Three men stand on the remnants of a road and survey the area of Sigi, which was devastated by the Sep. 28 earthquake. Much of the area was swept away by a phenomenon known as liquefaction, when an earthquake causes soil to act like a liquid.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
Zainab Labungasa and her granddaughter take away some of the possessions they were able to recover from their destroyed homes in Balaroa, one of the worst-hit neighborhoods in Palu. (VICE News/Laurel Chor)
Ati sits in front of her home, one of the few structures that still stands in the neighborhood of Petobo. (VICE News/Laurel Chor)
A mother holds her daughter in the destroyed neighborhood of Balaroa.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
An excavator searches for bodies in Petobo. (VICE News/Laurel Chor)
An excavator unloads a body found by a search and rescue team in Petobo.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
Air force officers deliver aid to Donggala, an area that was largely cut off by the earthquake.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
The “floating mosque” of Palu was knocked off its pillars by the Sep. 28 tsunami.
A man looks at a submerged vehicle while standing on the remains of a bridge destroyed by the Sep. 28 tsunami that hit Palu city.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
A search and rescue vehicle gets stuck in Petobo, which has been covered in mud after the earthquake.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)
Military planes are packed with evacuees so tightly that there is only standing room.(VICE News/Laurel Chor)