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  • Reenactment of the first landing of English settlers in the USA at First Landing Park on the 400th anniversary, 2007. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    First_Landing_400Anniv.jpg
  • US Border Patrol agents scan for undocumented migrants from Mexcio trying to enter the USA in Smuggler's Gulch near San Diego.  Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Smugglers_Gulch_1.jpg
  • A protester against the US war and occupation of Iraq, Norfolk, Virginia, 2005. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Iraq_war_protester001.tif
  • Religious signs along a roadway in Mississippi. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Signs_Mississippi.jpg
  • IED (improvised explosive device) disposal robot being operated during training for work in Iraq and Afghanistan by US Navy EOD (explosives ordinance disposal) crew at Fort Story in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    IED_1.jpg
  • Shuttered furniture store, 2007, Norfolk, Virginia. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Zedds_furniture.jpg
  • US-Mexico border fence near San Diego. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Smugglers_Gulch_3.jpg
  • Mural on a hotel wall, Virginia Beach. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Parking_Lot.jpg
  • Closed strip club, 2006. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Platinum.jpg
  • Shuttered motel, Ocean View, Norfolk, Virginia. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    OceanView2.jpg
  • Aftermath of snow storm. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Snack_Bar.jpg
  • Auto upholstery store. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    God_Bless_the_Troops.jpg
  • Friends gather where an 18-year-old high school student was shot to death in a drive by shooting in January 2009. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RIP_Lil'Charles_4.jpg
  • Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Tire_City_boat.jpg
  • A US Navy Blue Angels F/A-18 jet prepares for takeoff, Oceana Naval Air Station, Virginia Beach. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Blue_Angels.jpg
  • Rose Merry Tuazon, the mother of 21-year-old U.S. Army soldier Andrew Tuazon, mourns at her son's grave at Greenlawn Cemetery in Chesapeake, VA, on October 20, 2005. Andrew Tuazon was shot in the head by an Iraqi sniper in the city of Mosul in northern Iraq on May 10, 2004. His mother visits his grave every day. She now drives her son's Honda Accord, with the license plate bearing the inscription "RIP Andy". (Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RoseTuazon_102005.tif
  • Crab seller outside a flea market, Norfolk, Virginia, 2006. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Live_Female_Crabs.jpg
  • The decommissioned battleship USS Wisconsin moored in downtown Norfolk. The Wisconsin launched the first Tomahawk cruise missiles against Saddam Hussein that started the first Gulfa in February 1991. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    USSWisconsin.jpg
  • Harrison's Pier, destroyed by Hurricane Isabel in September 2003, is shown covered by snow in January 2004. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Harrisons_Pier.jpg
  • 4th of July, 2006. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    4thJuly2006.jpg
  • Traveling Vietnam Wall, a replica of the Washington DC Vietnam memorial that goes across the country.  Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Vietnam_Wall_3.jpg
  • Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    AfrAm_Fest.jpg
  • Erotic fashions shop. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Erotic_Fashions.jpg
  • Friends gather where an 18-year-old high school student was shot to death in a drive by shooting in January 2009. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RIP_Lil'Charles_1.jpg
  • IED (improvised explosive device) disposal demonstration during training for work in Iraq and Afghanistan by US Navy EOD (explosives ordinance disposal) crew at Fort Story in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    IED_2.jpg
  • Car wash on the 4th of July, 2006. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Car_Wash.jpg
  • Protesters against the US war and occupation of Iraq, Norfolk, Virginia, 2005. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Iraq_war_protesters003.tif
  • A protester against the US war and occupation of Iraq, Norfolk, Virginia, 2005. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Iraq_war_protester002.tif
  • Construction of a new Wawa convenience store and gas station. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Gasoline.jpg
  • Tourists outside the White House three days before the Wall Street crash of 2008. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    White_House_Chinese_tourists.jpg
  • People fishing in the Everglades near Alligator Alley, South Florida. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    Everglades_fishing.jpg
  • Sunset over the Elizabeth River, Norfolk, Virginia. Coastal Virginia is one of the regions most affected by rising sea levels caused by climate change. This threatens both the economic and military stability of the area, as Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News is home to both the largest military complex in the world, and a huge sea port that affects the economic health of sections of the eastern USA.
    RMR_0168.jpg
  • A pier adjacent to the headquarters of the US Army Corps of Engineers, at Fort Norfolk, Virginia. The ACE are working hard in the area to help shore up coastlines and mitigate the effects of rising sea levels. Coastal Virginia is one of the regions most affected by flooding caused by climate change. This threatens both the economic and military stability of the area, as Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News is home to both the largest military complex in the world, and a huge sea port that affects the economic health of sections of the eastern USA.
    RMR_0110 (1).jpg
  • A late afternoon sun peers through clouds over the piers where container ships are offloaded along the Elizabeth River in Norfolk and Portsmouth, Virginia. Coastal Virginia is one of the regions most affected by rising sea levels caused by climate change. This threatens both the economic and military stability of the area, as Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News is home to both the largest military complex in the world, and a huge sea port that affects the economic health of sections of the eastern USA.
    RMR_1317.jpg
  • Aerial view of the Harrison coal-fired power plant in Haywood, West Virginia. Coal from underground mining is still number one but is competing with natural gas from hydraulic fracturing, aka fracking, as a primary source of energy in the USA. The Harrison power plant was built in 1974 and has one of the world's tallest chimneys at 305 meters.
    RMR_1355.jpg
  • Aerial view of the Harrison coal-fired power plant in Haywood, West Virginia. Coal from underground mining is still number one but is competing with natural gas from hydraulic fracturing, aka fracking, as a primary source of energy in the USA. The Harrison power plant was built in 1974 and has one of the world's tallest chimneys at 305 meters.
    RMR_1128.jpg
  • Aerial view of the Harrison coal-fired power plant in Haywood, West Virginia. The plume of yellow-brown pollutants being emitted is visible. Coal from underground mining is still number one but is competing with natural gas and oil from hydraulic fracturing, aka fracking, as a primary source of energy in the USA. The Harrison power plant was built in 1974 and has one of the world's tallest chimneys at 305 meters.
    Harrison_Power_Station.jpg
  • Dark clouds move in as an afternoon thunderstorm begins over Norfolk, Virginia. Coastal Virginia is one of the regions most affected by rising sea levels caused by climate change. This threatens both the economic and military stability of the area, as Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News is home to both the largest military complex in the world, and a huge sea port that affects the economic health of sections of the eastern USA.
    RMR_1309.jpg
  • A cemetery in the high desert gains a neighbor of a natural gas storage tank in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0479.tiff
  • Friends gather where an 18-year-old high school student was shot to death in a drive by shooting in January 2009. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RIP_Lil'Charles_3.jpg
  • An oil pump jack operates on the prairie near Williston, North Dakota.The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_1511.jpg
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  • Coming in for landing at LaGuardia airport in New York City, June 22, 2015. Shot with iPhone 6Plus.
    IMG_6317.JPG
  • A storage tank with 300 barrels of crude oil is surrounded by debris from massive flooding that afflicted the region in late 2013, in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0503.jpg
  • Cattle graze on the prairie near an oil storage facility and jack pumps. The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_1574.jpg
  • An open runoff pit containing water used in the fracking process in North Dakota. The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_2236.jpg
  • A herd of cattle graze near an oil pipeline under construction in southwest Oklahoma. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0606.tiff
  • President Bill Clinton walks from the Oval Office at the White House after losing a vote for funding of the NATO war against Serbia in Washington, DC, April 28, 1999. (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Clinton South Lawn 042899.jpg
  • People listen to a radio outside the U.S. Capitol building as President Bill Clinton is impeached by the majority Republican U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC, December 19, 1998.  (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Clinton ImpeachVigil 121998.jpg
  • A solitary oil pumpjack used to extract crude oil from a well is shown against a backdrop of the Rocky Mountains in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to these old pumpjacks being replaced by fields of massive drilling derricks and storage tanks. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0405.tiff
  • Author Tom Clancy is photographed by David Burnett at his estate on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, June 22, 2010. Clancy died on October 1, 2013.
    Tom_Clancy-2.JPG
  • President Bill Clinton looks at his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, after she spoke at a White House conference on child care, Washington, DC, October 23, 1997.  (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Bill and Hillary 102397 (1).jpg
  • RMR_0426.jpg
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8881-bw.JPG
  • A cemetery in the high desert gains a neighbor of a natural gas storage tank in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0479.jpg
  • A waste water runoff pool near an oil drilling rig in Doddridge County, West Virginia. The Marcellus Shale formation that runs under West Virginia contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with some economic benefits but mainly negative consequences for residents way of life and the environment of the area.
    RMR_1045.jpg
  • An oil drilling rig operates on the prairie over the Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota, which contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_2182.jpg
  • A temporary housing area for oil workers, dubbed a 'man camp', viewed from the air. The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_1672.jpg
  • Author Tom Clancy at his estate on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, June 22, 2010. Clancy died on October 1, 2013.
    Tom_Clancy-1.JPG
  • Author Tom Clancy at his estate on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, June 22, 2010. Clancy died on October 1, 2013.
    Tom_Clancy-4.JPG
  • TRDance_ensemble_1bw.JPG
  • RMR_1393.jpg
  • RMR_1017.jpg
  • RMR_0922.jpg
  • RMR_0663.jpg
  • Dance_Backstage_7bw.JPG
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8911-bw.JPG
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8910-bw.JPG
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8883-bw.JPG
  • Former energy industry worker Sal Bombardiere says his health has been severely affected after exposure to toxic chemicals while working on a hydraulic fracturing (fracking site), pictured here at his home in Doddridge County, West Virginia. The Marcellus Shale formation that runs under West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with some economic benefits but mainly negative consequences for residents way of life and the environment of the area.
    RMR_1018.jpg
  • A solitary oil pumpjack used to extract crude oil from a well is shown against a backdrop of the Rocky Mountains in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to these old pumpjacks being replaced by fields of massive drilling derricks and storage tanks. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0405.jpg
  • A drilling rig operates near a  massive natural gas storage installation in the high desert of Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0573.tiff
  • A storage tank containing 'produced water', a toxic brew of water and chemicals used in hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of gas or oil, is shown near homes in a neighborhood in Weld County, Colorado. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0445.tiff
  • Independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr testifies about President Bill Clinton before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, November 1998. (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Ken Starr2.jpg
  • President Bill Clinton and other NATO leaders gather in Washington, DC at the opening ceremonies of the summit marking the 50th anniversary of the Atlantic alliance. Second from left is French president Jacques Chirac and beside Clinton is the Czech Republic's Vaclav Havel, April 23, 1999. (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Clinton NATO1 042399.jpg
  • President Bill Clinton (right) and Vice President Al Gore during an event at Presidential Hall in the Old Executive Office Building of the White House, Washington, DC, November 20, 1997.  (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Bill Clinton Al Gore 112097.jpg
  • RMR_0850.jpg
  • Dance_Backstage_3bw.JPG
  • Dance_Backstage_5bw.JPG
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8915-bw.JPG
  • March for Our Lives rally at Towne Pointe Park in Norfolk, Virginia.
    RMR_8880-bw.JPG
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  • A protest against a Confederate monument at One Commercial Place in Norfolk, Virginia, in the wake of the white supremacist and neo-Nazi march and killing of civil rights activist Heather Heyer in Charlottesville. A slave market once stood here in the 1850s, the street where it was located referred to the commerce of the slave trade.
    Confederate_Monument_protest_1.TIFF
  • A protest against a Confederate monument at One Commercial Place in Norfolk, Virginia, in the wake of the white supremacist and neo-Nazi march and killing of civil rights activist Heather Heyer in Charlottesville. A slave market once stood here in the 1850s, the street where it was located referred to the commerce of the slave trade.
    Confederate_monument_protest_2.TIFF
  • A herd of cattle graze near an oil pipeline under construction in southwest Oklahoma. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0608.jpg
  • A drilling rig operating in an oil and gas field in Weld County, Colorado. It is one of scores of rigs that travel to different locations to drill into the shale rock, soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. A boom in drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0448.jpg
  • Flares burn off methane gas released during fracking operations for oil near Williston, North Dakota. The infrastructure for capturing methane is not in place so the gas is burned off into the atmosphere. The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_1530.jpg
  • An oil drilling rig operates on the prairie among canola near Williston, North Dakota. The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_1606.jpg
  • An oil drilling rig operates on the prairie over the Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota, which contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_2066.jpg
  • The Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota contains some of the richest deposits of oil and gas in the world. This has led to a boom in hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state and region, with considerable economic benefits but also negative consequences for residents way of life and environment of the area.
    RMR_2227 (1).jpg
  • The owners of lakefront homes in the town of Azle, Texas, saw their water disappear as creeks that fed the lake dried up. The creek supplied millions of gallons of water used by energy companies fracking for oil and gas. In addition, a series of intense earthquakes that have rocked the region have been blamed on underground wastewater wells and the drilling. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0638.tiff
  • A drilling rig operates under a full moon in western Oklahoma. A boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0601.tiff
  • A home in Weld County, Colorado has drilling rigs as new neighbors, a common occurrence now since a boom in oil and gas drilling across the American West has led to pollution and environmental problems in what were once pristine lands. Traveling rigs go from location to location, drilling down into the shale rock, and are soon followed by pumps that inject a toxic brew of water and chemicals for hydraulic extraction or 'fracking' of oil and gas. Photograph by Roger M. Richards
    RMR_0521.tiff
  • Author Tom Clancy at his estate on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, June 22, 2010. Clancy died on October 1, 2013.
    Tom_Clancy-5.jpg
  • Author Tom Clancy at his estate on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, June 22, 2010. Clancy died on October 1, 2013.
    Tom_Clancy_6.jpg
  • Independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr testifies about President Bill Clinton before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, November 1998. (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Ken Starr4.jpg
  • President Bill Clinton is losing the battle for sleep, showing the fatigue of conducting the war against Serbia. President Clinton and other NATO leaders gathered in Washington, DC at the opening ceremonies of the summit marking the 50th anniversary of the Atlantic alliance. Second from left is President Jacques Chirac of France and next to him is President Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic. April 23, 1999. (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Clinton NATO3 042399.jpg
  • President Bill Clinton looks at his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, after she spoke at a White House conference on child care, Washington, DC, October 23, 1997.  (Photo by Roger M. Richards)
    Bill and Hillary 102397.jpg
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Roger M. Richards

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