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  • With their pet dog sitting between them, a couple sit on rocks watching windsurfers at the beach overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, on 23rd May, 2017, in Gruisson, Languedoc-Rousillon, south of France.
    gruisson_france-01-23-05-2017.jpg
  • Evaporating sea water to make sea salt In the salt pans Of Gruisson, France<br />
The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. <br />
The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity.<br />
You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt is much prized is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2341_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2331_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2329_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2328_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2326_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2325_1.jpg
  • Blue workshed in the salt pans of Gruissan, on 19th October 2016, in Aude, france.
    _E6A2318_1.jpg
  • A detail of red warning sirens, on 19th October 2016, in Aude, france.
    _E6A2317_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2332_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2353_1.jpg
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