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  • Debris of Korean Air Cargo Flight 8509, a Boeing 747-2B5F, registered HL7451 and bound for Milano-Malpensa Airport, which crashed due to instrument malfunction and pilot error on 22 December 1999 shortly after take-off from London Stansted Airport. The aircraft crashed into Hatfield Forest near the village of Great Hallingbury close to but clear of some local houses. All four crew on board were killed.
    korean_cargo_crash01-23-12-1999.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a beautiful sunny mid summer morning, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on nearby beaches on the 13th of August 2020 in Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Dungeness-Prospect-Cottage-7285.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a beautiful sunny mid summer morning, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on nearby beaches on the 13th of August 2020 in Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Dungeness-Prospect-Cottage-7268.jpg
  • Two days after the Irish Republican Army IRA exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate, a main arterial road that travels north-south through Londons financial area, City of London engineering officials examine the huge crater left by the terrorist device, on 26th April 1993, in London, England.  Debris is strewn around the hole with drainage and road material. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburgas church. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet 140,000 m² of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Costs of repairing the damage was estimated at £350 million. It was possibly the IRAs most successful military tactic since the start of the Troubles.
    city13-26-04-1993.jpg
  • The aftermath debris of glasses, bottles and plates at dawn, the morning after a 50th birthday party, spread around the garden in the Herefordshire countryside, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, Herefordshire, England.
    hereford_party-09-23-06-2019.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a beautiful sunny mid summer morning, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on nearby beaches on the 13th of August 2020 in Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Dungeness-Prospect-Cottage-7277.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a beautiful sunny mid summer morning, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on nearby beaches on the 13th of August 2020 in Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Dungeness-Prospect-Cottage-7286.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a misty winters day, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on the beaches of Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom on the 25th January 2020.
    UK-Dungeness-Propect-Cottage-5742.jpg
  • The aftermath debris of glasses, bottles and plates at dawn, the morning after a 50th birthday party, spread around the garden in the Herefordshire countryside, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, Herefordshire, England.
    hereford_party-03-23-06-2019.jpg
  • As if about to be crunched underfoot, shattered glass from the windows of offices in the historic City of London side-street, stickers and notices for Access (Mastercard) and American Express (Amex) credit cards lie on the disaster-strewn pavement (sidewalk). This is some of the debris lying about after the huge Bishopsgate bomb on 24th April 1993, London's most expensive terrorist atrocity during the Provisional Irish Republican Army's (IRA) sustained bombings on the British mainland. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 sq m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Costs of repairing the damage was estimated at £350 million and was possibly the IRA's most successful military tactic since the start of what was called the Troubles from 1969 onwards.
    credit_crunch01-24-04-1993_1.jpg
  • Two days after the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate, an optometrist's business remains open (like the eye illustration at the frontage) but it is boarded up with plywood with the words Open as Usual painted by hand. Debris has been swept up on the pavement awaiting collection but the scene is otherwise as it should. But one person was killed when the one-ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church on 24th April 1993. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office and retail space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Costs of repairing the damage was estimated at £350 million. It was possibly the (IRA's) most successful military tactic since the start of the Troubles.
    bomb_damage-26-04-1993_1.jpg
  • Prospect Cottage on a beautiful sunny mid summer morning, made famous by film maker Derek Jarman who found inspiration at Dungeness, where he created a shingle garden made from debris he found on nearby beaches on the 13th of August 2020 in Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Dungeness-Prospect-Cottage-7270.jpg
  • The aftermath debris of glasses, bottles, cans and plates, the morning after a 50th birthday party, spread around the garden in the Herefordshire countryside, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, Herefordshire, England.
    hereford_party-11-23-06-2019.jpg
  • The aftermath debris of glasses, bottles and plates at dawn, the morning after a 50th birthday party, spread around the garden in the Herefordshire countryside, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, Herefordshire, England.
    hereford_party-02-23-06-2019.jpg
  • Two days after the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate, a main arterial road that travels north-south through London's financial area, City of London engineering officials examine the huge crater left by the terrorist device. We see debris around the hole with drainage and road material. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m²) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Costs of repairing the damage was estimated at £350 million. It was possibly the (IRA's) most successful military tactic since the start of the Troubles.
    city_london10-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Mounds of concrete rubble and mud made from ground works using pile driving equipment that has begun on Folkestone seafront development on the 4th of June 2020, Folkestone, United Kingdom. The development consisting of 84 homes is right on the beachfront towards the western end of the beach close to the Lower Leas coastal path and Leas lift.
    UK-Folkestone-Seafront-Development-7...jpg
  • A Bolivian woman in traditional dress in the foreground looks worried as Emergency workers in red look over the devastation caused when a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained.
    _MG_1021_1.jpg
  • A derelict fishing boat sits on the shingle beach in Dungeness on a misty winters day, on the 25th of January 2020, Dungeness, Kent, United Kingdom. Dungeness is a shingle beach on the coast in Kent, famous for the Dungeness Power Station and Derek Jarman’s Prospect Cottage.
    UK-Dungeness-Derelict-Fishing-Boat-5...jpg
  • A pile of assorted ropes and fibrous cord and fishing pots await removal from the coastal landscape, having been collected by volunteers from a beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. The amount of rubbish found dumped on UK beaches rose by a third last year, according to a new report. More than 8,000 plastic bottles were collected by the Marine Conservation Society’s annual beach clean-up at seaside locations from Orkney to the Channel Islands on one weekend in September 2016. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-05-27-09-2017.jpg
  • Pieces of shattered glass, the aftermath of a victim of crime from a vehicle left in the gutter of a street in south London, on 15th February 2017, in the borough of Lambeth, United Kingdom.
    ferndene_glass-02-15-02-2017.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0990_1.jpg
  • Local residents searching through rubble for their belongings, on a broken road with trucks after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0917_1.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0875_1.jpg
  • London Fire fighters dampen down smouldering remains from a Simon Snorkel platform after an inner-city estate fire in south London. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire24-26-11-2009.jpg
  • The smouldering remains of a construction site after an inner-city estate fire in south London. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire20-26-11-2009.jpg
  • Days after the terrorist attacks on America in September 2001, we see front grill and bonnet (hood) paintwork of a parked US Government Ford car in Greenwich Village, scratched by scraped dirt and covered in concrete dust and grit that has been blown from nearby collapsed buildings at Ground Zero. The bent number plate of this now wrecked Federal-owned vehicle shows the impact on property and on the US economy. Total damage after this al-Qaeda plot has been put at $100 billion including: the loss of four civilian aircraft, buildings, the Pentagon, cleanup, property and infrastructure. emergency funds, job losses, unrecoverable property, insurance and air traffic revenue.
    9_11_government_car-15-09-2001_1.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash27-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The crash site of the Air France Concorde which came down after shortly after taking off from nearby Le Bourget airport, killing all passengers and crew plus those on the ground at Hotelissimo Les Relais Bleus Hotel, on 29th July 2002, in Gonesse, Paris, France. One hundred passengers and nine crew members on board the flight died. On the ground, four people were killed and one seriously injured.
    concorde_site03-29-07-2002.jpg
  • Fire damage to a structure at the Ruskin Park Community Garden, on 21st August 2019, in London, England. The Community Garden is a source of education and enthusiasm for growing vegetables and encouraging inner city gardening to reduce the carbon output involved in food production and transport. They receive grants from Capital Growth and the Lambeth Community Action Fund and were nominated for funding under the Lambeth Community Action Fund 2009/10 by the Herne Hill Ward Councillors.
    ruskin_fire-01-21-08-2019.jpg
  • Fire damage to a structure at the Ruskin Park Community Garden, on 21st August 2019, in London, England. The Community Garden is a source of education and enthusiasm for growing vegetables and encouraging inner city gardening to reduce the carbon output involved in food production and transport. They receive grants from Capital Growth and the Lambeth Community Action Fund and were nominated for funding under the Lambeth Community Action Fund 2009/10 by the Herne Hill Ward Councillors.
    ruskin_fire-03-21-08-2019.jpg
  • A walker and a fallen tree across the path known as the Torrent Walk along the River Afon Clwedog, on 13th September 2018, in Dolgellau, Gwynedd, Wales.
    dolgellau_walk-07-13-09-2018.jpg
  • A woman throws a drinks bottle on to a pile of assorted plastic materials awaiting removal from the coastal landscape, having been collected by volunteers from a beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. The amount of rubbish found dumped on UK beaches rose by a third last year, according to a new report. More than 8,000 plastic bottles were collected by the Marine Conservation Society’s annual beach clean-up at seaside locations from Orkney to the Channel Islands on one weekend in September 2016. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-07-27-09-2017.jpg
  • A pile of assorted ropes and fibrous cord and fishing pots await removal from the coastal landscape, having been collected by volunteers from a beach on Holy Island, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. The amount of rubbish found dumped on UK beaches rose by a third last year, according to a new report. More than 8,000 plastic bottles were collected by the Marine Conservation Society’s annual beach clean-up at seaside locations from Orkney to the Channel Islands on one weekend in September 2016. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-04-27-09-2017.jpg
  • Pieces of shattered glass, the aftermath of a victim of crime from a vehicle left in the gutter of a street in south London, on 15th February 2017, in the borough of Lambeth, United Kingdom.
    ferndene_glass-03-15-02-2017.jpg
  • Local residents searching through rubble for their belongings, on a broken road with trucks after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide022_1.jpg
  • Local residents searching through rubble for their belongings, on a broken road with trucks after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide011_1.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide003_1.jpg
  • Residents and emergency workers lifting out posessions with ropes, in the rubble of a landslide. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide001_1.jpg
  • Emergency workers in red look over the devastation caused when a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained.
    _MG_1017_1.jpg
  • A wall cracked in half as a result of a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011, which made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_1000_1.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0989_1.jpg
  • Two women search for their belongings whilst a Bolivian flag flies amid ruined houses and rubble, after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained.
    _MG_0979_1.jpg
  • Silhouette of a young boy carrying posessions out of their wrecked home under a bent telegraph pole, after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0964_1.jpg
  • Local residents searching through rubble for their belongings, on a broken road with trucks after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0921_1.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0874_1.jpg
  • Scorched paintwork of a van after an inner-city estate fire in south London. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire16-26-11-2009.jpg
  • Melted properties and devastated frontages after an inner-city estate fire in south London. A satellite dish has all but been incinerated after being exposed to very high temperatures facing the scene of this davastating incident. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire07-26-11-2009.jpg
  • Household refuse pollutes a coral beach on Meedu Island, an indigenous community in the Republic of the Maldives in the Indian Ocean. Packaging, foodstuffs and general waste has been tossed away on this otherwise beautiful place, north of the capital Male. Unfortunately, the practice of tossing away one's rubbish is a normal practice in this culture, the local people selfishly unconcerned about the future of their habitat and the health of their community. Only a few miles from Meedu are islands that serve as holiday resorts where families from Europe travel by air for the perffect vacation - unaware that fly-tipping is so widespread that it threatens this nation's worldwide status as a paradise on earth.
    maldives212-13-11-2007.jpg
  • Gathered on the Docklands Light Railway track, a group of police investigators and health and safety experts stand beneath the devastation and wreckage caused by the IRA’s docklands bomb on 10th February 1996. Office windows have been blown out and shattered glass lies everywhere making these workplaces unusable for many months afterwards. We see the men under the tall buildings looking tiny in comparison to the chaotic aftermath of this enormous explosion the day before. The bombing marked the end of a 17-month IRA ceasefire during which Irish, British and American leaders worked for a political solution to the troubles in Northern Ireland. 2 people were killed in the half-tonne lorry bomb blast which caused an estimated £85 million damage.
    docklands_bomb_team-11-02-1996_1.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash25-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The crash site of the Air France Concorde which came down after shortly after taking off from nearby Le Bourget airport, killing all passengers and crew plus those on the ground at Hotelissimo Les Relais Bleus Hotel, on 29th July 2002, in Gonesse, Paris, France. One hundred passengers and nine crew members on board the flight died. On the ground, four people were killed and one seriously injured.
    concorde_site01-29-07-2002.jpg
  • The crash site of the Air France Concorde which came down after shortly after taking off from nearby Le Bourget airport, killing all passengers and crew plus those on the ground at Hotelissimo Les Relais Bleus Hotel, on 29th July 2002, in Gonesse, Paris, France. One hundred passengers and nine crew members on board the flight died. On the ground, four people were killed and one seriously injured.
    concorde_site02-29-07-2002.jpg
  • Fire damage to a structure at the Ruskin Park Community Garden, on 21st August 2019, in London, England. The Community Garden is a source of education and enthusiasm for growing vegetables and encouraging inner city gardening to reduce the carbon output involved in food production and transport. They receive grants from Capital Growth and the Lambeth Community Action Fund and were nominated for funding under the Lambeth Community Action Fund 2009/10 by the Herne Hill Ward Councillors.
    ruskin_fire-04-21-08-2019.jpg
  • View of ruined houses due to landslide, shot from a broken bridge. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide005_1.jpg
  • Local residents searching through rubble for their belongings, on a broken road with trucks after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    PCH_La_Paz_Landslide004_1.jpg
  • Bolivian flag flies amid ruined houses and rubble, after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained.
    _MG_0974_1.jpg
  • A broken road with a truck stuck on it, after a major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0954_1.jpg
  • Residents and emergency workers lifting out posessions with ropes, in the rubble of a landslide. A major lansdlide in La Paz in 2011 made around 25,000 people homeless, due to heavy rain and poor infrastructure, there were no fatalities and only minor injuries sustained
    _MG_0914_1.jpg
  • The massive IRA bomb in Bishopsgate Street in the heart of the City of London destroyed a substantial number of businesses and disrupted a major part of London's financial hub. In the days after the attack on 24th April 1993, we see the pictorial evacuation of smiling faces in a portrait of Pret a Manger staff, the sandwich and lunch chain (from the French 'Ready to Eat'). The image was hung above the premises and construction workers wearing hard hats transport the picture, like hundreds of other nearby businesses whose workers carried away company property, for temporary safe storage. This store was also badly damaged and had to be transferred to another location. The City of London has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000. It is a geographically-small City within Greater London, England. The City as it is known, is the historic core of London from which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew. The City's boundaries have remained constant since the Middle Ages but  it is now only a tiny part of Greater London. The City of London is a major financial centre, often referred to as just the City or as the Square Mile, as it is approximately one square mile (2.6 km) in area.
    RB-0140.jpg
  • A group of local residents have been allowed past cordons and return to see their devastated estate after an inner-city estate fire in south London. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire19-26-11-2009.jpg
  • Three London Fire Brigade fire fighters attend to smouldering remains after an inner-city estate fire in south London. About 310 people were forced to leave their homes after the fire engulfed a wooden structure under construction in scaffolding at Sumner Road and Garrisbrooke Estate, Peckham, London at about 0430 AM. It spread to two blocks of maisonettes and a destroyed a pub. More than 150 firefighters tackled this unusually large and ferocious fire which injured ten people, including two police officers who received hospital treatment for minor injuries.
    peckham_fire12-26-11-2009.jpg
  • Girl lying in the debris of the morning after in the HUB, The centre of Shangri-La, Glastonbury Festival 2010
    _MG_4633_1_1.jpg
  • A City of London workman clears construction debris collected in bins, next to the artwork entitled Series Industrial Windows I by Marisa Ferreira, part of Sculpture in the City 2019, on 6th August 2020, in London, England.
    city_people05-06-08-2020.jpg
  • Discarded Halloween debris lies in Ruskin Park, a south London green space in the borough of Southwark, after an ilegal gathering of young people during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 1st November 2020, in London, England.
    halloween_litter05-01-11-2020.jpg
  • Girl lying in the debris of the morning after in the HUB, The centre of Shangri-La, Glastonbury Festival 2010
    _MG_4633.jpg
  • An Akha ethnic minority woman winnows rice on a bamboo basket to get rid of the debris before cooking, Ban Phou Yae village, Luang Namtha province, Lao PDR
    12-10_1_1.jpg
  • A wooden mould and ash for casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012643cc_1.jpg
  • Bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018284cc_1.jpg
  • A sign to a metalworkers house who makes spoons from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012655cc_1.jpg
  • Spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012652cc_1.jpg
  • A metalworker casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012597cc_1.jpg
  • The Monday morning following the attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11th we see commuters disembarking from the Staten Island Ferry terminal in Manhattan. Bravely returning to office desks they find their city skyline missing the Twin Towers with Manhattan still in a state of perpetual shock and still under a mist of smoke from the debris at Ground Zero. To celebrate the return to commercial near-normality, New Yorkers' spirit was proved intact by the hanging of US flags from buildings. An American flag hangs over the workers walking along a exit gantry before emerging into the morning before another working day.
    september11th012-16-09_2001_1_1.jpg
  • Mario Vieu is the owner, director and a broadcaster at Signal FM, a small station in Petion- Ville, Port au Prince. As soon as the earthquake struck he made his way to the Radio station; by accident or design, some one had left Hotel California radio station playing on a loop. His staff were afraid to go in but he managed to persuade some journalists to come and chat about what had happened and has been broadcasting ever since. "We had a minimum of 5000 people outside  all the time for four days (not the same people). We just gave them a microphone  and then broadcasted  messages all day. "We were like a phone with two people but broadcasting to the whole city. People would call in , 'My wife and kids are under the debris  - would you send help?'; afterwards they would come back and say, thank you."
    Haiti_28_1.jpg
  • New york Business man trying to get home after a steam pipe explosion In Manhatten. The July 18, 2007 New York City steam explosion sent a geyser of hot steam up from beneath a busy intersection, with a 40 story high shower of mud and flying debris raining down on the crowded streets of Midtown Manhattan in New York City. Initial fears that the cause was terrorist related were quickly allayed by statements by mayor Michael Bloomberg and other officials shortly after the event.
    ny2_1.jpg
  • Clutter and office debris at the desk of an employee, Leeds, UK.  From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    608tdwaterhouse_22_207_1.jpg
  • Female wrestler on floor amindst pie cake debris smiling at camera. Lucha Libre wrestling origniated in Mexico, but is popular in other latin Amercian countries, including in La Paz / El Alto, Bolivia. Male and female fighters participate in the theatrical staged fights to an adoring crowd of locals and foreigners alike.
    _MG_4738_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, metalworker casting bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018293cc_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, metalworker opens up the wooden mould used for casting bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018271cc_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, a metalworker opens a wooden mould used to make bracelets from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018253cc_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, metalworker casting bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018239cc_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, a metalworker prepares a wooden mould with ash to make bracelets from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974. 12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018236cc_1.jpg
  • A metalworker casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012648cc_1.jpg
  • A wooden mould for casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012642cc_1.jpg
  • A metalworker casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012630cc_1.jpg
  • Sitting drunk on a mid-town sidewalk (pavement), a construction worker wipes tears from his eyes. The man has driven from his mid-west home to offer help at the hazardous Ground Zero where for the past 4 days and nights he has been uncovering debris and human remains after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Exhausted and emotional, he was sent away for his own and the safety of others and alcohol was his first purchase. New Yorkers praised their heroes for assisting their city (and America) in their hour of need but here, passers-by stepped over him complaining of his drunken state. The now lonely man is distressed, tormented and psychologically fragile but gets no help. With his few possessions, his hard hat and flag, mask and cans of Budweiser we see a man at his lowest ebb.
    september11th021-16-09_2001_1_1.jpg
  • Having just unearthed more bodies from layers of volcanic ash and pumice, an archaeologist's assistant pauses for a cigarette, kneeling beside a victim of the AD79 eruption of Mount Versuvius over the ancient Roman town of Pompeii. Buried beneath huge amounts of toxic material this person was suffocated and crushed from falling debris. Preserved in a shell of volcanic material it is to be removed from this site on top of a villa roof where, it is calculated, this citizen was one of the last to die, having climbed 4 metres above ground level to await its fate. The Italian man ears a red t-shirt and holds a pick that has scraped and brushed away the soil to reveal the human form which also shows another body beneath. Others litter the rooftop too proving that many survivors of the first eruption perished after the second many hours later.
    pompeii03-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Hackney residents clean up debris from the riot after burnt out vehicles are removed along Clarence road, Pembrey estate, Hackney.
    11-hackneyriot-4697.jpg
  • Livis, leaning against a tree at his neighbour Jocelyn's home near Cham de Mars,  Port au Prince. He is helping Jocelyn to rescue his belongings. Livis was not affected directly, he did not lose any family himself,  but his experiences were similar to those of many Haitians living in central Port Au Prince.  He is a Winnie the Pooh fan and reads it to his five children. He says, "If you're excited what is the point? You have no choice but to be calm. Captured in my mind are the scenes immediately after the earthquake: the collapsed buildings, the dead bodies and worst of all the cries for help from those under the debris. The cries that would go unanswered until eventually they stopped. They cried but we couldn't help"
    Haiti_45_1.jpg
  • Discarded Halloween debris lies in Ruskin Park, a south London green space in the borough of Southwark, after an ilegal gathering of young people during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 1st November 2020, in London, England.
    halloween_litter01-01-11-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath debris of glasses and beer kegs, the morning after a 50th birthday party, in a barn in the Herefordshire countryside, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, herefordshire, England.
    herefordshire-22-23-06-2019.jpg
  • A workman clears debris and dirt from between rails on Milady Horakove street, Holesovice district, Prague 7, on 19th March, 2018, in Prague, the Czech Republic.
    prague-123-19-03-2018.jpg
  • New york Business men trying to get home after a steam pipe explosion In Manhatten. The July 18, 2007 New York City steam explosion sent a geyser of hot steam up from beneath a busy intersection, with a 40 story high shower of mud and flying debris raining down on the crowded streets of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, Initial fears that the cause was terrorist related were quickly allayed by statements by mayor Michael Bloomberg and other officials shortly after the event.
    ny copy_1.jpg
  • Tube worker (Fluffer) cleaning the underground rails near Baker street on the London Underground after the last train (1am). Fluffer is the name given to a person employed to clean the tracks in the tunnels. The passage of the trains through the tunnels draws in dust (70% od the dust is from human skin) and rubbish. Removing this debris is essential to maintain the safety of the Underground, as it would otherwise create a fire hazard. Coming and Going is a project commissioned by the Museum of London for photographer Barry Lewis in 1976 to document the transport system as it is used by passengers and commuters using public transport by trains, tubes and buses in London, UK.
    29 Coming and going_1_1.jpg
  • A sign to a metalworkers house who makes spoons from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018319cc_1.jpg
  • A sign to a metalworkers house who makes spoons and bracelets from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018301cc_1.jpg
  • Bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018281cc_1.jpg
  • Ms Vanthone, metalworker casting bracelets made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0018278cc_1.jpg
  • Spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012649cc_1.jpg
  • A metalworker casting spoons made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    A0012626cc_1.jpg
  • A spoon made from recycled aluminium sourced from Vietnam War debris and melted in an earthen kiln in Ban Naphia, a remote Tai Phouan village in mountainous Xieng Khouang Province in Northern Laos. Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than two million tons of ordnance dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974.12 artisan families began transforming war scrap into spoons (150,000 per year) in the 1970s to supplement subsistence farming activities. Supported by the Swiss NGO Helvetas, the project works to make the scrap metal supply chain safer for artisans and scrap collectors by collaborating with organisations such as Mines Advisory Group (MAG) that specialise in unexploded ordnance removal and education. More recently the villagers have started making bracelets and other items.
    46-11_1.jpg
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