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  • Waterfalls in Kipahulu, Maui. USA.
    USA_HI_21_xs.jpg
  • Rice: Aerial view of rice fields at Grey Lodge Waterfowl Management Area, Butte County, California, USA.
    USA_AG_RICE_02_xs.jpg
  • Aerial photograph of the California aqueduct, which carries water from north to south through the middle of the state. San Joaquin Valley. Agricultural land is seen on both sides of the aqueduct. Kern County, CaliforniaThe California State Water Project is the nation's largest state-built water and power development and conveyance system. Planned, designed, constructed and now operated and maintained by the California Department of Water Resources, this unique facility provides water supplies for 23 million Californians and 755,000 acres of irrigated farmland.
    USA_AERL_03_xs.jpg
  • Rushing mountain stream in Iceland.
    ICE_040525_025_rwx.jpg
  • Late spring snowmelt pool in Lassen Volcanic National Park .(Northern California).
    USA_CA_34_xs.jpg
  • Nomadic yak herder Karsal's wife Phurba washes her hands in a small creek outside yak hair tent home in the Tibetan Plateau after picking fresh yak dung and made patties from it to dry in the sun for use as fuel for cooking on her earthen stove. (Karsal is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) MODEL RELEASED.
    TIB_060624_065_xw.jpg
  • Albany covered bridge, New Hampshire in the fall.  New England, USA.
    USA_NENG_6_xs.jpg
  • Bridal Veil  Falls, near Portland, Oregon
    USA_121115_51_x.jpg
  • Napa River, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_110205_13_x.jpg
  • Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120128_290_x.jpg
  • BASE jumping from New River Gorge bridge, Bridge Day, West Virginia, USA. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia.
    USA_SPRT_05_xs.jpg
  • Le Conciergerie, the former prison on the Ile de la Cité at dusk on the banks of the Seine River, Paris, France.
    FRA_072_xs.jpg
  • Napa River, Napa Valley, CA
    USA_110205_13.jpg
  • View of the Colorado River at sunrise from Dead Horse Point, Utah. USA.
    USA_UT_5_xs.jpg
  • Nude bathers.  Base Camp at Redwood Summer, a conglomeration of environmental activists who camped out near Willow Creek, California, USA, to protest excessive logging during the summer of 1990.
    USA_FRST_17_xs.jpg
  • Roger Moore with Charles Jensen and his dog at Butte Sink Wildlife Refuge, Northern California. MODEL RELEASED.
    USA_CA_26_xs.jpg
  • Rice: rice fields near Richvale, Butte County, California, USA. 1990.
    USA_AG_RICE_07_xs.jpg
  • Irrigation: Tenneco West, Rosedale Ranch, Kern County, California.  The agricultural fields are irrigated as the automatic pumping and sprinkling machine rolls through the field drawing water from the small canal below. USA.
    USA_AG_IRR_02_xs.jpg
  • Napa, California flood on New Year's Eve 2005. Soscol Ave looking north
    USA_051231_13napa_rwx.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_013_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_012_x.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_009_x.jpg
  • Iguazu Falls, a series of large waterfalls on the Brazil and Parguay  border with Argentina. Argentina.
    ARG_12_xs.jpg
  • ARG_11_xs.Iguazu Falls, a series of large waterfalls on the Brazil and Parguay  border with Argentina. Argentina.
    ARG_11_xs.jpg
  • Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120128_293_x.jpg
  • Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120128_166_x.jpg
  • Local tribesman wearing a penis gourd, called a horum, and a hat of bird feathers carries a sack of vegetables and handful of bananas on a trail near Kurima, in the central highlands of the South Baliem Valley, Irian Jaya, Indonesia. His body is rubbed with pig grease to help protect him from chilly weather. Since the making of this photograph, Irian Jaya was renamed Papua.
    IDO_02_xs.jpg
  • Lava flow on Mauna Loa, Big Island, Hawaii. USA
    USA_HI_07_xs.jpg
  • The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas. Tourist boat.
    USA_030419_006_x.jpg
  • The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas. Tourist boat.
    USA_030419_003_x.jpg
  • The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas. Tourist boat.
    USA_030419_001_x.jpg
  • New River Gorge Bridge, West Virginia, USA. BASE jumper in mid-parachute seen below the 900-foot bridge. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia.
    USA_SPRT_07_xs.jpg
  • BASE jumper parachuting from 900-foot New River Gorge bridge on Bridge Day in West Virginia, USA. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia.
    USA_SPRT_06_xs.jpg
  • BASE jumping from New River Gorge bridge, Bridge Day, West Virginia, USA. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia.
    USA_SPRT_01_xs.jpg
  • Albany covered bridge, New Hampshire in the fall.  New England, USA.
    USA_NENG_6_xs.jpg
  • Elephant: Elephant orphanage at Pinnawella, Sri Lanka.
    SRI_ANML_01_xs.jpg
  • A small river of oil flows through the desert in the burning northern Al-Rawdhatain oil fields in Kuwait after the end of the Gulf War in May of 1991. More than 700 wells were set ablaze by retreating Iraqi troops creating the largest man-made environmental disaster in history.
    KUW_011_xs.jpg
  • A farmer in her field with her water buffalo in Yangshuo, China.
    CHI_26_xs.jpg
  • After hunting dragonflies in a rice field with a homemade bamboo whip tipped with sticky jack fruit sap, an Indonesian boy treats himself to a short swim under a waterfall, Batuan, Bali, Indonesia.(Man Eating Bugs page 61) 
    IDO_meb_9B_cxxs.jpg
  • The Summer Palace in Beijing, China. Situated the western outskirts of Haidian District, the Summer Palace is 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) from central Beijing and contains archetypal Chinese gardens and buildings. The Palace is considered by some one of the most noted classical gardens of the world.
    Chi_meb_700_xs.jpg
  • Irrigation: flood irrigation of flower fields grown for seed in Lompoc, California. USA.
    USA_AG_IRR_06_xs.jpg
  • Napa River flood on December 31, 2005 in Napa on Soscol Ave looking north.
    USA_051231_05_rwx.jpg
  • Giant Mountain Wilderness Area in the Adirondack Mountains, NY state.
    USA_121022_027_x.jpg
  • Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos.
    LAO_120128_145_x.jpg
  • Tourist dinner boat. The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas.
    USA_030419_030_x.jpg
  • The River Walk along the San Antonio River in downtown San Antonio, Texas.
    USA_030419_007_x.jpg
  • Phil Smith and Randy BASE jumping from New River Gorge bridge, Bridge day, West Virginia, USA. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia .
    USA_SPRT_03_xs.jpg
  • BASE jumping from New River Gorge bridge, Bridge Day, West Virginia, USA. BASE jumping is the sport of using a parachute to jump from fixed objects. "BASE" is an acronym that stands for the four categories of objects from which one can jump; (B)uilding, (A)ntenna (an uninhabited tower such as an aerial mast), (S)pan (a bridge, arch or dome), and (E)arth (a cliff or other natural formation). BASE jumping is much more dangerous than skydiving from aircraft and is currently regarded as a fringe extreme sport. -from Wikipedia.
    USA_SPRT_02_xs.jpg
  • José Angel Galaviz, 33, a rancher of Pima heritage, living in the Sierra Mountains  near Maycoba, in the Mexican state of Sonora. Repairing fences with his 22 year old nephew, Rigoberto. (José Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    MEX_080823_290_xw.jpg
  • Rancher José Angel Galaviz Carrillo repairs fences with his 22 year old nephew, Rigoberto at his home in the Sierra Mountains near Maycoba, in the Mexican state of Sonora.  (José Angel Galaviz Carrillo is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    MEX_080823_146_xw.jpg
  • Row irrigation of flower plants grown for seed in Gilroy, California.
    USA_AG_FLWR_37_xs.jpg
  • After hunting dragonflies in a rice field with a homemade whip tipped with sticky jackfruit sap, an Indonesian boy treats himself to a short swim under a waterfall in Batuan, Bali, Indonesia. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Ido_meb_9_xs.jpg
  • Perennial Burning Man attendee Nambla the clown (NAMBLA is an acronym for North American Man Boy Love Association) sports fake blood and push pins. Burning Man is a performance art festival known for art, drugs and sex. It takes place annually in the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nevada, USA..
    USA_BMAN_13_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) Helen Quinn, theoretician. 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. MODEL RELEASED [1986].
    USA_SCI_PHY_05_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), Menlo Park, California. Control Room [1988]. Instrumentation displays inside the control room of the 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_29_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Electronics Trailer. J. Chapman checks myriad connections..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. [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_19_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Rafe Schindler and Iris Abt with detector insert. 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. [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_18_xs.jpg
  • The Moon Pyramid, dedicated to Chalchihuitlicue, goddess of lakes and streams. The Street of the Dead leads up the pyramid. Teotihuacan, Mexico.
    MEX_001_xs.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
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), Menlo Park, California. Large Detector Control Room. Instrumentation displays inside the control room of the Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) experiment, 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. [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_26_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), Menlo Park, California. Control Room..Instrumentation displays inside the control room of the Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) experiment, 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. [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_22_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). Large Detector construction: sorting through the tens of thousands of fittings. 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. [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_15_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) Martin Perl, Physicist at SLAC..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. MODEL RELEASED [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_10_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Pat Burchat, with a computer simulation reflected in her glasses at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) Large Detector. Computer Simulated Event. 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. MODEL RELEASED [1988]
    USA_SCI_PHY_09_xs.jpg
  • California Conservation Corps. Clearing a stream of redwood logs for the California Department of Fish & Game so that salmon can use the stream to spawn. Near Eureka, Northern California.
    USA_CA_12_xs.jpg
  • Monarch butterflies in a woodland stream on the butterfly reserve near site alpha, Rosario, Mexico.
    MEX_058_xs.jpg
  • Biosphere 2 Project undertaken by Space Biosphere Ventures, a private ecological research firm funded by Edward P. Bass of Texas.  Biosphere scientist Abigail Alling seen in the artificial ocean of the Biosphere 2 Project during construction. The Ocean 'biome' provided a source of fish during the two-year duration of the Project. Water that evaporated from the surface of the 'ocean' was condensed and filtered to provide fresh water for consumption and to replenish the freshwater stream.  Biosphere 2 was a privately funded experiment, designed to investigate the way in which humans interact with a small self-sufficient ecological environment, and to look at possibilities for future planetary colonization. 1990
    USA_SCI_BIOSPH_31_xs.jpg
  • Laufafa Alatupe, 31, washes her family's clothes in a stream near the family home. Western Samoa. The Lagavale family lives in a 720-square-foot tin-roofed open-air house with a detached cookhouse in Poutasi Village, Western Samoa. Material World Project.
    Wsa_mw_711_xs.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
  • Biosphere 2 Project undertaken by Space Biosphere Ventures, a private ecological research firm funded by Edward P. Bass of Texas.  Biosphere scientist Mark van Thillo is spearfishing, while a tourist observes, inside the artificial ocean of the Biosphere 2 Project during construction. The Ocean 'biome' provided a source of fish during the two-year duration Project. Water that evaporated from the surface of the 'ocean' was condensed and filtered to provide fresh water for consumption and to replenish the freshwater stream.  Biosphere 2 was a privately funded experiment, designed to investigate the way in which humans interact with a small self-sufficient ecological environment, and to look at possibilities for future planetary colonization. 1992
    USA_SCI_BIOSPH_62_xs.jpg
  • Biosphere 2 Project undertaken by Space Biosphere Ventures, a private ecological research firm funded by Edward P. Bass of Texas.  Biosphere scientist Abigail Alling seen diving inside the artificial ocean of the Biosphere 2 Project during construction. The Ocean 'biome' provided a source of fish during the two-year duration of the Project. Water that evaporated from the surface of the 'ocean' was condensed and filtered to provide fresh water for consumption by the and to replenish the freshwater stream.  Biosphere 2 was a privately funded experiment, designed to investigate the way in which humans interact with a small self-sufficient ecological environment, and to look at possibilities for future planetary colonization.  1990
    USA_SCI_BIOSPH_61_xs.jpg
  • Biosphere 2 Project undertaken by Space Biosphere Ventures, a private ecological research firm funded by Edward P. Bass of Texas.  Biosphere scientists Goga Malich (right) and Taber McCallum seen after diving inside the artificial ocean of the Biosphere 2 Project during construction. The Ocean 'biome' provided a source of fish during the two-year duration of the Project. Water that evaporated from the surface of the 'ocean' was condensed and filtered to provide fresh water for consumption and to replenish the freshwater stream.  Biosphere 2 was a privately funded experiment, designed to investigate the way in which humans interact with a small self-sufficient ecological environment, and to look at possibilities for future planetary colonization.  1990
    USA_SCI_BIOSPH_32_xs.jpg
  • Biosphere 2 Project undertaken by Space Biosphere Ventures, a private ecological research firm funded by Edward P. Bass of Texas.  The Ocean 'biome' provided a source of fish during the two-year duration of the project. Water that evaporated from the surface of the 'ocean' was condensed and filtered to provide fresh water for consumption and to replenish the freshwater stream.  Biosphere 2 was a privately funded experiment, designed to investigate the way in which humans interact with a small self-sufficient ecological environment, and to look at possibilities for future planetary colonization.  1990
    USA_SCI_BIOSPH_30_xs.jpg
  • Sucking up ashes in a London living room, the RoboVac, shown here in a photo-illustration, shuttles randomly around the area, vacuuming everything in its path. Built by Kärcher, a German appliance company, the RoboVac monitors the level of dirt in the stream of incoming air with its optical sensors, that is, it detects when an area especially needs cleaning. When the RoboVac hits a grimy spot, the machine passes back and forth over it until the incoming air is clean, and so too, presumably, is the floor. London, UK. From the book Robo sapiens: Evolution of a New Species, page 164-165.
    GBR_rs_8_qxxs.jpg
  • Trees along a stream, 35km from Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Material World Project.
    Mon_mw_704_xs.jpg
  • Pachinko parlors in Japan are packed and popular with the older set. Osaka, Japan. (The girl holds a sign that says: "right now all of the machines have 'no panku'," which means they have turned off the part of the machine that randomly stops you from getting balls when you've started getting them. (The point of the game is to collect more and more balls, but sometimes when you get a ball somewhere, that makes them start streaming out, there is a function of the machine which will stop them after some random amount, so you usually get fewer; they've turned that function off). (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    Japan_JAP03_0030_xf1b.jpg
  • Proton decay experiment to determine the ultimate stability of matter. .Dr. Oscar Saavedra outside the door to the tunnel experiment with traffic streaming by. Oscar Saavedra, experimenter in the Mont Blanc Proton Decay group. The experiment consists of a 150-ton cube of iron sheets, interleaved with Geiger counter tubes. The cube has to be large enough to provide a mass of protons that will bring the probability of a decay event occurring within practical bounds, made difficult by the half life of the proton being 10 to the power 34 years.  (1985).
    FRA_SCI_PHY_01_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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