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  • An open refrigerator of a family with 4 children in San Antonio, Texas, USA. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats)
    UStx04_3846_xf1b.jpg
  • The Le Moine family refrigerator. The Le Moine family lives in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, France, and is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    FRA04_2875_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). 4-year-old Brianna Fernandez rearranges the magnets on her family's refrigerator in their home in San Antonia, Texas. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    UStx04_4014_xf1b.jpg
  • Middle class kitchen and open refrigerator, Kobe, Japan. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats)
    Japan_JAP03_0241_xf1b.jpg
  • The Qureshi family of Lorenskog, Norway, an Oslo suburb. Pritpal Qureshi, 49, preparing chapati, unleavened flat bread, in her kitchen.  Her husband Nasrullah, 51, is at the refrigerator. Model-Released.
    NOR_130526_056_x.jpg
  • The Le Moine family refrigerator. The Le Moine family lives in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, France, and is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    FRA04_2877_xf1brw.jpg
  • The Harris Ranch slaughterhouse, the Harris Beef Company, in Selma, California kills more than 700 head of cattle a day. Beef carcasses are cooled in a huge refrigerated room. A worker in a red hardhat trims beef. USA [[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_23_xs.jpg
  • The Harris Ranch slaughterhouse, the Harris Beef Company, in Selma, California kills more than 700 head of cattle a day. Beef carcasses are cooled in a huge refrigerated room. San Joaquin Valley, California. USA [[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_22_xs.jpg
  • Photographer Peter Menzel in front of cooling beef carcass parts. The Harris Ranch slaughterhouse, the Harris Beef Company, in Selma, California kills more than 700 head of cattle a day. Beef carcasses are cooled in a huge refrigerated room. San Joaquin Valley, California. USA .[[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_21_xs.jpg
  • The Harris Ranch slaughterhouse, the Harris Beef Company, in Selma, California kills more than 700 head of cattle a day. Beef carcasses are cooled in a huge refrigerated room. San Joaquin Valley, California. USA [[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_20_xs.jpg
  • The Harris Ranch slaughterhouse, the Harris Beef Company, in Selma, California kills more than 700 head of cattle a day. Beef carcasses are cooled in a large refrigerated room. San Joaquin Valley, California. USA .[[From the company: THE HARRIS FARMS GROUP OF COMPANIES. Harris Farms, Inc. is one of the nation's largest, vertically integrated family owned agribusinesses]].
    USA_AG_BEEF_19_xs.jpg
  • Preparing food for desert museum animals. Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, outside Tucson. MODEL RELEASED. USA.
    USA_AZ_15_xs.jpg
  • The Glad Ostensen family in Gjerdrum, Norway. Anne Glad Fredricksen, 45, her husband Anders Ostensen, 48, and their three children, Magnus, 15, Mille 12, and Amund, 8 at an evening meal in their farmhouse kitchen. Model-Released.
    NOR_130529_272_x.jpg
  • Pigs/Swine/Hog: Oscar Mayer Company slaughterhouse in Perry, Iowa. Pig carcasses cooling. USA.
    USA_AG_PIG_17_xs.jpg
  • Pigs/Swine/Hog: Oscar Mayer Company slaughterhouse in Perry, Iowa. USA.
    USA_AG_PIG_20_xs.jpg
  • Inside the Moahis' family home in Kabakae Village, Ghanzi, Botswana. The family survives on food rations supplied by the government for an orphaned child.  (Marble Moahi is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.)
    BOT_090315_158_xw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Because Oyuntsetseg (Oyuna) Lhakamsuren is working at her pharmacy tonight, her son Batbileg walks the meal over to her and then the two of them sit down with Oyuna's husband, Regzen Batsuuri, and a niece, to eat their dinner. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 233). The Batsuuri family of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    MON01_0008_xxf1s.jpg
  • As remote as the family's home is in the remote village of Cap Hope, Greenland, the Madsen family's refrigerator is covered with stuck-on icons of popular culture. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    GRE04_0178_xf1b.jpg
  • A look inside the Madsen family's refrigerator. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    GRE04_0180_xf1brw.jpg
  • A refrigerator in a middle class home in Giza, Egypt. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    EGY03_0109_xf1b.jpg
  • Ottersland Dahl family, of Gjettum, Norway (outside Oslo). Gunhild Valle Ottersland, 45, shopping for weekly groceries. Model-Released.
    NOR_130523_024_x.jpg
  • The Glad Ostensen family in Gjerdrum, Norway. Anne Glad Fredricksen, 45, chooses salmon while shopping for a week's worth of groceries. Model-Released.
    NOR_130531_070_x.jpg
  • Shrink-wrapped meat for sale at one of the bigger Ito Yokado supermarkets (a Japanese chain) in Bejing, China. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHI03_0081_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Marge Brown hugs her beloved refrigerator in the kitchen of her rented home in Riverview, Australia (near Brisbane). While the Browns are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator, they look forward to the days when it's full. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_0325_xf1b.jpg
  • Brown tree snake in bed with a very young sleeping child: every parent's worst fear. photo illustration. .There are no birds on the Pacific Island of Guam thanks to the Brown Tree Snake. These hungry egg-eating snakes have overrun the tropical island after arriving on a lumber freighter from New Guinea during World War II. Besides wiping out the bird population, Brown Tree Snakes cause frequent power outages: they commit short circuit suicide when climbing between power lines. They invade people's homes through the smallest openings. They have emerged from toilets. And they love the smell of babies. Several sleeping infants have been injured by the snake trying to swallow an arm or a leg...For this photo, an expert researcher and handler of brown tree snakes placed a brown tree snake that had been in a refrigerator to restrict its movement (cold blooded animals do not move much when they are chilled) on the bed with the sleeping child and monitored its movement as it warmed up. As it warmed up, the snake sensed the baby's breath and started to move toward it..MODEL RELEASED..
    GUM_09_xs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). John Brown holds his sister Sinead as they graze in the nearly-empty refrigerator. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 27).
    AUS104_0005.xxf1.jpg
  • Brown tree snake in bed with a very young sleeping child:every parent's worst fear. photo illustration. .There are no birds on the Pacific Island of Guam thanks to the Brown Tree Snake. These hungry egg-eating snakes have overrun the tropical island after arriving on a lumber freighter from New Guinea during World War II. Besides wiping out the bird population, Brown Tree Snakes cause frequent power outages: they commit short circuit suicide when climbing between power lines. They invade people's homes through the smallest openings. They have emerged from toilets. And they love the smell of babies. Several sleeping infants have been injured by the snake trying to swallow an arm or a leg...For this photo, an expert researcher and handler of brown tree snakes placed a brown tree snake that had been in a refrigerator to restrict its movement (cold blooded animals do not move much when they are chilled) on the bed with the sleeping child and monitored its movement as it warmed up. As it warmed up, the snake sensed the baby's breath and started to move toward it..
    GUM_10_xs.jpg
  • While the Browns of Riverview, Australia are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator, they look forward to the days when it's full. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. John tends to the bags while Marge and Vanessa continue to load groceries for checkout. This trip, the Browns were also preparing for their upcoming photo shoot. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_2010_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). While the Brown family of Riverview, Australia are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator, they look forward to the days when it's full?every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. Here, Vanessa looks on as John goes to get a box of cereal.(Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_1918_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). While the Browns of Riverview, Australia are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator in their rented home in Riverview, Australia (near Brisbane) they look forward to the days when it's full. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. Here, Vanessa and John walk ahead with the shopping cart, while Marge and Sinead follow close behind. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_1914_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Sinead Brown grazes through her grandparent's nearly-empty refrigerator in the kitchen of their rented home in Riverview, Australia (near Brisbane). Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_1813_xf1b.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). While the Brown family of Riverview, Australia are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator, they look forward to the days when it's full. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 26).
    AUS104_0003_xxf1.jpg
  • Brown tree snake in bed with a very young sleeping child: every parent's worst fear. photo illustration. There are no birds on the Pacific Island of Guam thanks to the Brown Tree Snake. These hungry egg-eating snakes have overrun the tropical island after arriving on a lumber freighter from New Guinea during World War II. Besides wiping out the bird population, Brown Tree Snakes cause frequent power outages: they commit short circuit suicide when climbing between power lines. They invade people's homes through the smallest openings. They have emerged from toilets. And they love the smell of babies. Several sleeping infants have been injured by the snake trying to swallow an arm or a leg...For this photo, an expert researcher and handler of brown tree snakes placed a brown tree snake that had been in a refrigerator to restrict its movement (cold blooded animals do not move much when they are chilled) on the bed with the sleeping child and monitored its movement as it warmed up. As it warmed up, the snake sensed the baby's breath and started to move toward it.
    GUM_12_120_xs.jpg
  • Brown tree snake in bed with a very young sleeping child:every parent's worst fear. photo illustration. .There are no birds on the Pacific Island of Guam thanks to the Brown Tree Snake. These hungry egg-eating snakes have overrun the tropical island after arriving on a lumber freighter from New Guinea during World War II. Besides wiping out the bird population, Brown Tree Snakes cause frequent power outages: they commit short circuit suicide when climbing between power lines. They invade people's homes through the smallest openings. They have emerged from toilets. And they love the smell of babies. Several sleeping infants have been injured by the snake trying to swallow an arm or a leg...For this photo, an expert researcher and handler of brown tree snakes placed a brown tree snake that had been in a refrigerator to restrict its movement (cold blooded animals do not move much when they are chilled) on the bed with the sleeping child and monitored its movement as it warmed up. As it warmed up, the snake sensed the baby's breath and started to move toward it..
    GUM_11_120_xs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). While the Brown family of Riverview, Australia are used to living with a nearly-empty refrigerator, they look forward to the days when it's full. Every two weeks a new check appears and the family goes to the supermarket. Here, Marge and Doug decide on a salad dressing. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    AUS104_1995_xf1b.jpg
  • Barcelona, Spain. Exhibition curated to look like a walk-through refrigerator with food photos from Material World: A Global Family Portrait. The exhibition continues through other rooms.
    SPA_070329_023.jpg
  • The Khuenkaew's refrigerator holds some soft drinks, eggs, a bag of meat. Thailand. The Khuenkaew family lives in a wooden 728-square-foot house on stilts, surrounded by rice fields in the Ban Muang Wa village, outside the northern town of Chiang Mai, in Thailand. Material World Project.
    Tha_mw_712_xs.jpg
  • The Lopes-Furtado family from Cabo Verde in the kitchen of their home in Luxembourg with one week's worth of food. Natercia Lopes-Furtado and her husband Ernesto Lopes Sanchez, 47, with their children: Darlene, 16, Melody, 14, Teddy, 9, and Lionel, 4. Cooking method: electric stove, oven and microwave. Food preservation: electric refrigerator and freezer. Model Released.
    LUX_070413_659_rwx.jpg
  • The Finken family's suburban straw bale home located a block-and-a-half east of Lac Deschênes in the city of Gatineau, Quebec, Canada. (Coco Simone Fincken is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Cooking methods: Electric stove. Food preservation: refrigerator-freezer.
    CAN_061002_090_rwxw.jpg
  • A vendor cleans corn as she waits for customers in the Santa Carolina Market in Quito, Ecuador.  Grocery stores, supermarkets, and megamarkets all have their roots in village market areas where farmers and vendors would converge once or twice a week to sell their produce and goods. In farming communities, just about everyone had something to trade or sell. As transportation became more efficient (especially refrigerated transport), and farms became huge, big corporations moved into the food business to take advantage of scale, especially in the United States. Now the convenience of one-stop shopping has made this business even bigger. Even the smaller supermarkets are being bought up or run out of business by the larger concerns. Some small town markets still exist today throughout much of Europe, although to a lesser degree there as well. Small markets are still the lifeblood of communities in the developing world, and, for better or worse, will remain so until they are numerous and big enough to attract the conglomerates' attention. Coming full circle, farmers markets have come back into vogue in some places in the USA where they had largely disappeared.
    ECU04_5198_xf1brw.jpg
  • A slaughtered cow rolls on a cart through the dusty mud-brick village of Kouakourou, Mali, destined for sale that day at the nearby Saturday market. Because the town has no electricity, and thus no refrigeration, this family will sell all their meat by sunset of the same day that the cow was slaughtered. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 210). This image is featured alongside the Natomo family images in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    MAL01_0003_xxf1s.jpg
  • CIMMYT: The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center outside Mexico City, Mexico has a huge concrete refrigerated gene bank with thousands of corn seed samples. Here, Jaime Diaz collects jars of seed. This is the largest such Germplasm bank in the world..Near Mexico City. .
    MEX_091_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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