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  • A patient lies near fully submerged in a wooden tub of herb infused water for promote relaxation during the process of detoxification as part of the Ayurvedic treatment process.  Ayurveda is considered a holistic Indian medicine dating back to ancient times, Kollengode, Kerala, India
    20071215_india_0386_1.jpg
  • A moored narrow boat lies partially submerged with Christmas tinsel still attached to the bow rail, on 2nd January 2017, in Regents Canal, central London, England.
    regents_canal-06-02-01-2017.jpg
  • While her brother apparently sinks beneath the surface of plastic balls, a three year-old girl scrabbles up a small slide in the Croydon branch of IKEAS's crèche facility, allowing parent shoppers to browse the store while their children frolic in the ball pond. Designed to encourage adventure and stimulate developing senses, the kids play on their own in this safe environment. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam11-25-05_1999_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6393_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6318_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6292_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6378_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6370_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6367_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6349_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6320_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1150_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1161_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1145_1.jpg
  • A young Thai woman swimming in the Andaman Sea off Koh Lanta, an island in the south of Thailand.
    2006-11-13-Kwan_swimming_1.jpg
  • A fire rescue boar passes forensic investigators and police officers looking over the wreckage of The Marchioness pleasure boat, on 20th August 1998, river Thames in London, England. The Marchioness disaster resulted in a fatal collision between two vessels on the River Thames in London on 20 August 1989, which resulted in the drowning of 51 people. The pleasure steamer Marchioness sank after being pushed under by the dredger Bowbelle, late at night close to Cannon Street Railway Bridge.
    marchioness_thames-20-08-1998.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6381_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6360_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6327_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6339_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1225_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1159_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6346_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_1147_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6387_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6350_1.jpg
  • The remains of the village of Paracatu de Baixo. In Nov 2015, the worst environmental disaster in Brazils history happened, when an iron tailings dam owned by the company Sanmarco - a joint project between Brazilian company Vale and British company BHP Biliton, in the municipality of Mariana burst, creating a stream of mud that reached the coast 17 days later, an estimated 60 millions cubic metres of iron ore waste flowed into the Rio Doce river, killed at least 18 people. Minas Gerais, Brazil.
    _MG_6331_1.jpg
  • People enjoying the ‘Submergence’ installation by Squid Soup as part of Cheriton Light Festival 2018 on Cheriton High Street, Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Folkestone-Light-Festival-3765.jpg
  • People enjoying the ‘Submergence’ installation by Squid Soup as part of Cheriton Light Festival 2018 on Cheriton High Street, Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Folkestone-Light-Festival-3799.jpg
  • People enjoying the ‘Submergence’ installation by Squid Soup as part of Cheriton Light Festival 2018 on Cheriton High Street, Folkestone, Kent, United Kingdom.
    UK-Folkestone-Light-Festival-3782.jpg
  • A pair of awkwardly splayed legs disappear into the cold, murky waters of the Serpentine Lake in London's Hyde Park. Having just dived head-first off a platform that juts out into the lake, the person is half in and half out and the splash is frozen in time. He or she is in incopetent diver with such ungainly plunge into the waters. It is otherwise a quiet moment. The water is largely undisturbed apart from the dive and buoy markers float to for a boundary line to keep rowing boats and bathers apart. This bathing area is where the normally busy Serpentine Swimming Club have the use of this Royal lake known as Lansbury's Lido. It is now normally open only in the summer, but one traditional event occurs each year on New Year's Day, when the ice is broken and brave bathers dive into the cold waters of the lake. The Serpentine will be used for the swimming leg of the triathlon at the London 2012 Olympics. The Serpentine gets its name from its supposedly snakelike, curving shape. It was formed in 1730 when Queen Caroline, wife of George II, ordered the damming of the River Westbourne and other natural ponds in Hyde Park.
    RB-0191.jpg
  • A young ragpicker and a discardrd statue of Ganesh that have been ritually submerged into the Yamuna. The river, by the Kudsia Ghat in Delhi is so polluted that it can no longer support life, however a community still live and work on it's banks. The boy, like many works as a scavenger, searching for anything valuable to sell
    SFE_070209_0039.jpg
  • Women collect and cultivate seaweed in the shallow water at low tide. Each woman has a little submerged 'field' of seaweed which is held down in rows. Once collected they dry the seaweed which is then sold ofr export, usually to be used as as a food thickener or stabiliser. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_12_matemwe dawn seaweed_a.jpg
  • One of the warning signs alerting motorists of tidal dangers on the causeway between the tidal Lindisfarne island and the Northumbrian mainland, on 27th September 2017, on Lindisfarne Island, Northumberland, England. Despite tide timetables posted all over the area, drivers often mis-time their crossings, their vehicles ending up submerged in salt water. The small Lindisfarne population of just over 160 is swelled by the influx of over 650,000 visitors from all over the world every year. A tidal Island: Lindisfarne is a tidal island in that access is by a paved causeway which is covered by the North Sea twice in every 24 hour period. The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, also known simply as Holy Island, is an island off the northeast coast of England. Holy Island has a recorded history from the 6th century AD; it was an important centre of Celtic and Anglo-saxon Christianity. After the Viking invasions and the Norman conquest of England, a priory was reestablished.
    lindisfarne-53-27-09-2017_1.jpg
  • Police tape and a makeshift sign warn of a lane closure due to flooding in the village of Lavant, West Sussex. Afternoon sunshine illuminates the roughly-made board with red painted letters which says 'Road Closed'. The rippling water is less than a foot deep and we can see the broken white centre line beneath the surface but the linked posts that border the village green are also submerged. Even so, traffic is prohibited from passing through there for the risk of grounding or damaging engines. Lavant is a village just north of the city of Chichester. It is made up of two parts, Mid Lavant and East Lavant, and takes its name from the River Lavant which flows from East Dean. This area has been prone to flooding for several years and houses around the rising rivers can be blighted with insurance companies refusing future cover.
    RB-0148.jpg
  • After heavy rain and the subsequent flooding, two lone canoeists paddle down the centre of the A27 near Chichester, West Sussex. The Dual carriageway has been completely submerged to approximately 1.5 metres and only the road sign with its directional arrow is visible above the surface which is rippling in a faint breeze. The men in red and yellow kayaks look inexperienced in boating activities and their clothing is not suitable for water sports. Even so, they are speeding down the highway that is otherwise empty of all other vehicles and they have the water and space to themselves without the fear of collision.
    RB-0147.jpg
  • Women collect and cultivate seaweed in the shallow water at low tide. Each woman has a little submerged 'field' of seaweed which is held down in rows. Once collected they dry the seaweed which is then sold ofr export, usually to be used as as a food thickener or stabiliser. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_13_matemwe seaweed_c.jpg
  • Women collect and cultivate seaweed in the shallow water at low tide. Each woman has a little submerged 'field' of seaweed which is held down in rows. Once collected they dry the seaweed which is then sold ofr export, usually to be used as as a food thickener or stabiliser. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_13_matemwe seaweed_b.jpg
  • St. Mary's Lighthouse is on tiny St Mary's Island, just north of Whitley Bay on the coast of North East England. The small rocky tidal island is linked to the mainland by a short concrete causeway which is submerged at high tide. It was decommissioned by Trinity House in 1984. While it no longer functions as a working lighthouse, it is easily accessible (when the tide is out) and is regularly open to visitors; in addition to the lighthouse itself there is a small museum and visitor's centre.
    107-11_1.jpg
  • Women collect and cultivate seaweed in the shallow water at low tide. Each woman has a little submerged 'field' of seaweed which is held down in rows. Once collected they dry the seaweed which is then sold ofr export, usually to be used as as a food thickener or stabiliser. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_12_matemwe dawn seaweed_h.jpg
  • Women collect and cultivate seaweed in the shallow water at low tide. Each woman has a little submerged 'field' of seaweed which is held down in rows. Once collected they dry the seaweed which is then sold ofr export, usually to be used as as a food thickener or stabiliser. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_12_matemwe dawn seaweed_b.jpg
  • A partner struggles to lift a lady on a shingle beach up over a coastal groyne in Porlock, Somerset, UK. Giving the lady a much-needed leg-up from the lower level of shingle to the one above, the man bends to haul her up making a funny moment in this coastal landscape. Porlock is a coastal village and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated in a deep hollow below Exmoor, 5 miles (8 km) west of Minehead. The parish, which includes Hawkcombe and Doverhay, has a population of 1,440. The coastline includes shingle ridges, salt marshes and a submerged forest. In 1052 the Saxon king, Harold, landed at Porlock Bay from Ireland, and burnt the town before marching on London
    porlock_beach-18-07-1992_1.jpg
  • Locals walk over the exposed stone walls of the once-thriving village of Ashopton that now lies at the bottom of Ladybower reservoir, Derbyshire, England. Remains of the village were revealed during the drought of 1989 the levels of water dropped from the country's reservoirs as rainfall failed in the heatwave while demand peaked in the cities such as Sheffield. The villages of Derwent & Ashopton were submerged when the valley was flooded, between 1943 & 1945, amid much controversy. Derwent church tower was left standing at first, but demolished in 1947 for safety reasons. The remains of the buildings are still visible when the water is very low, as it was in 1989.
    drought_reservoir-12-08-1989_1.jpg
  • A group of cruise ship passengers prepare for a morning scuba diving in the blue waters off Cancun, Gulf of Mexico. Having left their ship for a few hours excursion into the warm tropical sea, the men and women ready themselves before submerging below the floating platform. With masks and snorkels already in place, they take turns to sit on a step and take the plunge. Many look unfit and unused to diving – especially the fatter, older man in the foreground. But for many this holiday is a trip of a lifetime so they won’t want to miss such an opportunity. The skies are blue and they are miles from land and the worries of work and home. They are here for adventure and have the money to make it happen.
    snorkelling_tourists01-07-05-1996_1_...jpg
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