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  • Shoppers in the street pick-up dropped tomatoes and onions. Gathering the spilled produce from the pavement, a man bends down and reaches for the valuable fruit and vegetables into blue polythene bags - helped by others who have stopped to help prevent them from rolling away into the gutter. The street is Brick Lane in the east end of London, an area for Bangladeshi community's businesses.
    dropped_shopping01-30-11-2014_1.jpg
  • A nosy cat inspects a lorry that with a flat tyre, and its spilled market produce in the middle of the Galle Face Road in the Sri Lankan capital, on 16th April 1980, in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
    hong_kong17-16-04-1979.jpg
  • A detail of a puddle and dribble of spilled and squashed Caffe Nero coffee, on 5th January 2019, in London, England.
    coffee_puddle-02-05-02-2019.jpg
  • Discarded cigarettes spill from a hole in a brick wall in Waterloo, south London. We see a detail view of the butt that have been left in the gap of this Victorian wall opposite a bus station. Travellers leave their cigarette ends where others have too.
    cigarettes_wall01-15-05-2015.jpg
  • A detail of stains from left from a fuel spillage on the road surface in Aldwych, central London, UK on 7th June 2016. Looking down from higher perspective, we see the rainbow spectrum of colours from petrol which flows into a small drain cover at the intersection of Waterloo Bridge and the Strand. The parallel curves of double-yellow no parking lines are in the foreground.
    fuel_spill-01-07-06-2016.jpg
  • A young boy wearing his school uniform looks traumatised standing next to a burned-out shell of a saloon car that was set alight by vandals beneath the infamous Divis flats of the Catholic Lower Falls Road, West Belfast. He wears a red jumper which contrasts the blue graffiti paint on the wall behind him and the charred ground at his feet. He is alone, a young boy experiencing childhood through the traumas of a violent world Divis Tower was a flashpoint area during the height of the Troubles. 9 year-old Patrick Rooney a child of a similar age to this lad, was the first child killed in the Troubles, was killed in the tower during the Northern Ireland riots of August 1969,
    RB-0034.jpg
  • A white liquid spillage outside an audio retailer, on 28th February 2017, in London, England.
    shop_oval-03-27-02-2017.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-32-04-02-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists dressed in City suits, vomit 'oil' outside the Baltic Exchange, home to the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) who, according to environmentalists, are co-sponsoring the IMO's non-regulation, thereby allowing fossil fuel emissions by the shipping industry, on 16th November 2020, in London, England. 'Scrubbers' then appeared to metaphorically clean-up the mess left on the pavement before City of London Police officers arrived to re-open the street during this, the second lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic
    XR_oil_vomit35-16-11-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists dressed in City suits, vomit 'oil' outside the Baltic Exchange, home to the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) who, according to environmentalists, are co-sponsoring the IMO's non-regulation, thereby allowing fossil fuel emissions by the shipping industry, on 16th November 2020, in London, England. 'Scrubbers' then appeared to metaphorically clean-up the mess left on the pavement before City of London Police officers arrived to re-open the street during this, the second lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic
    XR_oil_vomit32-16-11-2020.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-45-04-02-2020.jpg
  • Londoners walk past the mess of litter and rubbish torn apart by overnight animals on a south London street in the borough of Lambeth. The garbage has been thrown under a sapling on this dirty pavement, outside a betting shop run by Betfred. Clothing, household items and foodstuffs are strewn across the sidewalk as pedestrians pass-by.
    street_rubbish01-16-04-2012_1_1.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists dressed in City suits, vomit 'oil' outside the Baltic Exchange, home to the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) who, according to environmentalists, are co-sponsoring the IMO's non-regulation, thereby allowing fossil fuel emissions by the shipping industry, on 16th November 2020, in London, England. 'Scrubbers' then appeared to metaphorically clean-up the mess left on the pavement before City of London Police officers arrived to re-open the street during this, the second lockdown during the Coronavirus pandemic
    XR_oil_vomit34-16-11-2020.jpg
  • Foreign travellers and ex-pats play drinking games at a bar called CJ's in the Chinese economic region of Macau. An unseen person stands over the customer and pours a mixture of apparently lime and an alcoholic drink into the other man’s open mouth. It spills and dribbles down his face but otherwise ends up in his throat for some kind of pleasurable – and expensive – youth experience. On his t-shirt are the words Rage Against the Machine, an anarchic message of rebellion.
    drinking_game01-10-08-1994_1.jpg
  • Instead of the intended newspapers and magazines, passers-by have instead stuffed coffee cups and general paper into a recycling bin slot in the City of London. The receptacle specifically states what should be inserted, but this has been ignored, its purpose disregarded for miscellaneous waste. On the top is also says that no tissues or cups are to be placed inside.
    recycling_bin02-18-01-2015_1.jpg
  • A businessman stoops to pick-up dropped paperwork that has spilled onto the pavement (sidewalk) in London.
    picking_up_man01-03-02-2011.jpg
  • Forget the pasty tax, Osborne needs to force big companies to spill the beans on taxes they are due in poor countries.
    George_Osborne-3091_1.jpg
  • In the darkness of a taxiway at the southern end of Heathrow Airport, the bright lights of an engineering hangar spill out into the night. A Boeing 747 Jumbo jet sits nose-in behind another during a scheduled set of maintenance tasks that every aircraft needs to keep to in order for its continued airworthiness. The unmistakable shape of this large aircraft is a half-silhouette against the intensity of the hangar and blue flare spots that arise from the internal glass in the camera's lens. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1564-19-08-2009_1.jpg
  • Forget the pasty tax, Osborne needs to force big companies to spill the beans on taxes they are due in poor countries.
    George_Osborne-3124_1.jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • At the start of another day's work, pilots belonging to the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, walk in single-file out into the pink morning light for the first winter training flight of the day at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire. Emerging from their squadron building the aviators make their way along a pathway towards the waiting Hawk jet aircraft known the world over. Wearing winter green flying suits and carrying their helmets, their day is spent flying and de-briefing up to six times a day when weather permits. Long shadows spill over on to the airfield's cropped grass. Scampton  is one of the original World War 2 RAF stations for the Lancaster bombers the 617 Dambusters squadron who attacked the damns of the German Ruhr valley on 16th May 1943 using the Bouncing Bomb. Today, it is used almost exclusively by the team.
    Red_Arrows011_RBA_1.jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • A young boy watches the sweeping arms of a Penny push/fall game in the amusement arcade at Weston-super-Mare's grand pier. Waiting for some coins to be caught in the log-jam and to fall into the prize tray below, the lad seems spellbound by the potential luck and possibilities although the odds are against him. Images of 1970s dancers, including John Travolta, strut their stuff at the disco. 2p pennies stack up until the moment when they topple over and spill out.
    slot_machines5-06-August-2011_1_1.jpg
  • The witness shows evidence of oil spills. BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2520_1.jpg
  • The witness shows evidence of oil spills. BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2509_1.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of an elderly man in his seventies street portrait with moustache. The man has stubble on his chin and his mostache is also untidy, in need of a trim and his white hair spills across his balding forehead and on to his glasses frames. A close-up portrait of an elderly man in his seventies street portrait with moustache. The man has stubble on his chin and his moustache is also untidy, in need of a trim and his white hair spills across his balding forehead and on to his glasses frames.
    moustache_men94-28-May-2011-2.jpg
  • A police officer looks over stormy waves wich crash over the super-structure and funnel of the Liberian-registered MV Braer oil tanker, spilling 84,700 tonnes of crude oil into the North Sea, on 7th January 1993, in Quendale Bay, Shetland, Scotland, UK. It sits below its water-line with crude oil leaking from its ruptured tanks after running ground in hurricane force winds, beaching itself on these rocks in Quendale Bay, west of Sunburgh Head, the Shetland Islands, Scotland. In fast-fading light, this ecological disaster occurred in a beautiful region of Great Britain affecting much native wildlife although the Gulfaks oil the Braer was carrying is lighter therefore more biodegradable and able to disperse better than other North Sea crude.
    brear_shetland-07-01-1993.jpg
  • Women selling local produce at Danyingone Station on 19th March 2016 in Yangon, Myanmar. At Danyingone Station, one of the Circular Railways 39 stations, the market spills out onto the tracks.
    DSCF8061cc_1.jpg
  • The assembly spills over into Whitehall. The anti-austerity march, the People's Assembly saw tens of thousands marching and protestin in the streets of London against the newly elected conservative government.
    _MG_9424_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2588_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2488_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6515_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6308_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6263_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6227_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6161_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6150_1.jpg
  • As stormy waves crash over its super-structure and funnel, the Liberian-registered MV Braer oil tanker spills 84,700 tonnes of crude oil into the North Sea. It sits below its water-line with crude oil leaking from its ruptured tanks after running ground in hurricane force winds, beeching itself on these rocks in Quendale Bay, west of Sunburgh Head, the Shetland Islands, Scotland. In fast-fading light, this ecological disaster occured in a beautiful region of Great Britain affecting much native wildlife although the Gulfaks oil the Braer was carrying is lighter therefore more biodegradable and able to disperse better than other North Sea crude.
    RB_028-07-01-1993.jpg
  • Using a cloth, a waiter picks up a hot bowl of Butter Squash soup ready for a la carte service in the kitchens at the Vivre restaurant in Sofitel, a 605 bedroom, 27 suite and 45 meeting room accommodation and business hub Heathrow Airport's hub hotel attached to Terminal 5. A stack of clean and unused plates are ready for use on the hot plate that warms them  and we see the waiter leaning over in shadow, carefully taking hold of the bowl so that none of the liquid spills. The man is wearing a smart white shirt and is about to take the dish over to the customer's table. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1227-15-08-2009_1.jpg
  • The blocking of Westminster Bridge is over but police is only letting people leave south side not to have any spilling into Parliament Sqaure. This protestor is denied leaving North way  and he is trying to get into a converstion with police on Government policies.<br />
The Health and Care Bill has been passed by Parliament and is due to go to the House of Lords. In protest against the bill which aim to deconstruct and privatise large parts of the NHS UK Uncut activists together with health workers and trade unionists blocked the Westminster Bridge from 1pm til 5.30pm.
    IMG_2525_1.jpg
  • A police officer looks over stormy waves wich crash over the super-structure and funnel of the Liberian-registered MV Braer oil tanker, spilling 84,700 tonnes of crude oil into the North Sea, on 7th January 1993, in Quendale Bay, Shetland, Scotland, UK. It sits below its water-line with crude oil leaking from its ruptured tanks after running ground in hurricane force winds, beaching itself on these rocks in Quendale Bay, west of Sunburgh Head, the Shetland Islands, Scotland. In fast-fading light, this ecological disaster occurred in a beautiful region of Great Britain affecting much native wildlife although the Gulfaks oil the Braer was carrying is lighter therefore more biodegradable and able to disperse better than other North Sea crude.
    braer_shetland-07-01-1993.jpg
  • Women selling jackfruit and fish at Danyingone Station on 19th March 2016 in Yangon, Myanmar. At Danyingone Station, one of the Circular Railways 39 stations, the market spills out onto the tracks.
    DSCF8058cc_1.jpg
  • A woman with a young baby sells mangoes at Danyingone Station on 19 March 2016 in Yangon, Myanmar. At Danyingone Station, one of the Circular Railways 39 stations, the market spills out onto the tracks.
    DSCF5431cc_1.jpg
  • Rosella for sale at Danyingone Station on 19th March in Yangon, Myanmar. At Danyingone Station, one of the Circular Railways 39 stations, the market spills out onto the tracks
    DSCF8063cc_1_1.jpg
  • The assembly spills over into Whitehall. The anti-austerity march, the People's Assembly saw tens of thousands marching and protestin in the streets of London against the newly elected conservative government.
    _MG_9435_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2693_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2636_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2575_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2568_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2551_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2546_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2543_1.jpg
  • BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2483_1.jpg
  • Procecutor read out the charges. BP-or-not-BP stages another of their clandestine performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the museum is taking money from the oil company BP. The play is about Sherlock Homes and Dr Watson who catch BP and put it on trial with procecutor and evidence of the oil spills that BP has been responsible for inthe past. Eventually BP is found guilty and ejected from the museum.
    AB9A2453_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6549_1.jpg
  • Performers dressed as police pose in front of a police van at the museum. BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6525_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6461_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6450_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6445_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6426_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6414_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6320_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6295_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6274_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6233_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6213_1.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6187_1.jpg
  • A lone figure stands silhouetted against a hangar belonging to the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire. Two huge hangar doors are ajar revealing an orange glow spilling on to the concrete outside. A Hawk jet aircraft is parked awaiting overnight maintenance. Engineers talk inside as the door travels along its track. The men are the team's support ground crew and eleven trades are imported from some sixty that the RAF qualifies. The hangar dates to World War 2, housing Lancaster bombers of 617 Dambusters squadron who attacked the damns of the German Ruhr valley on 16th May 1943 using the Bouncing Bomb. This version of BAE Systems Hawks are low-tech, without computers nor fly-by-wire technology, Some of the  team's aircraft are 25 years old and their airframes require frequent overhauls due.
    Red_Arrows074_RBA_1.jpg
  • A red Hawk jet aircraft belonging to the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, is parked in the hangar at RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire, the home base for the squadron. Night is falling with only blue daylight remaining in the western sky and the warm light from the hangar spills out of the giant open doors on to the concrete. The aircraft awaits attention from the engineer's night-shift who service and maintain all 11 of the famous red aerobatic jets before flying the next morning. The hangar, an original World War 2 shelter for the Lancaster bombers of 617 Dambusters squadron who attacked the damns of the German Ruhr valley on 16th May 1943 using the Bouncing Bomb. The Red Arrows use this and nearby offices administrative nerve-centre for the 90-plus displays they perform a year.
    Red_Arrows007_RBA_1.jpg
  • Two men enjoy their own versions of Blackpool North Pier, Lancashire, England. On the right, the first man is lying down on a bench with his trousers gathered around his ankles, his red bathing costume or underpants are baggy and he is looking across to something of interest while scratching his bald head. The second man on the right is not wearing a shirt and his stomach is spilling over his trousers. He has a bunch of keys attached to his belt and is pointing a video camera (camcorder) towards the shore. It is a comical scene and typical of Blackpool beach life. This northern sea side resort in the north-west of England is diverse in its transient holiday population whose behaviour can be routinely odd.
    RB-0111.jpg
  • On a night out with friends, a group of five ladies are queuing for screen 2 in a Croydon cinema, South  London to see a Bollywood romantic film. On a poster behind, a giant movie hero's face looks towards the viewer with a hand raised in a salute. The man is of a dashing, handsome character  whose dark skin looks like a tanned European person. The women are in good spirits before their favourite film and gather together in the cinema's foyer in expectation. One lady is dressed in a long, smart dress and is staring with wide open eyes. She has a large handbag over the left shoulder and her long hair is spilling down her back.<br />
<br />
.
    london_asians01-30-08-2007.jpg
  • A local delivery van full of gas cylinders struggles to round an uphill corner in central Lisbon, Portugal. The narrow streets, not designed for heavy traffic, still do not accommodate smaller vehicles. A tram waits for the obstructing truck to clear the tracks and rails and onlookers stop to see how the driver manages to get round without spilling its dangerous cargo.
    lisbon_traffic-21-03-1994.jpg
  • A 15 year-old teenage girl sips a Starbucks Frappuccino coffee through a straw in a London Street. Dressed in a black cloche-style hat, black glasses and matching black coat, the young lady purses her lips to draw in the iced drink, ironically on a bitterly cold mid-winter's day. The girl's long hair spills over her shoulders and her hat is pulled low over her head, keeping the low temperatures out. The wall is in a back street of Greenwich in southeast London, the area of the city known for its maritime heritage and this young consumer is a target buyer for Starbucks, the coffee retailer.
    ella_drink02-01-01-2011_1.jpg
  • Children collect water from their local borehole that supplies the village of Kanukurudio, in Turkana, Northern Kenya.  The goats drink from the trough that the wastewater spills into.
    05-turkana_8188.jpg
  • BP or not BP, a political performance group stage another one of their theatrical performances at the British Museum to highlight the fact that the Museum is sponsorer by BP, one of the world biggest oil producing companies and responsoble for numerous oils spills, including the biggest one in history, the Horizon oil disaster in the Mexican gulf.
    _MG_6243_1.jpg
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