Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Categories: World

Work the salt mines in Ethiopia is not to be envied: they are forced to work at 50 degrees Celsius for an average cost of 6.5 dollars a day. This is the hottest job on earth.

Salt mines are in Avarskoy basin and extend over 155 thousand square kilometers. At the lowest point, they are more than 90 meters below sea level. Professional travel photographer and videographer Joel Santos went into this is truly a hot place to capture the severe beauty of this corner of the planet.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

"I felt the need to tell the story of the salt miners. They work in the hottest place on earth and earn no more than 100-200 euros per month. The life of the local heavy. Probably one of the worst in the world," says the photographer.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

The depression of Danakil, especially the area around the lake Afdera, is a place which produces nearly all the salt in Ethiopia. Every day about two thousand dromedaries and thousands of donkeys are here, carrying salt slabs to Berhala 80 kilometers from here.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Miners often work at temperatures below 50 degrees Celsius and begin work early in the morning to avoid peak heat, when the sun is at the Zenith.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

"The air is so dry that in the desert nothing specific not smell. However, near some flooded areas you can feel the salty flavor, if you lean closer to the ground," — says the photographer.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

"Most people don't know that in Ethiopia there is a depression. The severity of has its own unique beauty, and surprisingly, as aerial photographs reveal it with hitherto unknown parts, giving more scale to what the miners face every day," said Santos.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Annually it produces about 1.3 million tons of salt. Here there are 750 officially registered miners of salt.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Harsh landscapes include active volcanoes, foul-smelling sulfurous hot springs, black lava streams and studded with salt crystals water.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Once the salt blocks used in this area as currency, but now they were replaced by money as the rest of the world. Avarskoe local population has a strict monopoly on the depression of Danakil and jealously guards the salt. Each merchant before you pass must stop at the hut of the collector of the salt duties, and to pay for every camel, donkey and mule in your caravan.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

"While I was shooting, I learned a lot. Especially when I had the pleasure to meet special people living in such extreme conditions. I had the opportunity to grow as a person and in another way to look at things," says the photographer.

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

 

Welcome to hell: looks like the hottest job in the world

Keywords: Heat | Salt | Temperature | Miners | Mines | Ethiopia

Post News Article

Recent articles

The ergonomics on the contrary: in different cities around the world are struggling with the homeless
The ergonomics on the contrary: in different cities around ...

Scenic and wild homeless have become an integral part of the landscape of the big city. Wherever there are horizontal any surface ...

20 photos of little Muscovites of the early 1960s
20 photos of little Muscovites of the early 1960s

In early 1960, American photographer and journalist Carl Midans, commissioned by LIFE magazine, made a series of stunning color ...

The most severe Russian photographer
The most severe Russian photographer

The seemingly dangerous photos were actually taken under the close attention of trainers. This is how the shots turned out with a ...

Related articles

8 things never to keep in the car in the winter
8 things never to keep in the car in the winter

Winter — it is a difficult time for motorists, especially if the vehicle has to be left under the open sky. But besides the ...

Why is the temperature measured in the mouth in the West, and in our armpit?
Why is the temperature measured in the mouth in the West, and ...

Most likely, you have seen in the movies that Americans put a thermometer in their mouth to measure the temperature. At the same ...

The Asian riddle: why you need this bamboo product?
The Asian riddle: why you need this bamboo product?

This strange-looking thing sold in many countries of South-East Asia: for example, in South Korea, you can buy in the supermarket. ...