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  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc138-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc363-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of NATS air traffic controller's hand pointing to flight IDs on screen in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc133-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc143-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc364-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc338-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of NATS air traffic controller's hand and radio trigger in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc124-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc353-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc321-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc319-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc308-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc373-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc329-03-06-2014.jpg
  • NATS Heathrow air traffic controller in control tower at Heathrow airport, London. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc366-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Air traffic controller in control tower at RAF Scampton, home base of the 'Red Arrows', Britain's Royal Air Force aerobatic team
    Red_Arrows372_RBA.jpg
  • Air traffic controller in control tower at RAF Scampton, home base of the 'Red Arrows', Britain's Royal Air Force aerobatic team
    Red_Arrows373_RBA.jpg
  • Joystick controller at BAE Systems Hawk jet aircraft simulator test a Red Arrows pilot at the fast-jet flying training centre, RAF Valley, Anglesey, Wales. All fast-jet pilots are required to complete an emergency drill every six months. The pilot is seated in his ejector seat as if in a real jet using back-projected computer graphics representing a generic landscape below. Each aviator proves they can cope with a series of failures that operators select: Engine, hydraulic failure or bird strike.  Apart from the aircraft fuselage, the high-tech facility loads malfunctions on a pilot that he could experience in reality. The version of Hawk that the Red Arrows fly is actually a primitive piece of equipment, without computers or fly-by-wire technology.
    Red_Arrows256_RBA.jpg
  • US Navy pilot grasps cyclic in the cockpit of a Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter at the Farnborough Airshow. ..The MH-60R is the U.S. Navy's newest and most advanced multi-mission helicopter, designed for anti-submarine and surface warfare (ASW/ASuW). Secondary missions include: Search and Rescue, anti-ship surveillance and targeting, communication relay and medevac/vertical replenishment. The Sikorsky-built helicipter with integrated avionics and mission systems by Lockheed Martin.
    farnborough_airshow58-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Reaching hands of ex-South African President Nelson Mandela's statue seemingly grasp Big Ben clock tower in Parliament Square..
    mandela_parliament03-07-03-2011.jpg
  • US Navy pilot grasps cyclic in the cockpit of a Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter at the Farnborough Airshow. The MH-60R is the U.S. Navy's newest and most advanced multi-mission helicopter, designed for anti-submarine and surface warfare (ASW/ASuW). Secondary missions include: Search and Rescue, anti-ship surveillance and targeting, communication relay and medevac/vertical replenishment. The Sikorsky-built helicopter with integrated avionics and mission systems by Lockheed Martin.
    farnborough_airshow59-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • US Navy pilot grasps cyclic in the cockpit of a Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter at the Farnborough Airshow. ..The MH-60R is the U.S. Navy's newest and most advanced multi-mission helicopter, designed for anti-submarine and surface warfare (ASW/ASuW). Secondary missions include: Search and Rescue, anti-ship surveillance and targeting, communication relay and medevac/vertical replenishment. The Sikorsky-built helicipter with integrated avionics and mission systems by Lockheed Martin.
    farnborough_airshow57-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • US Navy pilot grasps cyclic in the cockpit of a Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter at the Farnborough Airshow. The MH-60R is the U.S. Navy's newest and most advanced multi-mission helicopter, designed for anti-submarine and surface warfare (ASW/ASuW). Secondary missions include: Search and Rescue, anti-ship surveillance and targeting, communication relay and medevac/vertical replenishment. The Sikorsky-built helicopter with integrated avionics and mission systems by Lockheed Martin.
    farnborough_airshow56-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • US Navy pilot grasps cyclic in the cockpit of a Sikorsky MH-60R helicopter at the Farnborough Airshow. The MH-60R is the U.S. Navy's newest and most advanced multi-mission helicopter, designed for anti-submarine and surface warfare (ASW/ASuW). Secondary missions include: Search and Rescue, anti-ship surveillance and targeting, communication relay and medevac/vertical replenishment. The Sikorsky-built helicopter with integrated avionics and mission systems by Lockheed Martin.
    farnborough_airshow55-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Boeing's demonstrates SUGV (also known as iRobot) demonstrated at the US company's chalet Farnborough Airshow. Still in development, the iRobot will be used by the military for surveillance  and reconnaissance, bomb disposal of IEDs, at checkpoints, inspections and explosives detection, minimising the risk to troops. The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace business which is held biennially in Hampshire, England. The airshow is organised by Farnborough International Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of British aerospace industry's body the Society of British Aerospace Companies (SBAC) to demonstrate both civilian and military aircraft to potential customers and investors.
    farnborough_airshow51-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • The reaching hands of ex-South African President Nelson Mandela's statue seemingly grasp the Big Ben clock tower in Parliament Square, Westminster, central London. On the day of the British general election where a hung parliament is a possibility, the fight for power of the nation appears to be an historic possibility.
    mandela_statue02-04-07-2010.jpg
  • The reaching hands of ex-South African President Nelson Mandela's statue seemingly grasp the Big Ben clock tower in Parliament Square, Westminster, central London. On the day of the British general election where a hung parliament is a possibility, the fight for power of the nation appears to be an historic possibility.
    mandela_statue01-04-07-2010.jpg
  • A woman employee works at a computer at Allen-Bradley Automation in Milton Keynes, England UK. The factory worker wears blue company overalls and types on the keyboard and a computer that has an industrial screen filter. A variety of electronics equipment is seen in the background. Allen-Bradley is the brand-name of a line of Factory Automation Equipment manufactured by Rockwell Automation (NYSE ROK). The company was initially founded as the Compression Rheostat Company by Dr. Stanton Allen and Lynde Bradley with an initial investment of $1,000 in 1903.
    90s_electronics-20-09-1994.jpg
  • Joel Barre, Director of Guiana Space Center in his office at the European Space Agency's Kourou Spaceport in French Guiana.
    esa_guiana24315-08-2007.jpg
  • Pigeon pest controller, Sue Van Vynck releases Harriet, her Harris Hawk (Parabuteo unicinctus) to scare away the local pigeon population. The ancient sport of Falconry has become today's humane pest control of choice, particularly as costs falls. Once a pigeon population has been scared away, it requires only a token hawk presence to keep it away. Van Vynck Bird Control is a specialist company providing over 25 years, a range of environmental services dealing with nuisance bird management. They are pioneers of specialist techniques such as the use of predatory species (such as falconry) to displace and interrupt behavioural patterns as well as offering a complete range of physical deterrents. Here at Broadgate the nuisance was pigeons and Harriet leaves Sue's gloved hand to patrol the architecture of this 32 acres (129,499 m2) office and retail space.
    harris_hawk16-07_1993.jpg
  • Quality control worker sorts through sub-standard Moments biscuits at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont
    lambermont-biscuits313.jpg
  • Quality control worker sorts through sub-standard Moments biscuits at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont
    lambermont-biscuits249.jpg
  • Quality control worker sorts through sub-standard Moments biscuits at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont
    Lambermont_biscuits_296.jpg
  • Quality control worker sorts through sub-standard Moments biscuits at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont
    Lambermont_biscuits_211.jpg
  • A detailed view of a Mark 1 Hawk jet belonging to 'Synchro Leader' of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team. We see the flight controls and instrument panels looking grubby and worn with grey paint rubbed or flaking off. This version of the BAE Systems Hawk is low-tech without computers nor fly-by-wire technology it is one of the most user-friendly modern jets to fly and serves as a first step trainer for pilots to accumulate fast-jet flying hours and who are destined for the most sophisticated of fast military fighters in the future. Their aerobatic displays demands that their workhorse machine must have phenomenal turning circle ability and rate of climb. The team's aircraft are in some cases over 25 years old and their airframes require constant attention, with frequent engineering overhauls needed..
    Red_Arrows689_RBA.jpg
  • Queues of newly-arrived airline passengers line up to await their turn at the UK Border Agency's passport control at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Immigration officers deal with each member of the public seeking entry into the United Kingdom but on average, 10 a day are refused entry at this London airport and between 2008 and 2009, 33,100 people were detained at the airport for mainly passport irregularities. The UK Border Agency is responsible for securing the United Kingdom borders and controlling migration in the UK. They manage border control enforcing immigration and customs regulations and also consider applications for permission to enter or stay in the United Kingdom, citizenship and asylum. From writer Alain de Botton's book: "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1155-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Queues of newly-arrived airline passengers line up to await their turn at the UK Border Agency's passport control at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Immigration officers deal with each member of the public seeking entry into the United Kingdom but on average, 10 a day are refused entry at this London airport and between 2008 and 2009, 33,100 people were detained at the airport for mainly passport irregularities. The UK Border Agency is responsible for securing the United Kingdom borders and controlling migration in the UK. They manage border control enforcing immigration and customs regulations and also consider applications for permission to enter or stay in the United Kingdom, citizenship and asylum. From writer Alain de Botton's book: "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1154-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Queues of newly-arrived airline passengers line up to await their turn at the UK Border Agency's passport control at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Immigration officers deal with each member of the public seeking entry into the United Kingdom but on average, 10 a day are refused entry at this London airport and between 2008 and 2009, 33,100 people were detained at the airport for mainly passport irregularities. The UK Border Agency is responsible for securing the United Kingdom borders and controlling migration in the UK. They manage border control enforcing immigration and customs regulations and also consider applications for permission to enter or stay in the United Kingdom, citizenship and asylum. From writer Alain de Botton's book: "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport1153-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Aerial view (through control tower windows) showing NATS air traffic controllers and expanse of airport land at London Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc177-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of spare NATS air traffic controllers' headsets in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc68-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of spare NATS air traffic controllers' headsets in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc64-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Two seats, three tape-recorders, a panic strip and a telephone are seen in the UK Border Agency's immigration detention room at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. Officers deal with members of the public whose passports, demeanour or travel habits have drawn attention to possible criminal activity while seeking entry into the United Kingdom. On average, 10 a day are refused entry here and between 2008 and 2009, 33,100 people were detained at the airport for mainly passport irregularities. The UK Border Agency is responsible for securing the United Kingdom borders and controlling migration in the UK. They manage border control enforcing immigration and customs regulations and consider applications for permission to enter the UK for citizenship and asylum. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). ...
    heathrow_airport1167-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc16-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Aerial view (through control tower windows) showing expanse of airport land with airliners at London Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc171-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of NATS air traffic controllers' screen plan of ground operations, in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc385-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Detail of NATS air traffic controllers' screen plan of ground operations, in control tower at Heathrow airport, London.
    adie_dolan_atc378-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Quality control workers sort through sub-standard Moments biscuits at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont
    lambermont-biscuits206.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc186-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc05-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc183-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc03-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc416-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc417-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England.
    adie_dolan_atc404-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Aerial view (through control tower windows) showing expanse of airport land with airliners at London Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc164-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Aerial view (through control tower windows) showing expanse of airport land with airliners at London Heathrow.
    adie_dolan_atc172-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc10-03-06-2014.jpg
  • A detailed view of a Mark 1 Hawk jet belonging to 'Synchro Leader' of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team. We see the flight controls and instrument panels looking grubby and worn with grey paint rubbed or flaking off. This version of the BAE Systems Hawk is low-tech without computers nor fly-by-wire technology it is one of the most user-friendly modern jets to fly and serves as a first step trainer for pilots to accumulate fast-jet flying hours and who are destined for the most sophisticated of fast military fighters in the future. Their aerobatic displays demands that their workhorse machine must have phenomenal turning circle ability and rate of climb. The team's aircraft are in some cases over 25 years old and their airframes require constant attention, with frequent engineering overhauls needed..
    Red_Arrows691_RBA.jpg
  • A theatrical joke about bureaucracy between French and British comedians at an event to mark the opening of the Channel Tunnel produces this quirky scene where each country's officials are seated at a long table, dressed in British flags, to symbolise the controls on human traffic that will soon pass through the tunnel beneath the sea between England and France, the first physical link between these two land masses since the Ice Age. Wearing smart uniforms, French immigration police and Gendarmes sit among British customs and immigration officials who, rather comically wear yellow hard hats because Health and Safety laws make the wearing of protective headgear compulsory on construction sites. A frontier control point notice stands for the benefit of viewers who might otherwise be guessing what is going on.
    eurotunnel12-01-1990.jpg
  • Game Maker volunteers control crowds of spectators in the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village. After the Olympics, the park is to be known as Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
    olympic_park70-02-08-2012.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man07-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Croydon airport's control tower, the birthplace of commercial aviation in 1923 after service as a WW1 airfield. From here the world's first airliners (like the Imperial Airways Handley Pages) stopped, Charles Lindberg arrived to greet the king after his transatlantic solo flight and where Amy Johnson flew solo from as the first woman, to Australia.
    croydon_airport03-01-03-2015.jpg
  • American spectators admire mounted police officers on horseback help control crowds and provide security in the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village. After the Olympics, the park is to be known as Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
    olympic_park105-02-08-2012.jpg
  • A holy Sadhu man attracts a crowd on the Maidan in central Calcutta, India. Near some ballustrades built by the British during the last years of the Raj, the man is leaning forward on his knees and his head is buried in gravel. Practicing Tapas or Niyamas, is one form of Austerity that holy men like this perform to cleanse themselves of bad thoughts. It is a conservation of energy; an increase of power in the system by sense control; a process of positive-thought, self-imposed  hardships and inner-strength - all to gain a higher being for oneself. They might stand in cold water in winter, stand on or bury their heads in earth. Niyamas also breeds non-violence, truthfullness, non-stealing, moderation, non-possessiveness, purity, contentment, discipline, study and surrender.
    RB_059-18-11-1996.jpg
  • Visitors to the Lambeth Show in Herne Hill, are controlled by tape and barriers, on 21st July, in London, England
    lambeth_fair-04-21-07-2018.jpg
  • Visitors to the Lambeth Show in Herne Hill, are controlled by tape and barriers, on 21st July, in London, England
    lambeth_fair-02-21-07-2018.jpg
  • Visitors to the Lambeth Show in Herne Hill, are controlled by tape and barriers, on 21st July, in London, England
    lambeth_fair-01-21-07-2018.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man09-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man08-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man06-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man04-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man03-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Croydon airport's control tower, the birthplace of commercial aviation in 1923 after service as a WW1 airfield. In this car park the world's first airliners (like the Imperial Airways Handley Pages) stopped, Charles Lindberg arrived to greet the king after his transatlantic solo flight and from where Amy Johnson flew solo as the first woman, to Australia.
    croydon_airport04-01-03-2015.jpg
  • Croydon airport's control tower, the birthplace of commercial aviation in 1923 after service as a WW1 airfield. In this car park the world's first airliners (like the Imperial Airways Handley Pages) stopped, Charles Lindberg arrived to greet the king after his transatlantic solo flight and from where Amy Johnson flew solo as the first woman, to Australia.
    croydon_airport01-01-03-2015.jpg
  • Aerial view (from control tower) of taxiing airliner at London Heathrow airport. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc299-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Mounted police officers help control crowds in horseback and provide security in the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics. This land was transformed to become a 2.5 Sq Km sporting complex, once industrial businesses and now the venue of eight venues including the main arena, Aquatics Centre and Velodrome plus the athletes' Olympic Village. After the Olympics, the park is to be known as Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
    olympic_park72-02-08-2012.jpg
  • TV screens at Jupiter Control Center show launch readiness status of a European Space Agency's Ariane satellite rocket
    esa_guiana04714-08-2007.jpg
  • Press conference given to media at the European Space Agency's Jupiter Control Center hours before launch of Ariane satellite
    esa_guiana04014-08-2007.jpg
  • Visitors to the Lambeth Show in Herne Hill, are controlled by tape and barriers, on 21st July, in London, England
    lambeth_fair-03-21-07-2018.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man02-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Construction site Banksman waits to control local traffic where a concrete truck is due to emerge in Soho, central London.
    go_man01-02-03-2015.jpg
  • Aerial view (from control tower) of taxiing Virgin Atlantic 747 airliner at London Heathrow airport. <br />
<br />
From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc287-03-06-2014.jpg
  • Young adolescent couples kiss and cuddle in a dark corner of a Gatecrashers' Ball in London, England. Three boys and girls dressed in formal evening-wear have been consuming alcohol during the evening and are groping and snogging. The Gatecrasher Ball was an eighties phenomenon conceived by Edward Ormus Sharington Davenport whose parties catered for Public School students. Labled as excessive and out of control events, Davenport charged .£14 a ticket, for often 3,000 kids although he was later fined for tax evasion. .
    RB_031-17-12-1987.jpg
  • On a foggy Spring morning at RAF Scampton, in Lincolnshire, a yellow MoD airfield telephone stands alone in the mist. Scampton is the headquarters of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team who largely have the sole use of its air space. The ageing equipment is a push-button type and its colour matches the painted stripes on the damp, concreted ground. The gloomy mist is obscuring buildings and hangars in the background and flying has been cancelled so an eerie stillness has settled on the normally busy facility that would normally host up to six red Arrows sorties (flight) a winter's day. Communications with remote areas of the aerodrome is often necessary to alert the air traffic control tower. Only qualified personnel are to use this system, just as drivers must have undertaken an MoD vehicle course.  .
    Red_Arrows399_RBA.jpg
  • An airport worker employed by SABTCO guides an arriving Airbus onto its stand at Bahrain International Airport. The man carefully encourages the slow-moving flying machine using his illuminated sticks alerting the pilot in control of this commercial airliner to an exact stopping place after its taxiing from the runway. It is another hot day in this Gulf State, a key hub airport in the region, providing a gateway to the Northern Gulf. The airport is the major hub for Gulf Air which provides 52% of overall movements. It is also the half-way point between Western Europe and Asian destinations such as Hong Kong and Beijing. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903. .
    aviation_corbis07-21-04-2001.jpg
  • Sheep up for auction kept behind fencing to avoid the spread of diseases at the ancient annual Priddy Fair in Somerset, England. A sign issued by the government's disease control policy, unauthorised visitors are forbidden to enter the catle pens, avoiding the spread of epidemics like Foot and Mouth. According to tradition, Priddy Sheep Fair moved from Wells in 1348 because of the Black Death, although evidence has been found of a Fair being held at Priddy before that. There is a local legend, which says that as long as the hurdle stack shelter remains in the village, so will the Fair.
    sheep_auction05-21-08-2013.jpg
  • Sheep up for auction kept behind fencing to avoid the spread of diseases at the ancient annual Priddy Fair in Somerset, England. A sign issued by the government's disease control policy, unauthorised visitors are forbidden to enter the catle pens, avoiding the spread of epidemics like Foot and Mouth. According to tradition, Priddy Sheep Fair moved from Wells in 1348 because of the Black Death, although evidence has been found of a Fair being held at Priddy before that. There is a local legend, which says that as long as the hurdle stack shelter remains in the village, so will the Fair.
    sheep_auction01-21-08-2013.jpg
  • Sheep up for auction kept behind fencing to avoid the spread of diseases at the ancient annual Priddy Fair in Somerset, England. A sign issued by the government's disease control policy, unauthorised visitors are forbidden to enter the catle pens, avoiding the spread of epidemics like Foot and Mouth. According to tradition, Priddy Sheep Fair moved from Wells in 1348 because of the Black Death, although evidence has been found of a Fair being held at Priddy before that. There is a local legend, which says that as long as the hurdle stack shelter remains in the village, so will the Fair.
    sheep_auction02-21-08-2013.jpg
  • A mother controls pulling away child with reins on Southbank steps.
    child_reins02-15-09-2014.jpg
  • A mother controls pulling away child with reins on Southbank steps.
    child_reins01-15-09-2014.jpg
  • Sheep up for auction kept behind fencing to avoid the spread of diseases at the ancient annual Priddy Fair in Somerset, England. A sign issued by the government's disease control policy, unauthorised visitors are forbidden to enter the catle pens, avoiding the spread of epidemics like Foot and Mouth. According to tradition, Priddy Sheep Fair moved from Wells in 1348 because of the Black Death, although evidence has been found of a Fair being held at Priddy before that. There is a local legend, which says that as long as the hurdle stack shelter remains in the village, so will the Fair.
    sheep_auction03-21-08-2013.jpg
  • It is 1985 and a farmer walks along a line of long, combustible straw and with a pitchfork and smouldering straw, sets fire to the organic material in an Essex field, southern England. It is late summer and the harvested corn has left behind short stubble which the farmer sets ablaze. This now restricted practice of destroying cereal straw and stubble by flame was stopped by the introduction of The Crop Residues (Burning) Regulations of 1993 which now restricts farmers on burning crop materials, including residues of oilseed rape, field beans and peas, except in very limited circumstances, e.g. for disease control where a plant health order has been served. The burning of straw and stubble also deprives the soil of valuable organic material and releases greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. ..
    stubble_burning08-18-1985.jpg
  • A detailed view of a Mark 1 Hawk jet belonging to 'Synchro Leader' of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team. We see the flight controls and instrument panels looking grubby and worn with grey paint rubbed or flaking off. This version of the BAE Systems Hawk is low-tech without computers nor fly-by-wire technology it is one of the most user-friendly modern jets to fly and serves as a first step trainer for pilots to accumulate fast-jet flying hours and who are destined for the most sophisticated of fast military fighters in the future. Their aerobatic displays demands that their workhorse machine must have phenominal turning circle ability and rate of climb. The team's aircraft are in some cases over 25 years old and their airframes require constant attention, with frequent engineering overhauls needed. .
    Red_Arrows769_RBA.jpg
  • British and French customs officials shake hands during the ceremony to open the Channel Tunnel in Kent, on the UK side. As proof of Anglo-french relations between the two European states, an Entente Cordiale exists in this theatrical joke about bureaucracy between France and Britain. It symbolises the controls on human traffic that will soon pass through the tunnel beneath the sea between England and France, the first physical link between these two land masses since the Ice Age.
    anglo_french_90s-01-12-1990.jpg
  • Model plane enthusiasts discuss the finer points of radio controlled flight on the site of the former London (Croydon) airfield, once the location of the first international passenger services from England in the 1930s.
    croydon_airfield02-29-07-2002.jpg
  • A young boy creates ripples as he plays with his radio-controlled boat in the River Thames at Dorchester, Oxfordshire. The sun is hidden behind a line of trees and the boy who is backlit stands in the shallow part of the river up to his ankles, wearing his swimming costume. The small boat is only a few feet from the antenna that controls its movement. It is a scene of idyllic tranquility, a childhood of happy summer days. Here the Thames is at its most serene, where visitors enjoy its shallows with the fear of strong currents, tides or large boating activity.
    RB-0030.jpg
  • A portrait of both British and French customs officials during the ceremony to open the Channel Tunnel in Kent, on the UK side, on 1st December 1990, in Folkestone, England. It symbolises the controls on human traffic that will soon pass through the tunnel beneath the sea between England and France, the first physical link between these two land masses since the Ice Age.
    customs_women-01-12-1990.jpg
  • British Army Parachute Regiment soldiers prepare for another bout of Milling, a test of aggression for new recruits. In this event, each candidate is paired with another of similar weight and build, and is given 60 seconds to demonstrate 'controlled physical aggression' in a milling contest - similar to boxing, except neither winning, losing, nor skill are pre-requisites of passing. Candidates are instead scored on their determination, while blocking and dodging result in points deducted. Candidates now wear head protection as well as boxing gloves.
    paras_milling01-30-07-1996.jpg
  • Cockpit controls detail inside a BAE Ststems Hawk of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team.
    Red_Arrows772_RBA.jpg
  • Cockpit controls detail inside a BAE Ststems Hawk of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team.
    Red_Arrows771_RBA.jpg
  • Cockpit controls detail inside a BAE Ststems Hawk of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team.
    Red_Arrows770_RBA.jpg
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