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  • Portrait of Trevor Swales, Beekeeper wearing protective clothing amongst his bee hives, Osmotherley, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    99-29-2_1.jpg
  • Children playing on a PlayPump near Pretoria, South Africa with Trevor Field, inventor of the merry-go-round water pump. The PlayPump Water System uses the energy of children at play to operate a water pump. It is manufactured by the South African company Roundabout Outdoor. It operates in a similar way to a windmill-driven water pump. The PlayPump water system is a like a playground merry-go-round attached to a water pump. The spinning motion pumps underground water into a 2,500-liter tank raised seven meters above ground. The water in the tank is easily dispensed by a tap valve. According to the manufacturer the pump can raise up to 1400 liters of water per hour from a depth of 40 meters. Excess water is diverted below ground again. The storage tank has a four-sided advertising panel. Two sides are used to advertise products, thereby providing money for maintenance of the pump, and the other two sides are devoted to public health messages. There are more than 1000 PlayPump systems in five countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, providing clean drinking water to more than 1 million people in need.
    playpump04.jpg
  • Children playing on a PlayPump near Pretoria, South Africa with Trevor Field, inventor of the merry-go-round water pump. The PlayPump Water System uses the energy of children at play to operate a water pump. It is manufactured by the South African company Roundabout Outdoor. It operates in a similar way to a windmill-driven water pump. The PlayPump water system is a like a playground merry-go-round attached to a water pump. The spinning motion pumps underground water into a 2,500-liter tank raised seven meters above ground. The water in the tank is easily dispensed by a tap valve. According to the manufacturer the pump can raise up to 1400 liters of water per hour from a depth of 40 meters. Excess water is diverted below ground again. The storage tank has a four-sided advertising panel. Two sides are used to advertise products, thereby providing money for maintenance of the pump, and the other two sides are devoted to public health messages. There are more than 1000 PlayPump systems in five countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, providing clean drinking water to more than 1 million people in need.
    playpump03.jpg
  • Spectators watch the documentary artwork entitled Incoming by Richard Mosse on giant screens, on 5th March 2017, at the Barbican in the City of London, England. Mosse is a conceptual documentary photographer and Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner, created an immersive multi-channel video installation in the Curve. In collaboration with composer Ben Frost and cinematographer Trevor Tweeten, Mosse has been working with an advanced new thermographic weapons and border imaging technology that can see beyond 30km, registering a heat signature of relative temperature difference.
    richard_mosse-09-05-03-2017.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_I.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_H.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_E.jpg
  • Simon Roscoe Blevins with his father, mother and sister, Trevor, Rosalind and Fern the morning before sentencing, September 26 2018, Preston crown court,Preston, United Kingdom. Simon Roscoe Blevins, 26,  Richard Roberts, 36 were both sentenced 16 months in prison, Richard Loizou, 31, sentenced 15 months in prison and  and Julian Brock, 47 12 months supended. Simon Roscoe Blevins, 26,  Richard Loizou, 31, Richard Roberts, 36 and Julian Brock, 47 climbed on top of several trucks during a mass protest by locals and supporters in New Preston Road, against fracking in Lancashire, July 2017. The trucks were prevented form delivering equipment to Cuadrillas nearby fracking site for four days. After a seven day jury trial at Preston Crown Court in August 2018, the four men were found guilty of Public Nuisance. Judge Altham has told them to expect “immediate custodial sentences” on 25th September 2018.
    IC5A2909.jpg
  • Simon Roscoe Blevins with his father, mother and sister, Trevor, Rosalind and Fern the morning before sentencing, September 26 2018, Preston crown court,Preston, United Kingdom. Simon Roscoe Blevins, 26,  Richard Roberts, 36 were both sentenced 16 months in prison, Richard Loizou, 31, sentenced 15 months in prison and  and Julian Brock, 47 12 months supended. Simon Roscoe Blevins, 26,  Richard Loizou, 31, Richard Roberts, 36 and Julian Brock, 47 climbed on top of several trucks during a mass protest by locals and supporters in New Preston Road, against fracking in Lancashire, July 2017. The trucks were prevented form delivering equipment to Cuadrillas nearby fracking site for four days. After a seven day jury trial at Preston Crown Court in August 2018, the four men were found guilty of Public Nuisance. Judge Altham has told them to expect “immediate custodial sentences” on 25th September 2018.
    IC5A2898.jpg
  • A couple look at a stills picture from the documentary artwork entitled Incoming by Richard Mosse, on 5th March 2017, at the Barbican in the City of London, England. Mosse is a conceptual documentary photographer and Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner, created an immersive multi-channel video installation in the Curve. In collaboration with composer Ben Frost and cinematographer Trevor Tweeten, Mosse has been working with an advanced new thermographic weapons and border imaging technology that can see beyond 30km, registering a heat signature of relative temperature difference.
    richard_mosse-01-05-03-2017.jpg
  • Colin Pillinger on the Essex Marshes, the spot he believes the original HMS Beagle, the 19th-century ship in which Charles Darwin circumnavigated the world, now lies. Pillinger named his Mars probe Beagle 2 in its honour. He is best known for his 2003 attempt to land the spacecraft on Mars, which failed. Colin Trevor Pillinger, CBE (9 May 1943 – 7 May 2014), was a planetary scientist at the Open University in the UK. He was the principal investigator for the British failed Beagle 2 Mars lander project.
    colin_pillinger_1.jpg
  • Colin Pillinger on the Essex Marshes, the spot he believes the original HMS Beagle, the 19th-century ship in which Charles Darwin circumnavigated the world, now lies. Pillinger named his Mars probe Beagle 2 in its honour. He is best known for his 2003 attempt to land the spacecraft on Mars, which failed. Colin Trevor Pillinger, CBE (9 May 1943 – 7 May 2014), was a planetary scientist at the Open University in the UK. He was the principal investigator for the British failed Beagle 2 Mars lander project.
    colin_pillinger.jpg
  • Remains of the stolen Barbara Hepworth sculpture Two Forms (1969) stolen from Dulwich Park where it was installed for 40 years. Dame Barbara Hepworth DBE (10 January 1903 – 20 May 1975) was an English sculptor. The sculpture which is insured for £500,000 is believed to have been stolen by scrap metal thieves who entered the unprotected park at night on Dec 19th 2011. The bronze piece, called Two Forms (Divided Circle), was cut from its plinth overnight, Trevor Moore of Dulwich Park Friends said. The price it could fetch as scrap metal would only be a tiny fraction of its value as a complete work. Southwark Council is offering a reward for the thieves' arrest and conviction.
    hepworth_sculpture1-01-01-2012_1.jpg
  • The Sun newspaper for sale at a newsstand in London, England, UK. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_O.jpg
  • The Sun newspaper for sale at a newsstand in London, England, UK. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_N.jpg
  • The Sun newspaper in a shopping bag in London, England, UK. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_M.jpg
  • The Sun newspaper in a shopping basket in London, England, UK. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_L.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_J.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_G.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_F.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_D.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_C.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_B.jpg
  • Outside the offices of The Sun newspaper on Pennington Street, London, England, UK. This is home to News International who have been embroiled at the centre of the phone hacking scandal and to all of the newpapers in the UK owned by Rupert Murdoch. British police arrested five senior members of staff at News Corporation's newspaper The Sun, as part of investigations into alleged payments to police by journalists for information. This story continues the controversy surrounding News International with regards to the phone hacking scandal. Trevor Kavanagh, the newspapers's associate editor said the senior members of staff had been treated like "an organised gang" and the tabloid was "not a swamp that needed draining". He said money sometimes changed hands while unearthing stories, and this had always been standard practice. The Met Police declined to comment.
    20120213the sun_A.jpg
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