NPR

Life Along The Shores Of The Caspian Sea

British photographer Chloe Dewe Mathews captures the ways in which natural elements show up in religion, therapeutic practices and recreation around the world's largest inland body of water.
A polluted stream in Talesh Mahalleh, which is said to be the most highly radioactive inhabited area in the world. Residents of Ramsar are exposed to naturally occurring radiation that is 10 times the annual rate of permissible radiation exposure recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection. Talesh Mahalleh, Ramsar, Iran, 2015.

Photographer Chloe Dewe Mathews' newest book, Caspian: The Elements, takes the reader on a meandering journey through oil-rich central Asia following traces of natural elements such as fire, gas, salt and water in people's everyday lives. Her images work as small, fascinating stories about how the region's residents interact with their environment in surprising ways.

Natural elements show up in Dewe Mathews' photos through religion, ancient therapeutic practices and recreation. In one of the most striking series of images, Dewe Mathews shows people bathing in the region's celebrated crude oil at a spa in Naftalan, Azerbaijan. In other images she explores Ramsar,

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