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And the industrial city requires the pipe to help the lives of workers.
View in Living With Pipeline Industry
Women's Project Theater: The Pipeline Festival Photo Shoot
WEEK 1: March 24 – 26
CYGNUS
An inexplicable and life-altering event sends Cydney on a search for a divine solution to her earthly problems.
By Susan Soon He Stanton
Directed by Danya Taymor
Produced by Liz Olson
- See more at: wptheater.org/show/the-pipeline-festival/#sthash.eS5zjRUF...
From November 1-20, hundreds of Minnesotans attended the Line 3 evidentiary hearing at the Public Utilities Commission hearing room in St. Paul. Cameras were not allowed inside the hearing room, but these images show pipeline opponents debriefing and celebrating in lunchtime and post-hearing conversations every day, and eating food brought by native elders in the movement.
Photo by Andy Pearson
The Trans Alaska oil pipeline travels 800 miles from Prudhoe Bay in the Arctic to Valdez in Prince William Sound. it's fair to say it passes through some pretty spectacular scenery! From the Richardson Highway, Interior Alaska
The Spanish hauled gold from Peru over the Camino Cruces to a point on the other side of the river near Gamboa where it was then taken down the river, into the Atlantic Ocean, and eventually to Portobello. Gamboa is tucked up into the jungle, which regularly spills the birds and animals into the clean-cut world of man. Scientists from around the world flock to Gamboa to study the birds and animals along the Pipeline Road where birdwatchers have set world records for numbers and variety.
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Sun fading in the distance while looking down the clearing for an underground gas line. The trees would have already filled in this open space if it was not actively managed..
A water pipeline built entirely by hand, mostly from prisoner labor. Runs through the Royal Gorge right alongside the Arkansas River.
Taken from within the Royal Gorge Train. It was snowing pretty good, hence the melting snow droplets running down the window.
The Spanish hauled gold from Peru over the Camino Cruces to a point on the other side of the river near Gamboa where it was then taken down the river, into the Atlantic Ocean, and eventually to Portobello. Gamboa is tucked up into the jungle, which regularly spills the birds and animals into the clean-cut world of man. Scientists from around the world flock to Gamboa to study the birds and animals along the Pipeline Road where birdwatchers have set world records for numbers and variety.