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  • A lady concentrates in a cluttered office unit beneath corporate artwork in Ernst & Young's Norman Foster-designed building. The oval-shaped picture depicts an esasperated-looking female rolling her eyes to the ceiling while her contemporary below stares down at her laptop surrounded by the paraphernalia of her accounting London job. Dressed in an open-neck shirt and wearing glasses, the woman at work is busy and preoccupied with the job in hand of auditing a company's accounts. Despite all the 385,000 square feet in the European headquarters on the River Thames, there is no spare space in this tiny office that she shares with another employee. The Fine Art has been supplied by Anderson O'Day and E & Y have invested in 500,000 Pounds of office art for their 114,000 employees in 700 locations across 140 countries around the world.
    ernst+young249-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • As the country continues the UK governments Coronavirus lockdown with social distancing rules still in effect, a middle-class couple sit on the porch in the front garden outside their home in Herne Hill, south London, on 17th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-06-17-05-2020.jpg
  • An Asian man crosses a bridge over Upper Thames Street in the City of London, the capital's financial district - aka the Square Mile, on 7th November 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-01-07-11-2018.jpg
  • A young man sits on an exterior ledge, benneath apartments at Waterloo, on 5th March 2019, in London, England.
    southbank_apartments-01-05-03-2019.jpg
  • A person wearing an England cap looks down at the ground in Camberwell, on 26th September 2018, in Southwark, London, England.
    england_cap-02-26-09-2018.jpg
  • Barometer in Birmingham, England, United Kingdom. A barometer is a scientific instrument used in meteorology to measure atmospheric pressure. Pressure tendency can forecast short term changes in the weather.
    20170113_birmingham_007.jpg
  • A pressure gauge inside the boiler room of a modern office building in central London UK.
    UK-Building-boiler-room-pressure-gau...jpg
  • Large barometer outside a pub in Moseley on 12th December 2020 in Birmingham, United Kingdom. A barometer is a scientific instrument that is used to measure air pressure in a certain environment. Pressure tendency can forecast short term changes in the weather.
    20201210_barometer_001.jpg
  • After a week of snow and ice, an employee uses a pressure hose to wash down a dirty pavement at the side entrance of the Wolseley Brasserie opposite the Ritz in Arlington Street, on 5th March 2018, in London, England.
    hosing_pavement-02-05-03-2018.jpg
  • A pressure gauge inside the boiler room of a modern office building in central London UK.
    UK-Building-boiler-room-pressure-gau...jpg
  • Near the junction of the 400 to Buckhead, the 401 highway divides and splits during afternoon rush-hour traffic which slows and builds up so that vehicles and cars back-up as they head home and out of Downtown Atlanta, Georgia. The inner median is coned off during some construction work which slows the traffic even more. Crossing the 5-lane road comes a train of Atlanta's own mass-transit system, the MARTA network and it approaches the overpass with care. We see the infrastructure of a modern metropolis at the busiest time of day when the exodus to get home puts the roads and feeder lanes under the most pressure. Fortunately, the weather is fine with good visibility making drivers' journeys a little shorter and more tolerable but it shows too America’s habit and dependency on car culture.
    atlanta_traffic11-10-1995_1.jpg
  • A conservator with City of London contractor Rupert Harris Conservation, uses a pressure jet spray to hose off  urban grime the statue of Victorian philanthropist, entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869). As part of a rolling programme of maintenance and cleaning by the Square Mile's governing Corporation, historic items - from statues and plaques to other pieces of historic value are regularly attended to.
    statue_cleaning06-09-02-2015_1.jpg
  • A conservator with City of London contractor Rupert Harris Conservation, uses a pressure jet spray to hose off  urban grime the statue of Victorian philanthropist, entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869). As part of a rolling programme of maintenance and cleaning by the Square Mile's governing Corporation, historic items - from statues and plaques to other pieces of historic value are regularly attended to.
    statue_cleaning05-09-02-2015_1.jpg
  • A detail of a computerized weather chart showing atmospheric pressure isobars across western Europe on 16/9/91 at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), Reading, UK. ECMWF  is an international organisation supported by 31 States, based in England, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Austria, Portugal, Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, Turkey, United Kingdom. Its role is “to provide monthly and seasonal-to-interannual forecasts; to deliver real-time analyses and forecasts of atmospheric composition; to carry out climate monitoring through regular re-analyses of the Earth-system and to contribute towards the optimization of the Global Observing System.” Source: http://www.ecmwf.int/
    weather_chart02-16-09-1991_1_1.jpg
  • With a grimace on her pained face, a female Officer Cadet at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst splashes through a water obstacle during  an endurance race. Recruits are running a 5 mile steeplechase around the Academy grounds to assess individual stamina and accumulate team points. Sandhurst is an institution which has bred staff officers since 1800. Today it trains future officers for the demands of leadership and military understanding of military understanding. Students are tested for their command instincts, intellect, strength of character and physical endurance often under great psychological pressure - the demands asked of them in modern warfare. Failure in this test might not necessarily mean dismissal though perseverance or refusal to give up won't harm their prospects.
    sandhurst_cadet04-12-1996.jpg
  • An Officer Cadet at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst is loaded into the back of a British Army Land Rover ambulance to join the downfacing trainers of a collapsed colleague, after retiring  from an endurance race. Recruits run a 5 mile steeplechase around the Academy grounds to assess individual stamina and accumulate team points. Sandhurst is an institution which has bred staff officers since 1800. Today it trains future officers for the demands of leadership and military understanding of military understanding,. Students are tested for their command instincts, intellect, strength of character and physical endurance often under great psychological pressure - the demands asked of them in modern warfare. Failure in this test might not necessarily mean dismissal though perserverence or refusal to give up won't harm their prospects.
    army02-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • The prison nurse takes the blood pressure of an inmate in the prison medical unit. HM Prison Askham Grange is a women's open category prison, located in Askham Richard village in North Yorkshire, England. The prison is run by Her Majesty's Prison Service. Askham Grange accepts adult females and female young offenders, and has space for ten mothers to maintain full-time care of their child or children whilst in custody. Inmates tend to have already served three years or more in other prisons, and are transferred to Askham Grange to complete the last part (maximum three years) of their sentence. Because of this the prisons main focus is the re-integration and re-settlement of prisoners into the community and preparation for life after prison. Accommodation in the prison consists mainly of dormitories, though there are some single rooms. All prisoners in the Mother and Baby unit have their own rooms. The prison's education department mainly concentrates on vocational skills, and many prisoners are given work-placements outside the prison as part of their re-settlement plan.
    08-hmpaskham_7440_1.jpg
  • A masseuse pushes the sore back of a street patient during the demonstration of an Anma acupressure treatment in a central London street. Anma is Japanese for 'press and rub'. Matching the stance of the practitioner wearing a blue tunic who puts his weight forward into the pressure point of the lumbar area, a young mother holds on to the pushchair of her young child. There are many different methods in Anma, including massage, acupressure, stretching But it is important to note that there are many different versions of anma. Many massage therapists in the west have adapted this old technique to work with their more modern methods. Most common is the stretching, pulling, and pulling of affected areas. This is done to try and achieve the release of muscle tension that in return will help to encourage the proper blood flow and lymph flow.
    street_massage1-30-09-2011_1_1.jpg
  • India. Orissa. Sambalpur. September 2012. Dr Shiva's downtown eye clinic. An ophthalmic assistant takes blood pressure.
    ind1_5215_1.jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller leaves the Supreme Court under close protection after the second day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 18th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful.
    20190918_supreme court gina miller00...jpg
  • Detail of NATS air traffic controller's hand and radio trigger in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. A guiding hand and radio intercom control is seen in detail. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc124-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • A female passenger leans forward with head in hands amid the busy terminal at Chicago O'Hare Airport, Illinois, USA. Fellow-travellers in the background appear unworried, waiting for their respective flights in a calm manner. The lady in the foreground's body language however, suggests fatigue and distress and perhaps a fear of flying. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903.
    aviation_corbis52-10-11-2000_1.jpg
  • An environmental activist is arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-10-16-10-2019.jpg
  • Two environmental activists protest about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-14-16-10-2019.jpg
  • An environmental activist is dragged and arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-11-16-10-2019.jpg
  • An environmental activist is lies on the ground after being arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-08-16-10-2019.jpg
  • An environmental activist is arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-09-16-10-2019.jpg
  • An environmental activist is dragged and arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-06-16-10-2019.jpg
  • A environmental activist is arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-05-16-10-2019.jpg
  • Environmental activists are arrested while protesting about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-04-16-10-2019.jpg
  • A Quaker environmental activist from Exeter is arrested while protest about Climate Change during the blockade of Whitehall in central London, part of a two-week prolonged worldwide protest by members of Extinction Rebellion, on 16th October 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    extinction_rebellion-01-16-10-2019.jpg
  • Action by Stop Killing Londoners, Cut Air Pollution campaign on 30th October 2017 in central London, England, United Kingdom. The campaign aims to draw attention to the poor air quality of London and the effect of this on peoples health. For one hour seven activists sat in the road on Tower Bridge, London, stopping traffic. Seven people were arrested. Police take down details on ipads before making arrests.
    skl_8137_1.jpg
  • Action by Stop Killing Londoners, Cut Air Pollution campaign on 30th October 2017 in central London, England, United Kingdom. The campaign aims to draw attention to the poor air quality of London and the effect of this on peoples health. For one hour seven activists sat in the road on Tower Bridge, London, stopping traffic. Seven people were arrested.
    skl_8050_1.jpg
  • Action by Stop Killing Londoners, Cut Air Pollution campaign on 30th October 2017 in central London, England, United Kingdom. The campaign aims to draw attention to the poor air quality of London and the effect of this on peoples health. For one hour seven activists sat in the road on Tower Bridge, London, stopping traffic. Seven people were arrested.
    skl_8093_1.jpg
  • 1990s traders look stressful on a city trading floor, on 29th March 1996, in London, England.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_5.jpg
  • 1990s traders look stressful on a city trading floor, on 29th March 1996, in London, England.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_4.jpg
  • An upside down man remains balanced on his head in a public park - one in a sequence of four - on 19th July 2017, in Ruskin Park, south London borough of Lambeth, England.
    handstand_man-03-19-07-2017.jpg
  • A local fisherman using a jetwash hoses down the seawater off shellfish pots overlooking the harbour, on 14th July 2017, at Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England.
    scarborough-02-14-07-2017.jpg
  • Support struts of Heathrow airport's control tower, London. Barbed wire prevents intruders from attempting to climb the 87 metre high structure in the middle of the airfield. Designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and opened in 2007, the NATS tower oversees 1,350 aircraft movements a day at Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc412-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc366-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc363-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc329-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc319-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc308-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. The back of the head of the controller is seen as he looks out of the panoramic window. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc138-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • An employee with 1990s weather chart technology at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), Reading, UK. ECMWF is an international organisation supported by 31 States, its role is “to provide monthly and seasonal-to-interannual forecasts; to deliver real-time analyses and forecasts of atmospheric composition; to carry out climate monitoring through regular re-analyses of the Earth-system and to contribute towards the optimization of the Global Observing System.”
    meteorology_90s3-16-09-1991_1.jpg
  • Detail of the catapult that propels F-A/18 fighters from the deck of the US Navy's Harry S Truman aircraft carrier whilst on exercise somewhere in the Persian Gulf. The cable drives $38 million F/A-18s fighters off the ship's deck and into the air from a standing position. The angled flight decks of the carriers use a CATOBAR arrangement to operate aircraft, with steam catapults and arrestor wires for launch and recovery. The Truman is the largest and newest of the US Navy's fleet of new generation carriers, a 97,000 ton floating city with a crew of  5,137, 650 are women.
    US_navy_carrier02-07-01-2003_1_1.jpg
  • Visitors stand on ancient graffiti-covered rocks in Saguaro National Park, outside of Tucson Arizona. Saguaro is usually thought of as a Cactus sanctuary but these tourists stand on and clamber over the natural rock formation. The oldest rocks found in the area, although not directly in the park, are granites and metamorphic rocks which represent the original crust of Southern Arizona. These rocks are approximately 1.7 billion years old and belong to an era of geologic time known as the Precambian. The metamorphic rocks are mostly schist
    saguaro_park_rocks12-15-08-1998.jpg
  • The solitary figure of a man stands on the roof of an office building in downtown Atlanta during a victory parade for the city's baseball team. The man may be a security guard, keeping watch over the streets below as crowds gather to honour the Atlanta Braves Baseball team, after their 1995 World Series win. The figure is in his manmade environment and the high walls and windows of the buildings that make up this metropolis dwarf this tiny human who in the scale and perspective of a modern city looks incongruous, isolated and insignificant.
    roof_man01-10-11-1995.jpg
  • We see six office workers silhouetted against the large orange wall of the Credit Lyonnais Bank. They rush to work while one figure stands and talks into his mobile phone, at Broadgate in the City of London, UK. Several figures who are also reduced to black shapes and without detail that may identify them or their clothes, are hurrying in different directions, carrying a bag or briefcase but the feeling of rushing business is seen and their scale is ambiguous becase we don't know how close or far away they are from each other. This is due to telephoto lens forshortening. Some therefore look giants and some appear tiny. Broadgate Estate is a large, 32 acre (129,000 m²) office and retail estate in the City of London, owned by British Land and managed by Broadgate Estates. It was originally built by Rosehaugh and was the largest office development in London until the arrival of Canary Wharf in the early 1990s.
    RB-0182.jpg
  • A Parachute Regiment recruit is in mid-flight and leaps across a wide space between scaffolding and a rope net during the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme. Seen in silhouette, the man is in full stretch, half-way between the gantry he leapt from and the rope net that he is about to meet. It is an image that describes a mid-point, a half-way position between safety and uncertainty. Known as the Trainasium, it is an 'Aerial Confidence Course' which is unique to P Company. In order to assess his suitability for military parachuting, the Trainasium tests a candiates ability to overcome fear and carry out simple activities and instructions at a height above ground level. Recruits wanting to join the British Army's Parachute Regiment held regularly at Catterick army barracks, Yorkshire, need to pass this and other tests before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    RB-0075.jpg
  • Three soldier recruits wearing shorts and black army boots, one with blood trickling down from the knees to the shins, stand at ease, lined up for inspection after the rigorous steeple-chase endurance race, an individual test with candidates running against the clock over a 1.8 mile cross country course. The course features a number of 'water obstacles' and having completed the cross country element, candidates must negotiate and 'Assault Course' to complete the test. This forms part of  the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme. Recruits wanting to join the British Army's Parachute Regiment held regularly at Catterick army barracks, Yorkshire, need to pass this and other tests before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret. A plastic bottle of water stands between recruit number three (3) and six (6).
    RB-0073.jpg
  • A boy soldier collapses on the ground suffering fatigue and dehydration on the rigorous 10-mile march conducted as a squad, over undulatiing terrain with each candidate carrying a bergen (back pack) weighing 35 pounds.(plus water) and a weapon. Three senior trainers help revive the lad with smelling salts who fell under the weight of his backpack and weapon carried on a hot day and without drinking enough fluids. The march must be completed in 1 hour and 50 minutes. This forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme. Recruits wanting to join the British Army's Parachute Regiment held regularly at Catterick army barracks, Yorkshire need to pass this and other tests before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    RB-0070.jpg
  • We see two office workers silhouetted against the large orange wall  of the Credit Lyonnais Bank, rushing to work through Broadgate in the City of London, UK. The figures are reduced to black shapes and without detail that may identify them or their clothes, are hurrying in different directions, one is a lady carrying a bag  but the feeling of rushing business is seen and their scale is ambiguous because  we don't know how close or far away they are from each other. The female therefore looks a  giant and the man, tiny. Broadgate Estate is a large, 32 acre (129,000 m²) office and retail estate in the City of London, owned by British Land and managed by Broadgate Estates. It was originally built by Rosehaugh and was the largest office development in London until the arrival of Canary Wharf in the early 1990s.
    RB_078-18-05-1995.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
  • British army Parachute Regiment recruits are suffering from fatigue on a rigorous forced march conducted as a squad, over undulating terrain with each candidate carrying a Bergen (backpack) weighing 35 pounds (plus water) and a weapon. The lads are slowly buckling under the weight of backpack Bergens and weapons carried on a hot day and without drinking enough fluids. The 10-mile march must be completed in 1 hour and 50 minutes and it forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme that recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, held regularly at Catterick army barracks in Yorkshire, need to pass (with other tests) before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    paras_p_company-30-07-1996.jpg
  • A British army Parachute Regiment recruit is suffering from exhaustion on a rigorous assault course conducted over rough terrain and into water. He emerges dripping from the water jump and back into the forest accompanied by instructors who shout encouragement and abuse to get the candidate to a successful stage of this test. This forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme that recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, held regularly at Catterick army barracks in Yorkshire, need to pass (with other tests) before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    paras_course-30-07-1996.jpg
  • While being shouted and screamed at by a tattooed instructor, a squad of 8 soldier recruits experience the extreme exhaustion and stress during an army team event in which they haul a log (a telegraph pole) weighing 60 kg over 1.9 miles (3.1 km) of undulating terrain. Candidates wear only a numbered helmet and webbing but all their energies must go into performing as a team and completing the course in the time allotted. This is supposed to be one of the hardest events of what the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme. Recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment held regularly at Catterick army barracks, Yorkshire need to pass this and other tests before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    p_company03-30-07-1996.jpg
  • A boy soldier has collapsed on the ground suffering from fatigue and dehydration on a rigorous march conducted as a squad of soldier recruits, over undulating terrain with each candidate carrying a bergen (back pack) weighing 35 pounds (plus water) and a weapon. Two senior trainers haul the buy up who fell under the weight of his backpack and weapon carried on a hot day and without drinking enough fluids. The 10-mile march must be completed in 1 hour and 50 minutes and it forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme that recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, held regularly at Catterick army barracks in Yorkshire, need to pass (with other tests) before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    p_company02-30-07-1996.jpg
  • A boy soldier is about to collapse on the ground suffering fatigue and dehydration on the rigorous long march conducted as a squad, over undulating terrain with each candidate carrying a Bergen (backpack) weighing 35 pounds (plus water) and a weapon. The lad is buckling under the weight of his backpack and weapon carried on a hot day and without drinking enough fluids. The 10-mile march must be completed in 1 hour and 50 minutes and it forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme that recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, held regularly at Catterick army barracks in Yorkshire, need to pass (with other tests) before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    p_company01-30-07-1996.jpg
  • Beneath the giant, solid pillars of the Bank of England in the heart of London’s financial district – the ancient Square Mile – a man dressed in a traditional pinstripe suit has stopped to make a phone call or check for messages. Halting his journey along this street he has opted to stand in line with a traffic no waiting cone and also near double-yellow lines that restrict parking or stopping. Without the cone or lines this scene would otherwise be without colour - the columns of this financial institution and the pavement (sidewalk) are drab – so the welcome yellow gives this picture more interest. We only see the man from the rear view and so he remains anonymous, a small person set against the scale of a large-scale financial landscape.
    city_gent_bank-29-06-1993_1.jpg
  • A young trader in currencies leans back in his chair on the currency trading floor of Barclays Bank in the City of London, England, UK. Easing back during the stress of a day when the money markets have been volatile, this young man has the responsibilities of millions of Pounds Sterling to trade and value. He has old technology at his disposal, in the decade when technology made a big impression on the workplace but before the arrival of the internet and e-mail. Communication was therefore slow and unreliable although banks like Barclays who traded money across the world were skilled in migrating information across time-zones.
    city_banker07-16-1998_1.jpg
  • In the foreground we see the strong forearm of a British army soldier whose blood group O-Negative has been tattooed in large letters beneath an image of a Japanese Geisha girl. He also wears a watch with aq green strap matching his working army fatigues uniform. Behind him are two part-time territorial army conscripts who are sitting on their  army-issued rucksack Bergens awaiting further orders to serve on active duty from Sandhurst military academy to the Balkans during Operation Resolute, the  National Support Element to support NATO action. The dominating figure in the foreground stands upright though we don't see his face. His two conscripts sit on the ground looking dejected or perhaps worried about their forthcoming duties. They are still in civillian clothing, jeans and t-shirts but will soon change into uniform.
    army06-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Wearing a large green helmet with the number 26 painted on the front, a worried-looking black soldier recruit gazes into the distance in front of a white army  instructor at the large Garrison at Catterick, England. Here, the Parachute Regiment (The Paras) - hold part of their famous basic training programme called Pegasus (P) Company. The most notorious selection procedure in the British Army. After initial recruitment, each student is sent to either pass or fail a set of 9 events from which a total score of 90 points is possible. 58% or more passes, less fails. Events like the 18 mile Forced March followed by a further 5 miles can earn 10 points though this will inevitably prove too much for many young man, desperate to pass P Company and earn his prestigious beret (Like the Foreign Legion).
    army05-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Four members of the Royal Gurkha Rifles are on tactical manoeuvres on heathland above Farnborough airfield, England. These Nepali-born boys belong to an elite Regiment of the British army. Every year 60,000 boys attend recruiting sessions in villages and towns in the Himalayan Kingdom but only 150 are selected each year to serve on active duty across the world. They fly to the UK for basic soldier training where they learn the skills required for infantry, transport, communications or clerical duties. Their reputation as a fierce but intensely loyal fighting force and many Victoria Crosses were won for bravery during World War 2. Here they are seen cradling modern SA-80 rifles while dressed in camouflaged helmets with oak leaves. The nearest to the camera points his weapon past the viewer with a yellow blank cover attached.
    army04-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Foire Gras and dairy farming family's women experience hardships together during breakfast at their home in Alsace. The Kesslers live on the farm in the quiet village of Boofzheim in Alsace, France. Their business is producing Foie Gras and they raise force-fed ducks near the German border region. The youngest member is their daughter with head in her hands. Beside her, her mother reads the local newspaper by the window and her grandmother who has just served breakfast. The family farm produces the French delicacy called Foie Gras so early mornings and long days are required. France produces and consumes the most Foie Gras in Europe using the French Gavage method of forcing ducks or geese to consume vast quantities of corn mash down the oesophagus two weeks before slaughter.
    alsace_family01-13-10-1997_1.jpg
  • Youngsters wearing cartoon costumes usher in the first week of summer vacation by attending an Anime festival and enjoying a rare opportunity of carefree fun in Shanghai, China on 03 July 2009.  Chinese youth face one of the toughest school system and most unrealistic parental expectation level in the world, a recent survey showed that three-quarters of parents expect their children to achieve scores above 90%, and almost one in ten expects their children to achieve perfect scores in all subjects.
    QS090703Shanghai009.jpg
  • A teenage boy wearing a samurai costume attends an Anime and Cosplay festival and enjoys a rare opportunity of carefree fun in Shanghai, China on 03 July 2009.  Chinese youth face one of the toughest school system and most unrealistic parental expectation level in the world, a recent survey showed that three-quarters of parents expect their children to achieve scores above 90%, and almost one in ten expects their children to achieve perfect scores in all subjects.
    QS090703Shanghai008.jpg
  • Youngsters dressed in cartoon costumes play a shooter video game at an Anime and Cosplay festival and enjoying a rare opportunity of carefree fun in Shanghai, China on 03 July 2009.  Chinese youth face one of the toughest school system and most unrealistic parental expectation level in the world, a recent survey showed that three-quarters of parents expect their children to achieve scores above 90%, and almost one in ten expects their children to achieve perfect scores in all subjects.
    QS090703Shanghai006.jpg
  • Performing an acupressure foot massage, a traditional Chinese medicine technique.
    07-foot_7580.jpg
  • A Buddhist man on silent retreat in a private cabin at the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, East Sussex, England. As the last light from a summer's day fades into night, the cabin (a converted garden shed), the practicing Buddhist stands against the internal lamp light, pausing to think and contemplate about his life and its meaning. Long grass from a private meadow is for the sole use of someone in retreat, a period of a few days or perhaps a week, separated from the pressures of modern life. Rivendell was once a Victorian country rectory for the local vicar in this East Sussex village, it now houses facilities for the spiritual and the peaceful, having escaped for a brief time, the pressures of modern life. Beyond are two Buddhas on a tapestry and as a statue. The community web address is www.rivendellretreatcentre.com.
    buddhist_retreat153-27-06-2010_1.jpg
  • An early morning swimmer bathes in the unheated pool of the Grade II listed  Brockwell Brixton Lido in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, 25th August 1995, in London, England. The Lido is an oasis for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Brockwell Lido is a large, open air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 but after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994. Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Councils Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond.
    lido_swimmer-25-08-1995_1.jpg
  • The Rt. Hon. Tony Blair MP, as Leader of the Opposition, stares in deep thought whilst on a train en-route to an evening Labour Party rally in Nottingham, 2 years before his victory in the 1997 General Election that eventually made him British Prime Minister. Blair is with an unknown Downing Street assistant and is has been reading the London Evening Standard newspaper in the First Class carriage at a time when fellow-passengers take little notice of the future controversial world statesman. Then, he could travel in relative obscurity, without large security details. Blair is wearing a blue shirt with a sober, patterned tie and his hair is still dark without the greyness that would appear rapidly when the pressures of office prematurely aged him. It is dark outside and we see no detail through the window of the vast Victorian mainline station outside.
    RB-0165.jpg
  • A Supermarine Spitfire awaits refuelling with Avgas 100LL fuel at Farnborough International Airshow media launch. The pilot is the air show's Flight Operations Director Rod Dean who stands on the wing of this old WW2 warbird fighter of the British Royal Air Force and the refueller man has unhooked the nozzle from the bowser and hauls it across the concrete towards the aircraft. Hazardous and flammable signs are on the truck's rear. Avgas 100LL is a fuel designed for piston engines and is the most commonly used aviation fuel, dyed blue for easy visual identification. 100LL, spoken as "100 low lead", contains a small amount of tetra-ethyl lead (TEL), a lead compound that reduces gasoline's tendency to spontaneously explode (detonation or "knock") under high loads, high temperatures and high pressures - perfect for aerobatic performance flying.
    farnborough_spitfire06-12-05-2010_1.jpg
  • Buddhists meditate in silence for 30 minutes in their Shrine Room at the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, England. A middle-aged man and a younger woman sit in a meditative cross-legged position in order to relax their bodies and free their minds for this period of inner-contemplation. Their retreat centre is a Victorian house now run by the Triratna Buddhist Community. Once a Victorian country rectory for the local vicar in this East Sussex village, it now houses facilities for the spiritual and the peaceful, having escaped for a brief time, the pressures of modern life. Beyond are two Buddhas on a tapestry and as a statue. The community web address is www.rivendellretreatcentre.com.
    buddhist_retreat70-27-06-2010_1.jpg
  • Many racial groups enjoy the pleasures of outdoor in the unheated pool of  the Grade II listed  Brockwell (Brixton) Lido in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. Wearing a straw hat, necklace and hanging sunglasses, a young afro-Caribbean man sunbathes near a blonde white girl who looks over her shoulder. Brockwell Lido is a large, open air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994. Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Council's Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond.
    brockwell_lido02-25-08-1995_2.jpg
  • Two young British Asian men stand in front of a Bollywood action hero poster, while waiting for a bus in Southhall, West London, England. The lads are in their early twenties and are dressed against the cold European winter. The muscular Indian man in the movie poster is in his prime, posing as a tough guy and making a serious face towards the viewer, his rippling biceps wet with sweat. We see two ordinary young men living the harsh reality of life in a big English city, with all the pressures, paradoxes and cultural differences of India or Bangladesh, and that of multicultural Britain. It may be sunny but the biting winter day is raw with cold.
    london_asians07-30-08-2007.jpg
  • Buddhists meditate in silence for 30 minutes in their Shrine Room at the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, England. A middle-aged man and a younger woman sit in a meditative cross-legged position in order to relax their bodies and free their minds for this period of inner-contemplation. In the middle on a polished parkay floor is a model of their retreat centre, a house now run by the Triratna Buddhist Community. Once a Victorian country rectory for the local vicar in this East Sussex village, it now houses facilities for the spiritual and the peaceful, having escaped for a brief time, the pressures of modern life. Beyond are two Buddhas on a tapestry and as a statue. The community web address is www.rivendellretreatcentre.com.
    buddhist_retreat112-27-06-2010_1.jpg
  • Crowds enjoy the warmth of a summer’s heat wave within the confines of  Brockwell (Brixton) Lido. These Londoners have escape the street and unwind during a warm spell of weather and before another day of city heat. They swim and bathe in the chilly waters of this unheated pool. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. In the centre, a mother helps her young daughter up from the cool morning water before another hot day in August. Brockwell Lido is a large, open-air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994.
    brockwell_lido03-25-08-1995_1_1.jpg
  • Seen from the roof, we see an aerial perspective of an early morning swim for many south London locals as they bathe in the unheated pool of  the Grade II listed  Brockwell (Brixton) Lido in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. In the centre, a mother helps her young daughter up from the cool morning water before another hot day in August. Brockwell Lido is a large, open air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994. Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Council's Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond.
    brockwell_lido01-25-08-1995_2.jpg
  • A 1990s Afro-Caribbean mother and her child enjoy the August heatwave in the unheated waters of the Grade II listed  Brockwell Brixton Lido in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, 25th August 1995, in London, England. The Lido is an oasis for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Brockwell Lido is a large, open air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 but after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994. Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Councils Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond.
    lido_swimmer-25-08-1995.jpg
  • Empty rigid-design gas holders architecture at the Oval, South London. The steel frames are seen against an afternoon sky at Oval, in south London - their strengthening architecture showing how the gasometer design has been an effective method storing gas for a hundred years. The Oval Gasholders at The Oval cricket ground, in spite of no longer being used, are now a grade 2 listed structure. Typical volumes for large gasholders are about 50,000 cubic metres, with 60 metre diameter structures. Gasholders tend to be used nowadays for balancing purposes (making sure gas pipes can be operated within a safe range of pressures) rather than for actually storing gas for later use.
    gas_holders01-30-11-2014_1.jpg
  • A family relax in late-afternoon sunshine and wood smoke in a quiet field at Woodland Tipi and Yurt Holidays near Little Dewchurch, Herefordshire. We see the sun shining through pine trees and long shadows stretching through the fresh grass where camping seats and a camp-fire is billowing clouds of smoke, just like in the days of cowboys and indians. The holidaymakers are staying in 17 acres of an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, experiencing the peace and tranquillity of tipi and yurt camping in their own private, secluded valley - an ever-increasingly popular holiday adventure that is both green and carbon neutral since they are not using electricity for heating or cars to travel. It is also a stress-free lifestyle, away from the pressures of work and urban life, where travellers can unwind safe in the knowledge they are helping the environment.
    wales_pembrokeshire14-30-07-2007_1_1.jpg
  • A Supermarine Spitfire awaits refuelling with Avgas 100LL fuel at Farnborough International Airshow media launch. The pilot is the air show's Flight Operations Director Rod Dean who stands on the wing of this old WW2 warbird fighter of the British Royal Air Force, before the refueller man unhooks the nozzle from the bowser and hauls it across the concrete towards the aircraft. Hazardous and flammable signs are on the truck's rear. Avgas 100LL is a fuel designed for piston engines and is the most commonly used aviation fuel, dyed blue for easy visual identification. 100LL, spoken as "100 low lead", contains a small amount of tetra-ethyl lead (TEL), a lead compound that reduces gasoline's tendency to spontaneously explode (detonation or "knock") under high loads, high temperatures and high pressures - perfect for aerobatic performance flying.
    farnborough_spitfire03-12-05-2010_1.jpg
  • Buddhists meditate in silence for 30 minutes in their Shrine Room at the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, England. A middle-aged man and a younger woman sit in a meditative cross-legged position in order to relax their bodies and free their minds for this period of inner-contemplation. In front of the couple is a model of their retreat centre, a house now run by the Triratna Buddhist Community. Once a Victorian country rectory for the local vicar in this East Sussex village, it now houses facilities for the spiritual and the peaceful, having escaped for a brief time, the pressures of modern life. Beyond are two Buddhas on a tapestry and as a statue. The community web address is www.rivendellretreatcentre.com.
    buddhist_retreat62-27-06-2010_1.jpg
  • Chips, burgers and fast-food is popular at the outdoor the Grade II listed  Brockwell (Brixton) Lido in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. A rather overweight young man takes some plastic cutlery after dousing his fries in ketchup as others queue for food. Brockwell Lido is a large, open air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994. Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Council's Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond.
    brockwell_lido03-25-08-1995_2.jpg
  • Regular swimmers and bathers enjoy quieter lengths at Brockwell (Brixton) Lido before crowds arrive. After a 6.30am summer opening time, these Londoners escape the crowds and unwind during a warm spell of weather and before another day of city heat. They swim and bathe in the chilly waters of this unheated pool. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. In the centre, a mother helps her young daughter up from the cool morning water before another hot day in August. Brockwell Lido is a large, open-air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994.
    brockwell_lido02-25-08-1995_1_1.jpg
  • An early morning regular swimmer swims solitary lengths at Brockwell (Brixton) Lido before crowds arrive. After a 6.30am summer opening time, this Londoner likes to escape the crowds and unwind during a warm spell of weather and before another day of city heat. She swims many lengths of breast stroke (American crawl) in the chilly waters of this unheated pool. The Lido is a magnet, an oasis, for city dwellers to escape, if only for an hour from the pressures of fast urban life. Many enjoy the benefits of outdoor bathing and the friendship of meeting old friends. In the centre, a mother helps her young daughter up from the cool morning water before another hot day in August. Brockwell Lido is a large, open-air swimming pool in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, London. It opened in July 1937, closed in 1990 and after a local campaign was re-opened in 1994.
    brockwell_lido01-25-08-1995_1_1.jpg
  • Liu Yu Peng,16 (left) with friends, is in high-school (equivalent of lower sixth) and is preparing for her mid-semester exam (the Chinese equivalent of A levels) She hopes to get the grades to go to the China Communication University - the most prestigious place in China to study media. Her father is a driving instructor and her mother, a clothes shop manager and she lives with them both in Beijing. Yu Peng says that many of her friends suffer from depression because of the pressures put on them. ..Its over thirty years (1978) since the Mao's Chinese government brought in the One Child Policy in a bid to control the world's biggest, growing population. It has been successful, in controlling growth, but has led to other problems. E.G. a gender in-balance with a projected 30 million to many boys babies; Labour shortages and a lack of care for the elderly.
    china_onechild_12_1.jpg
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