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  • A pile of lunchtime litter is added to by a City worker outside the Bank of England during the 2018 heatwave in the City of London, the capitals historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-33-02-08-2018.jpg
  • A pile of lunchtime litter is added to by a City worker outside the Bank of England during the 2018 heatwave in the City of London, the capitals historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-32-02-08-2018.jpg
  • Pile of logs from pine trees which have been cut down as part of forest management on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_logs_002.jpg
  • Pile of logs from pine trees which have been cut down as part of forest management on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_logs_001.jpg
  • Broken green glass lying in a pile on double-yellow lines in a south London gutter, on 2nd October September 2016, at the National Gallery, London, England.
    gutter_glass-01-02-10-2016.jpg
  • Gardening fork and spade shovel leaning up on a pile of manure, organic community farming project, Devon, UK
    _MG_9632_1.jpg
  • Sitting on garden seats, a seaside couple enjoy ice creams near broken building materials in the resort of Sandown. A decaying pile of rubble and building bricks have been left on the ground where visitors and tourists sit on their holiday making for a grim and depressing experience and dystopic landscape. This is the seaside resort of Sandown on the Isle of Wight, twinned (jumelée in French) with the town of Tonnay-Charente, in the western French département of Charente-Maritime. Its American twin town is St. Pete Beach, Florida.
    derelict_beach-18-06-1989_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012.  Village near Bouar. Boy with catapault next to pile of firewood.
    car7_4247_1.jpg
  • Pile of logs from pine trees which have been cut down as part of forest management on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_logs_004.jpg
  • Pile of logs from pine trees which have been cut down as part of forest management on the Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom.
    20170101_logs_003.jpg
  • Mural outside a burger restaurant in East London, UK. Unfortunately positioned by a pile of rubbish bags.
    20150421_burger rubbish_A.jpg
  • Young man cutting wood with a chainsaw with no shirt on next to a pile of timber, community farm, Devon, UK
    IMG_9734_1.jpg
  • A 14 year-old teenage boy jumps down off a pile of logs during a countryside walk with his pet dog. After running along the tops of the logs, being stored by a local landowner on a countryside path, the lad balances on the timber as he descends to the ground again. His dog is a muddy terrier cross who relishes the outing as much as the boy who is demonstrating a sense of adventure and boyhood in the great outdoors.
    sam_logs01-08-04-2012.jpg
  • One shovel-full of road grit has been left in a small pile at the kerb of a side road in East Dulwich, South London. Left by workers from the borough of Southwark, this modest supply is symbolic of the controversial problem of local government running low on street grits and salts that help prevent thousands of traffic collisions and pedestrian falls every winter. In January of 2010 (following the equally snow fall of February 2009) councils were caught unprepared for adverse weather which virtually brought towns and cities and rural communities to a standstill. We look down at the fallen snow, trodden by countless pairs of boots which compress the snow and make it an often treacherous surface on which to tread.
    london_snows32-13-01-2010.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_G.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_F.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_E.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_D.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_C.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_B.jpg
  • Installing Geothermal International’s ‘Energy Pile’ ground source heat pumps at a building in the City of London.
    11-geothermal-0577.jpg
  • Installing Geothermal International’s ‘Energy Pile’ ground source heat pumps at a building in the City of London.
    11-geothermal-0436.jpg
  • Installing Geothermal International’s ‘Energy Pile’ ground source heat pumps at a building in the City of London. One of the workers cleans the drill before it goes back in the ground.
    11-geothermal-0361.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter at Blackfriars, London, UK. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London.
    20140531_rubbish_A.jpg
  • Installing Geothermal International’s ‘Energy Pile’ ground source heat pumps at a building in the City of London.
    11-geothermal-0673.jpg
  • Installing Geothermal International’s ‘Energy Pile’ ground source heat pumps at a building in the City of London.
    11-geothermal-0321.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2329_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2332_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2353_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2328_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2326_1.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2325_1.jpg
  • Street scene of delievery men dropping off piles of free newspapers in the City of London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160421_city of london scene_003.jpg
  • Disused wooden piles at Salen Pier, Salen, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The mailboat service from Oban to Mull traditionally called at Salen pier en route to Tobermory and many people still have fond memories of the Lochinvar.  From 1964 the new ferries required bigger piers and Craignure was established as the main ferry terminus. Salen (Scottish Gaelic: An t-Sàilean) is a settlement on the Isle of Mull, Scotland. It is on the east coast of the island, on the Sound of Mull, approximately halfway between Craignure and Tobermory. The full name of the settlement is 'Sàilean Dubh Chaluim Chille' (the black little bay of St Columba).
    isle_of_mull308-21-11-2011_1.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter opposite the Houses of Parliament, central London. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London. Tourists gather her to take pictures. The result of so may people is plain to see.
    25042011litter rubbish trashC.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter on Regent Street, central London. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London. People out shopping walk past and their reaction is plain to see.
    23042011litter rubbish trashB.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter on Regent Street, central London. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London. People out shopping walk past and their reaction is plain to see.
    23042011litter rubbish trashA.jpg
  • A landscape of sea salt mountains extracted from salt pans, on 19th October 2016, in Gruissan, France. The traditional industry around Gruissan is salt making - it is the residue of evaporated sea water. The salt from Saint Martins saltern is the result of a salt marsh technique, which dates back to Antiquity. You can see the fields of salt water and piles of brown and white salt - called camelles because of their resemblance to the humps of camels. Salt pans cover a total surface area of almost 400 hectares between the sea and the island of St Martin. The harvest has grown from around 5 tons in 1912, to more than 30,000 tons today, in a good year. Water from the sea is pumped into the salt pans in spring. It evaporates during the summer, and salt is harvested in autumn.  The salt, much prized, is called Fleur de sel.
    _E6A2331_1.jpg
  • Overflowing bin and litter opposite the Houses of Parliament, central London. At certain times, especially weekends and public holidays, the volume of people in the area generates a big problem with trash. Rubbish piles high in certain places and proves unsightly for such an important area of London. Tourists gather her to take pictures. The result of so may people is plain to see.
    25042011litter rubbish trashD.jpg
  • Detail of logs and timbers in a traditional Slovenian barn in a rural village, on 19th June 2018, in Bohinjska Bela, Bled, Slovenia.
    slovenia-93-19-06-2018.jpg
  • Detail of logs in a traditional Slovenian barn in a rural village, on 19th June 2018, in Bohinjska Bela, Bled, Slovenia.
    slovenia-106-19-06-2018.jpg
  • A locked bike in a rack next to dog faeces outside an apartment building in Wedding, a north-western district of Berlin. The pink bicycle is locked to the red rack against a pink tiled wall, standing on cobbles in a more downmarket area, home to non-germans and immigrants.
    berlin_bike02-06-04-2013_1.jpg
  • One of the main dumpsites for Mombassa, Kenya. Many children can be found at the dumpsite collecting metals and plastic. Wema, a NGO organisation supporting vulnerable children, supports the local School and aims to remove the children from the dumpsite.  The school has 807 pupils and 16 teachers.
    11-wema-7732.jpg
  • One of the main dumpsites for Mombassa, Kenya. Many children can be found at the dumpsite collecting metals and plastic. Wema, a NGO organisation supporting vulnerable children, supports the local School and aims to remove the children from the dumpsite.  The school has 807 pupils and 16 teachers.
    11-wema-7725.jpg
  • A small cairns, man-made stack of stones, marks the trail for hikers along the path up the western side of Helvellyn Mountain, Lake District, Cumbria, UK.  Behind the carins is stunning green valleys of Wythburn and Armboth Fells and Thirlmere reservoir.  Helvellyn is the third-highest point in England and is located in the beautiful Lake District National Park and part of the Eastern Fells.
    UK-Tourism-Lake-District-8976.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state German Democratic Republic, a brown coal delivery man stops to shovel his polluting fossil fuel into local cellars, on 15th June 1990, in Aue, Saxony. Aue is a mining town in the Ore Mountains known for its copper, titanium, and kaolinite. The town was a machine-building and cutlery manufacturing centre in the East German era with a population of roughly 18,000 inhabitants. It was the administrative seat of the former district of Aue-Schwarzenberg in Saxony and part of the Erzgebirgskreis since August 2008.
    GDR_coleman-15-06-1990.jpg
  • A detail of sourdough bread loaves at an artisanal bakery, on 20th April 2000, in London, England.
    bread_loaves-20-04-2000.jpg
  • A tipper pours aggregates at a facility owned by the construction company, Hanson, on 17th April 1999, in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
    hanson_industry-17-04-1999_5.jpg
  • A tipper works on removing aggregates from a facility owned by the construction company, Hanson, on 17th April 1999, in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
    hanson_industry-17-04-1999_4.jpg
  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a lady shovels East German Lignite coal briketts left outside her home, on 1st June 1990, in Aue, Saxony, eastern Germany former DDR. The coal was delivered as Briketts and was either Lignite or Braunkohle, imported from either Poland or northern Czech Republic.
    DDR_coal_lady-01-06-1990.jpg
  • Household objects scrap metal await recycling on rural land, on 30th July 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    scrap_metal-01-30-07-2017.jpg
  • A Dont Dump sign on a wall above discarded street rubbish, on 11th January 2017, in London, England. Nearly half the population 48 per cent admit to dropping litter and 30 million tonnes of litter are collected in the UK every year at a cost of £1bn but a Mori poll in July 2007 found the public more concerned about litter and graffiti than they were about climate change.
    dumped_rubbish-01-11-01-2017.jpg
  • Oranges for sale at Chiang Dao twice monthly fresh morning market, Chiang Mai province, Thailand. Local hill tribes throng to the market to sell their products and buy necessities.
    DSCF7631_1.jpg
  • Stacks of The Vinyl Factory is the old EMI vinyl works in Uxbridge, Middlesex, producing limited edition vinyls of new releases, plus re-presses of classics. They also act as a distributor of vinyl releases.
    _MG_0380_1.jpg
  • Stacks of newly made vinyl records on a trolley, waiting to be packaged. The Vinyl Factory is the old EMI vinyl works in Uxbridge, Middlesex, producing limited edition vinyls of new releases, plus re-presses of classics. They also act as a distributor of vinyl releases.
    _MG_0371_1.jpg
  • Organic Rocket, Riverford Organics farm, Devon, UK food industry
    _MG_0157_1.jpg
  • Organic Spinach, Riverford Organics farm, Devon, UK food industry
    _MG_0153_1.jpg
  • Logs for firewood and a pair of dirty wellies on the doorstep outside a peasant farmer's home in Botiza, Maramures, Romania.
    41-16_1.jpg
  • Mobile phone left on public transport in 1990, held in the Lost Property office of London Transport.<br />
About 184,000 items are left on London public transport systems every year, and they do the best they can to reunite passengers with their lost belongings!
    _O7F4151.jpg
  • Meat porters drag old carts laden with freshly-butchered meat in Smithfield market. One man’s coat reveals blood stains and one calls to the other as they walk. Meat has been bought and sold at Smithfield for over 800 years, making it one of the oldest markets in London. A livestock market occupied the site as early as the 10th century. Approximately 120,000 tons of produce pass through the market each year. As well as meat and poultry, products such as cheese, pies, and other delicatessen goods are available. Buyers including butchers, restaurateurs and caterers are able see the goods for themselves and drive away with what they have bought. Bargaining between buyers and sellers at Smithfield sets the guidelines for meat and poultry prices throughout the UK.
    smithfield_butchers-16-04-1994_1_1.jpg
  • Central African Republic. August 2012. Bangui outskirts - market with man carring boiled eggs to sell
    car2_2922_1.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
  • Looking at practice baggage of Heathrow airport's Terminal 5. Designed by architects Richard Rogers Partnership the controversial building opened with chaotic scenes on 27/3/08. British Airways passengers faced baggage disruption after a 6 year construction project that has seen the British public divided over the role of commercial aviation. At a cost of £4.3bn, the project was Britain's longest planning inquiry which lasted four years but finally employing a total of 60,000 workers. 30,000 square metres of glass in walls; 80,000 tonnes of steel were used - 17,000 in the roof alone; 5,000 doors, 800 toilets, 20,000 power sockets and 1,700 miles of cable; 60 new aircraft stands, including 14 for the Airbus A380; 13km of tunnels were bored for the state-of-the-art baggage handling to handle 12,000 bags per hour.
    heathrow_terminal_five-07-17-03-2008...jpg
  • A Cabbage stall in the Makongeni market, Thika, Kenya. The market work closely with Afcic, Action for children in conflict, and are trying to encourage the kids to go to school. The manager has banned children from working in the market during school hours.
    11-afcic-0943.jpg
  • British one penny coins stacked up.
    10-studio-8573.jpg
  • British one penny coins stacked up.
    10-studio-8550.jpg
  • British one penny coins stacked up.
    10-studio-8539.jpg
  • Boxes of Braille paper ready to be made into books at the Krousar Thmey School for Deaf and Blind Children. The paper is shipped in from a company in the USA.
    10-cambodia-7570.jpg
  • Farmers stack up their marrows ready to be sold in the Khulna district market, Bangladesh.
    10-Bangladesh-1656.jpg
  • A tipper drops aggregates into a dumpster at a facility owned by Hanson, on 17th April 1999, at Chipping Sodbury, England.
    hanson_industry-17-04-1999_2.jpg
  • Household objects scrap metal await recycling on rural land, on 30th July 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    scrap_metal-06-30-07-2017.jpg
  • A Cabbage stall in the Makongeni market, Thika, Kenya. The market work closely with Afcic, Action for children in conflict, and are trying to encourage the kids to go to school. The manager has banned children from working in the market during school hours.
    11-afcic-0928.jpg
  • A stack of freshly cut logs in sustainable woodland, Suffolk, United Kingdom. This area of the UK is rich in woodland and this wood can provide a sustainable source of heat when used in efficient boilers. This is exactly what local schools are doing thanks to the local council which is managing the resource while supplying wood-fuel for heating. The initiative saves the schools energy, reduces CO2 emissions by 1,200 tonnes a year and cuts their fuel bills by up to 25%.  Suffolk County Council won an Ashden Award for its approach to susatainability.
    10-suffolk-2627.jpg
  • Free Evening Standard newspapers in the City of London, England, United Kingdom.
    20170315_evening standard_001.jpg
  • Early morning rubbish overspilling a litter bin in Dorsoduro, a district of Venice, Italy. The detritus of tourism is left from the previous day but soon to be collected by an army of refuse workers who sweep and clean the city's streets before the day's influx of tourists begins once again. On this street corner, we see drinks bottles and general waste on top of an already overflowing bin, above the ad for swimwear brand Calzedonia. Venice attracts 22-million visitors each year (for a city of only about 60,000 residents) while the cultural protection organisation, Italian Nostra, warns that Venice can only accommodate about 33,000 visitors per day but currently at least 60,000 daily.
    venice_02-21-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Street scene in the City of London, England, United Kingdom.
    20190821_evening standard stacks_001.jpg
  • The faded flowers from the shrine dedicated to those killed in the London Bridge terrorist attack are collected from the pavement and respectfully disposed of, on 26th June 2017, in London, England.
    terrorism_flowers-02-26-06-2017.jpg
  • The faded flowers from the shrine dedicated to those killed in the London Bridge terrorist attack are collected from the pavement and respectfully disposed of, on 26th June 2017, in London, England.
    terrorism_flowers-01-26-06-2017.jpg
  • Free Evening Standard newspapers in the City of London, England, United Kingdom.
    20170315_evening standard_002.jpg
  • Alaba International Market. One of the market's many technicians, his speciality is DVD players in the Alaba International Market.<br />
New and old - and a lot of non-working electronic goods such as TVs and computers come in to the market via Lagos harbour from the US, Western Europe and China. This picture is part of an undercover investigation by Greenpeace and Sky News.  A TV-set originally delivered to a municipality-run collecting point in UK for discarded electronic products was tracked and monitored by Greenpeace using a combination of GPS, GSM, and an onboard radiofrequency transmitter placed inside the TV-set.  The TV arrived in Lagos in container no 4629416 and was found in Alaba International Market and bought back by Greenpeace activist. The TV was subsequently brought back to England and used as proof of illegal export of electronic waste. A number of individual are currently on trial in London in connection with illegal exports(Nov 2011)
    IMG_7613_1.jpg
  • Heat pumps being installed deep underground in the City of London. Geothermal International’s heat pumps provide both heating and cooling for commercial buildings
    11-geothermal-0860.jpg
  • Heat pumps being installed deep underground in the City of London. Geothermal International’s heat pumps provide both heating and cooling for commercial buildings
    11-geothermal-0834.jpg
  • Heat pumps being installed deep underground in the City of London. Geothermal International’s heat pumps provide both heating and cooling for commercial buildings
    11-geothermal-0794.jpg
  • Black plastic rolled round silage bags beside a field of sweetcorn in Baddesley Clinton, England, United Kingdom. Silage is a form of conserved grass that is made by farmers during the summer months when the grass supply is plentiful and not required for grazing. The grass or maize is cut, piled and covered in an air tight seal known as a clamp, done here in plastic. Through this process it is fermented and stored, with the whole process known as ensilage, ensiling or silaging.
    20190811_silage bags_002.jpg
  • Pierre Yves Jovin, 56, Morgue Manager, Central hospital, Port Au Prince. Pierre has worked at the morgue for 27 years. He is the manager in charge. He is standing in front of the cold stores each of which hold about 60 bodies. Relatives are still coming to see if they can identify their loved ones such is the need to know if their families are just missing or dead.  People are searching high and low for loved ones even knowing that the chances of finding them dead or alive must be miniscule when so many have been cleared into mass graves or burnt where they lay. "After the earthquake, all the bodies were piled outside this morgue. There was a huge pile of two to three thousand and inside there were bodies piled up to the ceiling.  Every time the earth trembled, the after-shocks caused the bodies to move and I could smell the dead"
    Haiti_15_1.jpg
  • With al fresco customers sitting at cafe tables on the street a driver checks the delivery of toilet rolls and piles them up on the pavement, having taken them out from the back of his van in Soho, central London. Checking the customer's order, the driver stands with his piles of items driven into the capital from a warehouse somewhere. More boxes are piled high and strewn around the vehicle as the transported goods make their way to various locations around the capital. It seems to be an inappropriate place to offload, given the customers' proximity to the toilet rolls.
    soho_delivery02-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • A man checks the delivery of toilet rolls from the back of a van in Soho, central London. Checking the customer's order, the driver stands in the back of his van and takes out the piles of items driven into the capital from a warehouse somewhere. Boxes are piled high and strewn around the vehicle as the transported goods make their way to various locations around the capital.
    soho_delivery01-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • Black plastic rolled round silage bags beside a field of sweetcorn in Baddesley Clinton, England, United Kingdom. Silage is a form of conserved grass that is made by farmers during the summer months when the grass supply is plentiful and not required for grazing. The grass or maize is cut, piled and covered in an air tight seal known as a clamp, done here in plastic. Through this process it is fermented and stored, with the whole process known as ensilage, ensiling or silaging.
    20190811_silage bags_001.jpg
  • Rubbish piled high on the street in Wapping, London, England, United Kingdom.
    20190426_rubbish_001.jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Traditional Morris Dancing in Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Working its route along the river, the Jack reaches Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Working its route along the river, the Jack reaches Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Working its route along the river, the Jack reaches Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. The procession begine, working its route through Deptford. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Preparations out in the street outside the Dog and Bell pub. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Preparations out in the street outside the Dog and Bell pub. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. In the Dog and Bell pub the Jack has some final touches made to it. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Traditional Morris Dancing in Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
  • May Day custom of Deptford Jack in the Green, a man encased in a framework entirely covered with greenery, is one of the lesser-known modern revivals by the Blackheath Morris Men of English traditional customs on May 1st 2016 in London, United Kingdom. Working its route along the river, the Jack reaches Greenwich. Fowlers Troop Jack in the Green was revived in the early 1980s. Originally a revival from about 1906, it developed from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade, decorated with garlands of flowers and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. By the mid eighteenth century other groups, notably chimney sweeps, were moving in on the milkmaids territory as they saw May Day as a good opportunity to collect money, so carried a Jack in the Green. Over the last 25 years several popular festivals have grown up around the Jack in the Green tradition. Deptford Jack in the Green is not very widely known although it has been running since the early 1980s.
    20160501_deptford jack in the green_...jpg
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