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  • Mount Whitney, at 14,496 feet high, is the tallest mountain in the continental United States. It is one of the most frequently climbed mountains in the US. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_05_xs.jpg
  • Death Valley. Skateboarding on road along Artist's Drive through Artist's Palette.
    USA_DSRT_05_xs.jpg
  • Mount Whitney, at 14,496 feet high, is the tallest mountain in the continental United States. It is one of the most frequently climbed mountains in the US. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_10_xs.jpg
  • Mount Whitney, at 14,496 feet high, is the tallest mountain in the continental United States. It is one of the most frequently climbed mountains in the US. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_04_xs.jpg
  • Boat trip back from the Thousand Buddha Caves on the Mekong River, Luang Prabang, Laos...
    LAO_120123_593_x.jpg
  • Death Valley. Skateboarding in July from Zabriskie Point to Badwater. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_DSRT_04_xs.jpg
  • Eureka Dunes, California - the tallest dunes in the United States. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_CA_ES_13_xs.jpg
  • Mount Whitney, at 14,496 feet high, is the tallest mountain in the continental United States. It is one of the most frequently climbed mountains in the US. Route 395: Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California.
    USA_CA_ES_09_xs.jpg
  • Ayer's Rock (Yulara). Central Australia. At sunset.
    AUS_18_xs.jpg
  • Tourists make the descent from Ayer's Rock (Yulara). Central Australia.
    AUS_17_xs.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio on the ride up the Unir River in a 40-foot longboat headed for Sawa village, Asmat swamp, Irian Jaya, Indonesia.(Man Eating Bugs page 186)
    IDO_meb_43_cxxs.jpg
  • Abdul-Baset Razem, a Palestinian guide and driver in his extended family's backyard olive orchard with his day's worth of food in the Palestinian village of Abu Dis in East Jerusalem. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of October was 3000 kcals. He is 40 years of age; 5 feet, 6 inches tall; and 204 pounds. On the hilltop in the distance, Israel's 25-foot-high concrete security barrier cuts off this Abu Dis neighborhood from Jerusalem, turning a short trip into the city into an extremely long and circuitous journey requiring passage through an Israeli checkpoint on the highway. Constructed by the Israeli government to cut down on attacks and suicide bombings, the highly controversial 436-mile-long barrier was 60 percent complete at the time of this photo. For the majority of Palestinians, travel to and from East Jerusalem now requires special permits from the Israeli government?often difficult or impossible to obtain. MODEL RELEASED.
    PAL_081025_100_xxw.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Main complex. (1986) 3. 2 km (2 mile) long linear accelerator at the Stanford Linear Accel- erator Center (SLAC), California. The end at which the electrons start their journey is in the distance; the experimental areas where the accelerated electrons are smashed into targets, or used for further acceleration in electron-positron Colliders, is in the group of buildings seen here. The giant red- roofed building in the experimental area is End Station A, where the first evidence of quarks was discovered in 1968-72. .Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) experiment, Menlo Park, California. With a length of 3km, the Stanford Linear Accelerator is the largest of its kind in the world. The accelerator is used to produce streams of electrons and positrons, which collide at a combined energy of 100 GeV (Giga electron Volts). This massive energy is sufficient to produce Z-zero particles in the collision. The Z-zero is one of the mediators of the weak nuclear force, the force behind radioactive decay, and was first discovered at CERN, Geneva, in 1983. The first Z-zero at SLC was produced on 11 April 1989.
    USA_SCI_PHY_37_xs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). To break the monotony of dogsled travel, 9-year-old Martin Madsen runs alongside. When the snow crust is hard enough to ensure that the dogs won't break through, they can pull the half-ton weight of the sled for hours on end. On level ground, the animals pull at about the pace of a running human, but the sleds can whip down hills so fast that drivers must step on the brake at the rear of the sled to avoid running over their dogs. Martin's sister Belissa sleeps through part of the journey behind her father on his sled. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 148).
    GRE04_0003_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Some of the Mustapha family's goats in Dar es Salaam village, Chad, begin their daily journey to first get water from the wadi, then start their search for something green to eat. Wadis in the central part of Chad are dry nine months of the year. During that time, villagers must dig down to the water, shoring up the wells with millet stalks to keep them from collapsing. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA04_9141_xf1brw.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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