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  • A woman and a child holding a snake during the snake Procession of Cocullo, one of the oldest pagan Christian celebrations still held today in Italy, on Thursday, May 5, 2005. Saint Domenico, the peculiar Saint of the event, was thought to protect from and heal snake bites. **ITALY OUT**
    Serpari01.JPG
  • Holding a snake during the snake Procession of Cocullo, one of the oldest pagan Christian celebrations still held today in Italy, on Thursday, May 5, 2005. Saint Domenico, the peculiar Saint of the event, was thought to protect from and heal snake bites. **ITALY OUT**
    Serpari02.JPG
  • Statue of Saint Domenico covered in snakes during the snake Procession of Cocullo, one of the oldest pagan Christian celebrations still held today in Italy, on Thursday, May 5, 2005. Saint Domenico, the peculiar Saint of the event, was thought to protect from and heal snake bites. **ITALY OUT**
    Serpari05.JPG
  • Statue of Saint Domenico covered in snakes during the snake Procession of Cocullo, one of the oldest pagan Christian celebrations still held today in Italy, on Thursday, May 5, 2005. Saint Domenico, the peculiar Saint of the event, was thought to protect from and heal snake bites. **ITALY OUT**
    Serpari04.JPG
  • Members of the band playing during the snake Procession of Cocullo, one of the oldest pagan Christian celebrations still held today in Italy, on Thursday, May 5, 2005. Saint Domenico, the peculiar Saint of the event, was thought to protect from and heal snake bites. **ITALY OUT**
    Serpari03.JPG
  • Dean Baker, 72, owner of the largest ranch in Snake Valley, is talking on the phone inside his home near Baker, Utah, USA. Although opposing South Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) 300-mile water pipeline project, he is one of the very few inhabitants of Snake Valley that is supporting Utah Governor Gary R. Herbert to sign a legal agreement between Utah and Nevada. This document should protect their future rights and the local environment, but would also allow for the beginning of the pipeline construction: many people fear that once pumping water, it will not be easily stopped, even if breaching any of the points outlined within the agreement.
    19_Las_Vegas_Water_Addiction.JPG
  • Dean Baker, 72, is visiting cow herds grazing inside his ranch, the largest in Snake Valley, near Baker, Utah, USA. Although opposing South Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) 300-mile water pipeline project, he is one of the very few inhabitants of Snake Valley that is supporting Utah Governor Gary R. Herbert to sign a legal agreement between Utah and Nevada. This document that should protect their future rights and and the local environment, but would also allow for the beginning of the pipeline construction: many people fear that once pumping water, it will not be easily stopped, even if breaching any of the points outlined within the agreement.
    22_Las_Vegas_Water_Addiction.JPG
  • Dean Baker, 72, owner of the largest ranch in Snake Valley, is driving on his land near Baker, Utah, USA. Although opposing South Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) 300-mile water pipeline project, he is one of the very few inhabitants of Snake Valley that is supporting Utah Governor Gary R. Herbert to sign a legal agreement between Utah and Nevada. This document should protect their future rights and the local environment, but would also allow for the beginning of the pipeline construction: many people fear that once pumping water, it will not be easily stopped, even if breaching any of the points outlined within the agreement.
    06_Las_Vegas_Water_Addiction.JPG
  • Rupert Steele, former chairman of the Goshute Tribe, is speaking with anger at a public meeting with Utah's governor Gary R. Herbert at West Desert School, in Trout Creek, Snake Valley, Utah, USA. The talks have focused on the pipeline's possible impact. It will reach far into the valleys on the border with Utah, therefore the governor is addressing concerns on how to best protect the State's environment and natural resources, such as water.
    02_Las_Vegas_Water_Addiction.JPG
  • A replica real-life size of the proposed 300-mile South Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) pipeline, has been put on display at the Border Inn Motel, near Baker, Snake Valley, on the Nevada-Utah border, USA. To function properly, the pipeline will need to be filled up with water at all times.
    07_Las_Vegas_Water_Addiction.JPG
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Alex Masi Documentary Photography

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