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  • A worker on a tea plantation, near Kericho, Kenya, owned by Unilever. Workers live in company housing and make $3 to $9 US per day, depending on how much tea they pick. They are paid by the kilo. The young tea leaves  are picked every two weeks.
    KEN_090228_084_xw.jpg
  • Kibet Serems' grandmother who lives near their farm by herself in a small house.  (Kibet Serem is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Kibet, who is 25 years old, cares for a small tea plantation that his father planted on their property near Kericho, Kenya when Kibet was a young boy and he is responsible for milking the cows that his family owns. He sells extra milk to a nearby school for a government feeding program and gives some to his mother who makes yogurt and sells it. His staple food is ugali, a maize meal porridge. He milks, feeds, waters and cares for the cows twice a day with the help of the wives of his brothers who also live on the property in their own houses.
    KEN_090227_330_xw.jpg
  • Chief Sammy, a Maasai chief eating at a small meat restaurant in the Maasai village of Oldorko, several hours from Narok, Kenya. He is the husband of Noolkisaruni Tarakua (the third of his four wives). (Noolkisaruni Tarakuai is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    KEN_090225_775_xw.jpg
  • A Maasai woman at a weekly market in Oldorko Maasai village,  several hours from Narok, Kenya. The jewelery worn by the Maasai is symbolic through its colors and patterns.
    KEN_090225_275_xw.jpg
  • Villagers milk goats in a Maasai village compound during drought conditions, yielding very little milk, near Narok, Kenya. Maasai wealth is derived from the ownership of cattle, land and the number of children born to support the family business to look after cattle and goats.
    KEN_090225_024_xw.jpg
  • Roseline Amondi, a mother of four and microloan recipient with her day's worth of food outside her restaurant in the Kibera slum, Nairobi, Kenya.  (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090302_120_xxw.jpg
  • Kibet Serem, a tea plantation farmer, with his day's worth in his tea plantation near Kericho, Kenya. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his typical day's worth of food in the month of February was 3100 kcals. He is 25 years if age; 5 feet, 11 inches tall; and 143 pounds. He cares for this small tea plantation that his father planted on their property when Kibet was a young boy. He is responsible for milking the cows that his family owns. He sells extra milk to a nearby school for a government feeding program and gives some to his mother who makes yogurt and sells it. His staple food is ugali, a maize meal porridge. MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090227_450_xxw.jpg
  • Noolkisaruni Tarakuai, the third of four wives of a Maasai chief, milks a drought-stricken cow at her home near Narok, Kenya, and is able to draw only a half cup of milk. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of January was 800 kcals. She is 38; 5'5" and 103 pounds. MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090225_119_xxw.jpg
  • Microloan beneficiary and mother of four, Roseline Amondi, outside her café in the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya.  (Roseline Amondi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090302_247_xw.jpg
  • Roseline Amondi (left) a mother of four and microloan recipient with her friends and neighbors near her small café in the Kibera slum, Nairobi, Kenya. (Roseline Amondi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090302_175_xw.jpg
  • A worker on a tea plantation, near Kericho, Kenya, owned by Unilever. Workers live in company housing and make $3 to $9 US per day, depending on how much tea they pick. They are paid by the kilo. The young tea leaves  are picked every two weeks.
    KEN_090228_036_xw.jpg
  • Noolkisaruni Tarakuai, the third of four wives of a Maasai chief, at her home in a Maasai compound village near Narouk, Kenya. Noolkisaruni Tarakuai is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090225_342_xw.jpg
  • Noolkisaruni Tarakuai, the third of four wives of a Maasai chief with her day's worth of food outside her house in a Maasai village compound near Narok, Kenya. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of her typical day's worth of food on a day in the month of January was 800 kcals. She is 38 years of  age: 5 feet, 5 inches tall; and 103 pounds. Noolkisaruni has her own house for sleeping and a windowless cooking house with earth and dung chinked into the walls. Maasai wealth is derived from the cattle owned, the land, and the number of children born to support the family business: cattle and goats. She is photographed here with her day's worth of food: largely maize meal and milk. The fallen tree on which her food rests was knocked down by a marauding wild elephant. MODEL RELEASED.
    KEN_090226_005_xxw.jpg
  • Pictures of deceased Iranians are displayed on graves in a cemetery in Maybod, Iran.
    IRN_061214_351_xw.jpg
  • Kibet Serems' grandmother who lives near their farm by herself in a small house.  (Kibet Serem is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Kibet, who is 25 years old, cares for a small tea plantation that his father planted on their property near Kericho, Kenya when Kibet was a young boy and he is responsible for milking the cows that his family owns. He sells extra milk to a nearby school for a government feeding program and gives some to his mother who makes yogurt and sells it.
    KEN_090227_305_xw.jpg
  • Peter Menzel photographing oil well fires at 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 but 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. This well was of relatively low volume. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030325_106_x.jpg
  • Tarantula seller Sok Khun takes a dainty bite of one of the deep-fried tarantulas that she sells at a roadside market, Kampong Cham Province, Cambodia.(Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects page 48. See also cover of book) .
    CAM_meb_1_xxs.jpg
  • Lugano, Switzerland on Lake Lugano. "Lugano is a city in the south of Switzerland, in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino, which borders Italy. The population of the city proper was 55,151 as of December 2011, and the population of the urban agglomeration was over 145,000. Wikipedia"
    SWI_121012_024_x.jpg
  • Newly married couple being photographed across the river from the Guggenheim Art Museum, Bilbao, Spain. Frank Gehry, architect.
    SPA_090_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
  • A waiter carrying two desserts at a restaurant on the Moselle River, overlooking the French border with. Luxembourg.
    LUX_070411_232_rwx.jpg
  • Brian Krause, president of Boots and Coots, with Sara Akbar, development specialist for the Kuwait Oil Company and member of the firefighting team from the company's (KWWK: Kuwait Wild Well Killers) as they prepare to extinguish the first oil well fire in Iraq's Rumaila Oil field. Sara is a Muslim woman and is rather surprised by the way Brian, a friendly American, reacts to a photo by putting his arm around her. The other Kuwaiti's notice this too. After dousing the flames with high pressure water hoses, they sealed the spurting well 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. The Rumaila oil field is one of Iraq's biggest 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_030327_121_x.jpg
  • Firefighters from the KWWK (Kuwait Wild Well Killers) pose for group picture at Rumaila Oil Field in southern Iraq. 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. This well was of relatively low volume. Rumaila is also spelled Rumeilah.
    IRQ_030325_097_x.jpg
  • A Cambodian saleswoman holds a plastic tray full of cooked cicadas, one of many varieties found in Phnom Penh's Central Market, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects page 47)
    CAM_meb_7_xxs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Tama Matsuda, 100 years old, watches as her daughter-in-law Keiko, 75, proudly shows images of Tama at different ages. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats). The Matsuda family is one of the thirty families featured in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 186). Hara hachi bu "eat only until 80 percent full," say older Okinawans. The island has been the focus in recent years of researchers trying to discover why a disproportionately large number of Okinawans are living to age 100 or more.
    JOK03_0174_xf1b.jpg
  • Passerbys examine sidewalk chalk art on Las Ramblas, Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_139_xs.jpg
  • Bedouin camel herders at Rumaila oil field in southern Iraq. 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_030401_017_rwx.jpg
  • A large snaggletooth woman on the balcony of her apartment in the Cairo suburb of Al-Salaam City. Egypt.
    EGY_030528_004_x.jpg
  • A rural Peruvian girl displays her catch of a chanchu chanchu (Megaloptera Corydyalus armatus Hagen) river insects. The insects are pulled from the undersides of river rocks near the Yanatile River, Koribeni, Peru. (Man Eating Bugs page 157)
    PER_meb_68_cxxs.jpg
  • Young Daniel Piña Real, 4, displays his lunch of live fried chiro worms (the larvae of longhorn beetles from the family Cerambycidae ) the worms were pulled from the infected trunk of a pansona tree by Daniel's father and siblings, and were prepared by Marleni, his older sister. Koribeni, Peru. (page 161)
    PER_meb_62_xxs.jpg
  • Indonesian forest frog epaulettes, worn in jest, down river from the Sawa village, Irian Jaya, Indonesia. The frogs will be part of dinner. (Man Eating Bugs page 74 Bottom)
    IDO_meb_61_cxxs.jpg
  • Passerbys examine sidewalk chalk art on Las Ramblas, Barcelona, Spain.
    SPA_138_xs.jpg
  • Napa Valley portraits of Peter Menzel and Faith D'Aluisio with 600 mm lens.
    USA_0707221_52x.jpg
  • Napa Valley portraits of Peter Menzel and Faith D'Aluisio with 600 mm lens.
    USA_0707221_37x.jpg
  • IND.MWdrv04.323.x..Anil Yadav portrait. Son of Bachau and Mishri Yadav. Ahraura Village, Uttar Pradesh, India. 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. Child, Children..
    IND_MWdrv04_323_x.jpg
  • A portrait of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is displayed at the Zayandeh River bridges in Isfahan, Iran.
    IRN_061216_060_xw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio and Peter Menzel, authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets with fisherman João Agostinho Cardoso da Silva at his floating house on a branch of the Solimoes River near Manacapuru, Brazil. (João Agostinho Cardoso da Silva is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Photo was taken after the food portrait. MODEL RELEASED.  PJM
    BRA_071107_371_xw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Production shot for the official family food portrait: The Bainton family in the dining area of their living room in Collingbourne Ducis, Wiltshire, with a week's worth of food. Left to right: Mark Bainton, Deb Bainton (petting Polo the dog), and sons Josh, and Tadd. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    GRB02_0028_xf1bs.jpg
  • Luxembourg. Family portrait of the Engel family with one week’s worth of food in April. The Hungry Planet project.
    LUX_070414_405_rwx.jpg
  • Nunavut, Canada. Family portrait of the Melanson family with one week's worth of food in October. The Hungry Planet project.
    CAN_061005_150_f1x.jpg
  • Gatineau, Canada. Family portrait of the Finken family with one week's worth of food in October. The Hungry Planet project.
    CAN_061002_262_f1xrw.jpg
  • Portrait of a naga who is smoking hash and tobacco in a clay chillum pipe at Kumbh Mela.  Every 12 years, millions of devout Hindus celebrate the month-long festival of Kumbh Mela by bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges at Hardiwar, India. Hundreds of ashrams set up dusty, sprawling camps that stretch for miles. Under the watchful eye of police and lifeguards, the faithful throng to bathe in the river.
    IND_102_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of a naga who has been smoking hash at Kumbh Mela.  Every 12 years, millions of devout Hindus celebrate the month-long festival of Kumbh Mela by bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges at Hardiwar, India. Hundreds of ashrams set up dusty, sprawling camps that stretch for miles. Under the watchful eye of police and lifeguards, the faithful throng to bathe in the river.
    IND_099_xs.jpg
  • Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Portrait of a housewife at home. Her hands are adorned with henna in honor of the wedding she will attend this afternoon. She is covered from head to toe in her home today, as she is when out in public, because she is entertaining guests from outside her family.
    DUB_030521_012_x.jpg
  • Thoroddson family at home in Hafnarfjordur, near Reykjavik, Iceland in May of 2004. A revisit, after the family was profiled in Material World in 1993. Family is in same order as the family portrait in Material World taken outside their home in December 1993. MODEL RELEASED.
    ICE_1929_rwx.jpg
  • Self Portrait, Peter Menzel, after photographing in the street during the Holi Festival, a Hindu spring festival, also called the Festival of Colors. On the second day, known as Dhulandi, people spend the day throwing colored powder and water at each other. New Delhi, India. New Delhi, India; MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_070_xs.jpg
  • Stanton Friedman. Portrait of Stanton T. Friedman, nuclear physicist and author of books examining the UFO incident near Roswell, New Mexico, USA. He makes a living from writing and lecturing on UFOs. The Roswell incident started on 2 July 1947 when UFO sightings were reported during a thunderstorm. Next morning a rancher, Mac Brazel, discovered strange wreckage in a field. When the impact site was located, a UFO craft and alien bodies were allegedly found. On 8 July 1947, the Roswell Daily Record announced the capture of a flying saucer. The official statement was that a weather balloon had crashed. Many Roswell inhabitants, however, believe this a cover up, and that aliens arrived. Model Released (1997).
    USA_SCI_UFO_15_xs.jpg
  • Luxembourg. Family portrait of the Kutten-Kass family with one week’s worth of food in April. The Hungry Planet project.
    LUX_070412_476_rwx.jpg
  • Portrait of a naga who is covered in ash at Kumbh Mela.  Every 12 years, millions of devout Hindus celebrate the month-long festival of Kumbh Mela by bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges at Hardiwar, India. Hundreds of ashrams set up dusty, sprawling camps that stretch for miles. Under the watchful eye of police and lifeguards, the faithful throng to bathe in the river.
    IND_103_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of Dan Turell, a famous mystery writer outside the Spunk Bar in Vesterbro, the red light district of Copenhagen. Denmark. MODEL RELEASED.
    DEN_05_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of the head of the Citroen car designers in his office. Paris, France.
    FRA_029_xs.jpg
  • Stanton Friedman. Portrait of Stanton T. Friedman, nuclear physicist and author of books examining the UFO incident near Roswell, New Mexico, USA. He makes a living from writing and lecturing on UFOs. The Roswell incident started on 2 July 1947 when UFO sightings were reported during a thunderstorm. Next morning a rancher, Mac Brazel, discovered strange wreckage in a field. When the impact site was located, a UFO craft and alien bodies were allegedly found. On 8 July 1947, the Roswell Daily Record announced the capture of a flying saucer. The official statement was that a weather balloon had crashed. Many Roswell inhabitants, however, believe this a cover up, and that aliens arrived. Model Released (1997).
    USA_SCI_UFO_16_xs.jpg
  • Luxembourg. Family portrait of the Lopes-Furtado family with one week’s worth of food in April. The Hungry Planet project.
    LUX_070413_659_rwx.jpg
  • Portrait of a holy man praying at Kumbh Mela.  Every 12 years, millions of devout Hindus celebrate the month-long festival of Kumbh Mela by bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges at Hardiwar, India. Hundreds of ashrams set up dusty, sprawling camps that stretch for miles. Under the watchful eye of police and lifeguards, the faithful throng to bathe in the river.
    IND_101_xs.jpg
  • Portrait of young Palestinian woman in Dubai, United Arab Emirates..
    DUB_030521_008_x.jpg
  • Thoroddson family at home in Hafnarfjordur, near Reykjavik, Iceland in May of 2004. A revisit, after the family was profiled in Material World in 1993. Family is in same order as the family portrait in Material World taken outside their home in December 1993. MODEL RELEASED..
    ICE_9773_rwx.jpg
  • Couple looking out the front door of their pink house, Lerma Village, Yucatan, Mexico.
    MEX_030_xs.jpg
  • Self-portrait of photographer Peter Menzel in his rental car window; fields of marigolds in the background in Lompoc, California.
    USA_AG_FLWR_40_xs.jpg
  • From Mt. Phousi, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120122_897_x.jpg
  • The daughter of Kibet Serem's brother on her way to school with the tea field in the background. (Kibet Serem is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Kibet Serem cares for a small tea plantation that his father planted on their property near Kericho, Kenya when Kibet was a young boy and he is responsible for milking the cows that his family owns. He is 25 years of age. He sells extra milk to a nearby school for a government feeding program and gives some to his mother who makes yogurt and sells it. His staple food is ugali, a maize meal porridge. He milks, feeds, waters and cares for the cows twice a day with the help of the wives of his brothers who also live on the property in their own houses.
    KEN_090227_141_xw.jpg
  • Ricki the Chimp eats yogurt during a break in a shooting session on what he eats in one day at the Bailiwick Ranch and Discovery Zoo in Catskill, NY. (Ricky the chimp is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.) He is owned by circus folk Pam Rosaire-Zoppe and Roger Zoppe.
    USA_080623_439_xw.jpg
  • Ferran Adrià, chef of El Bulli restaurant near Rosas on the Costa Brava in northern Spain, speaks to a colleague.  (Ferran Adrià is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    SPA_070629_674_xw.jpg
  • Widowed farmer Lan Guihua enjoys lunch at a small restaurant in a market town near Ganjiagou Village, Sichuan Province, China. (Lan Guihua is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    CHI_060614_208_xw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio, one of the authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets in front of the Imam Mosque in Isfahan, Iran, during a December snow storm. MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061217_106_xw.jpg
  • Birthday celebrant has her photograph taken with her family at an Ogimi Village area nursing home in Okinawa, Japan. Most of the community has turned out to honor the birthdays of three residents. (These are traditional Japanese birthdays, not the actual birth dates. 88, for example is celebrated on the eighth day of the eighth month in the lunar calendar.) Musicians, dancers, and comedians perform as well wishers cheerfully gorge on sushi, fruits, and desserts. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats).
    JOK_5190_f1x.jpg
  • Matsu Zakimi (with purple eyeshadow applied by her great-granddaughter) during the celebration for her 97th birthday,at a nursing home near Ogimi Village. Most of the community has turned out to honor the birthdays of three residents. (These are traditional Japanese birthdays, not the actual birth dates; 88, for example is celebrated on the eighth day of the eighth month in the lunar calendar.) Musicians, dancers, and comedians perform as well wishers cheerfully gorge on sushi, fruits, and desserts washed down with beer and saki. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats).
    JOK_0293_f1x.jpg
  • Brazilian fisherman João Agustinho Cardoso at his floating home on the Salimones River in near the town of Manacapuru, Brazil.  (João Agustinho Cardoso da Silva is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    BRA_071107_406_xw.jpg
  • Mariel Booth, a professional model and New York University student at home in her rented 4th floor walk up apartment located in the Lower East Side of New York City. (Mariel Booth is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_ny_081011_257_xw.jpg
  • Din Memon, a Chicago taxi driver in his leased taxi on Devon Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. (Din Memon is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080926_664_xw.jpg
  • Lourdes Alvarez, a restaurant owner, at her Mexican restaurant El Coyote in the suburb of Alsip, Chicago Illinois. (Lourdes Alvarez is featured in the book What I Eat;  Around the World in 80 Diets.)   MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080926_243_xw.jpg
  • Ironworker Jeff Devine at work at a construction site on 300 East Randolph St., Chicago, Illinois. (Jeff Devine is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080926_007_xw.jpg
  • Felipe Adams, a 30-year-old Iraq war veteran who was paralyzed by a sniper's bullet in Baghdad, Iraq. (Felipe Adams is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080910_043_xw.jpg
  • Ernie Johnson carries his surf board on the beach of the Pacific near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, California.  (Ernie Johnson is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080909_237_xw.jpg
  • Ricki the Chimp eats yogurt during a break in a shooting session on what he eats in one day at the Bailiwick Ranch and Discovery Zoo in Catskill, NY. (Ricky the chimp is featured in the book What I Eat; Around the World in 80 Diets.) He is owned by circus folk Pam Rosaire-Zoppe and Roger Zoppe.
    USA_080623_443_xw.jpg
  • Ricki the chimp with his typical day's worth of food at the Bailiwick Ranch and Discovery Zoo, in Catskill, New York. (Ricki the chimp is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) His owners, Pam Rosaire-Zoppe and Roger Zoppe say that he likes fresh fruits and vegetables, and an occasional yogurt drink, far more than packaged monkey chow. (MODEL RELEASED).
    USA_080623_378_xw.jpg
  • Assistant carpenter and tattooist Louie Soto with his family at his new home in Sacaton, Arizona. (Louie Soto is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Soto built a new home, financed by casino profits and built by the Gila River Indian Community.
    USA_080524_225_xw.jpg
  • Todd Kincer, a coal miner, with his face blackened with coal dust after an industrious day at work in a coal mine located deep inside a mountain in the Appalachians near the town of Whitesburg, Kentucky. (Todd Kincer is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) After showering and scrubbing off the day's coal dust, Todd gets ready to dig in to one of his favorite meals: Hamburger Helper with double noodles. A college graduate drawn to the coal mine by the relatively high pay, Todd spends a 10-hour shift mining underground, driving a low-slung electric shuttle car that carries coal from the face of the coal seam, where it's being chewed up by a deafening, dusty mining machine, to a conveyer belt. The coal mine in which Kincer works is pitch-black, except for headlights and headlamps. During winter months, Todd never sees daylight during the workweek. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_080428_057_xw.jpg
  • An apprentice at  Joel Salatin's farm tends to pigs as they feed in an open area at the farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley.  (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    USA_071019_241_xw.jpg
  • Joel Salatin, a farmer and author, in an eggmobile (portabled henhouse) at his farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. (Joel Salatin is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)  Much of his daily fare is from his own farm, including applesauce and apple cider canned by his wife, Teresa, who fills the basement larder with the bounty of their farm each year.  MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_071017_115_xw.jpg
  • Ferran Adrià, a chef at the famous El Bulli restaurant near Rosas on the Costa Brava in Northern Spain, speaks to a colleague.  (Ferran Adrià is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    SPA_070629_520_xw.jpg
  • Ferran Adrià, chef of El Bulli restaurant near Rosas on the Costa Brava in Northern Spain on the Mediterranean, with the food he eats in one day (the lunch he has with the cook staff).  (Ferran Adrià is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) This food does not include any tasting throughout the day.  MODEL RELEASED. .
    SPA_070629_497_xw.jpg
  • Ansis Sauka, a voice teacher, musician, and composer in Riga, Latvia. (Ansis Sauka is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Riga, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with the oldest continuously running market in Europe, is known throughout Europe for its choral traditions. It proudly hosts the nationwide Latvian Song and Dance Festival every five years. In 2008 more than 38,000 singers, dancers, and musicians participated in the weeklong event. MODEL RELEASED.
    LAT_081020_025_xw.jpg
  • Faith D'Aluisio and Peter Menzel, award-winning authors of the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets, at the Jameh Mosque in the city of Yazd, Iran. (From the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061209_62_xxw.jpg
  • Cao Xiaoli, a professional acrobat, practices balancing on one hand in the practice room at Shanghai Circus World in Shanghai, 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 1700 kcals.  She is 16 years of age; 5 feet, 2 inches tall; and 99 pounds.  Cao Xiaoli lives in  a room with nine other girls. She started her career as a child, performing with a regional troupe in her home province of Anhui. Now she practices five hours a day, attends school with the other members of her troupe, and performs seven days a week. She says what she likes best about being an acrobat is the crowd's reaction when she does something seemingly dangerous. MODEL RELEASED.
    CHI_060606_187_xxw.jpg
  • A girl leans on a qat tree in a qat orchard near the city of Sanaa, Yemen. Although qat chewing isn't as severe a health hazard as smoking tobacco, it has drastic social, economic, and environmental consequences. When chewed, the leaves release a mild stimulant related to amphetamines. Qat is chewed several times a week by a large percentage of the population: 90 percent of Yemen's men and 25 percent of its women. Because growing qat is 10 to 20 times more profitable than other crops, scarce groundwater is being depleted to irrigate it, to the detriment of food crops and agricultural exports.
    YEM_080404_286_xw.jpg
  • Ahmed Ahmed Swaid, a qat merchant, sits on a rooftop in the old Yemeni city of Sanaa. (Ahmed Ahmed Swaid is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his typical day's worth of food in the month of April was 3300 kcals. He is 50 years of age; 5 feet, 7 inches tall; and 148 pounds. Ahmed, who wears a jambiya dagger as many Yemeni men do, has been a qat dealer in the old city souk for eight years. Although qat chewing isn't as severe a health hazard as smoking tobacco, it has drastic social, economic, and environmental consequences. When chewed, the leaves release a mild stimulant related to amphetamines. Qat is chewed several times a week by a large percentage of the population: 90 percent of Yemen's men and 25 percent of its women. Because growing qat is 10 to 20 times more profitable than other crops, scarce groundwater is being depleted to irrigate it, to the detriment of food crops and agricultural exports. MODEL RELEASED.
    YEM_080328_098_xw.jpg
  • Vietnamese war veteran Nguyen Van Thuan displays his medals in Hanoi, Vietnam. (Nguyen Van Thuan is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    VIE_081223_056_xw.jpg
  • Rice farmer Nguyen Van Theo cycles through the rice fields near his home in Tho Quang Village, Vietnam. (Nguyen Van Theo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    VIE_081220_409_xw.jpg
  • The head nun of the Lhasaani Tsang Kung Nunnery,  Tsul Tim Lhamu. (Tsul Tim Lhamu was photographed for the book project What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    TIB_060621_336_xw.jpg
  • The head nun of the Lhasaani Tsang Kung Nunnery,  Tsul Tim Lhamu. (Tsul Tim Lhamu was photographed for the book project What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    TIB_060621_315_xw.jpg
  • A woman takes a bite of a deep fried chicken anus on a stick at an open air food stall in Taipei, Taiwan.
    TAI_081228_565_xw.jpg
  • Abdul-Baset Razem, a Palestinian guide and driver, with his family in his backyard olive orchard in a Palestinean village in East Jerusalem.  (Abdul-Baset Razem is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    PAL_081025_397_xw.jpg
  • Takeuchi Masato, a professional sumo wrestler whose ring name is Miyabiyama (meaning Graceful Mountain), after practice with his team in Tokyo, Japan.  (Takeuchi Masato is featured in the book What I Eat, Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    Japan_JAP_060601_177_xw.jpg
  • Ofer Sabath Beit-Halachmi, a Reform rabbi at his home in Tzur Hadassah 15 minutes southwest of Jerusalem, Israel. (Ofer Sabath Beit-Halachmi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) The caloric value of his typical day's worth of food in the month of October was 3100 Kcals. He is 43 years of age; 6 feet, 1 inch tall and 165 pounds. Ofer's town, located in the Judean Hills, is a communal settlement where residents lease land and houses from the state of Israel for a 99-year period. On Friday evenings Ofer leads the Shabbat service in a small portable building that is kindergarten by day and synagogue at night and on weekends. MODEL RELEASED.
    ISR_081024_180_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat, a high school student and aspiring fashion designer (second from left in blue jeans), enjoys dinner with her family in their elegant four-story home in Isfahan, Iran.  (Atefeh Fotowat is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    IRN_061216_119_xw.jpg
  • Atefeh Fotowat's mother, walks from the kitchen, about to sit down to a dinner with her family in their elegant four-story home in Isfahan, Iran. With her husband, a renowned miniaturist painter, they exemplify the educated Iranian upper middle class in Isfahan, Iran's third largest city, famous for art and Islamic architecture.
    IRN_061216_115_xw.jpg
  • A 76-year-old weaver works in a cave workshop in Na'in, Iran, making a camel hair cloak for a cleric. MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061215_139_xw.jpg
  • A picture of Mohammed Ali Sharifi is displayed on an Iran-Iraq War martyr billboard near Yazd, Iran. A portion of the Yazd to Na'in highway is named after him
    IRN_061215_130_xw.jpg
  • Young girls who are wedding guests sit in the Talar Yazd Restaurant in the city of Yazd, Iran.
    IRN_061214_758_xw.jpg
  • Akbar Zareh takes a break from the hectic schedule at his bakery in the province of Yazd, Iran to fix his head scarf. (Featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    IRN_061212_001_xw.jpg
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Peter Menzel Photography

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