZAIG_09_xs.jpg
  • Simon Qampie brushes his teeth over a bucket in the bedroom of his family's house in Southwest Township (called Soweto), South Africa. They have running water in the kitchen only, and their toilet is an outhouse in their backyard. The Qampie family lives in a 400 square foot concrete block duplex house in the sprawling area of Soweto, outside Johannesburg (Joberg) South Africa. Material World Project.
    Saf_mw_704_xs.jpg
  • Mio Ukita has her hair brushed by her mother Sayo before school. Japan. Material World Project. The Ukita family lives in a 1421 square foot wooden frame house in a suburb northwest of Tokyo called Kodaira City.
    Japan_Jap_mw_700_xs.jpg
  • Floyd Zaiger, with two women workers on ladders, emasculate blossoms in the Zaiger's greenhouse. Flower petals and buds are removed to leave the pistol exposed, which is then hand-pollinated with brushes or cotton swabs. Blossoms are collected by hand from specific trees in the orchards and pollen is extracted from them by cutting the flower up with small scissors and sifting the parts. The pollen goes into a small plastic bottle that is numbered and stored in ice chests. Many trees are grown in barrels that are moved into the greenhouse to be worked on or to speed up or slow down pollination and development. Floyd Zaiger (Born 1926) is a biologist who is most noted for his work in fruit genetics. Zaiger Genetics, located in Modesto, California, USA, was founded in 1958. Zaiger has spent his life in pursuit of the perfect fruit, developing both cultivars of existing species and new hybrids such as the pluot and the aprium. -MODEL RELEASED. 1983.
    USA_AG_ZAIG_03_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

  • Home
  • Legal & Copyright
  • About Us
  • Image Archive
  • Search the Archive
  • Exhibit List
  • Lecture List
  • Agencies
  • Contact Us: Licensing & Inquiries