View allAll Photos Tagged 2000
This one was really "hiding in plain sight". The owner has tried to protect it as you can see from the notice in the side window, but it doesn't look too good for this one.
A self portal it taken with my Pentax K1000 on color film while I was living in Beaufort, South Carolina.
In Flickr Explore 03/18/25
Nieuw Zuid, Antwerpen, België.
A new residential area in the south of Antwerp. This project, as they promise, is an example and a catalyst for sustainable urban development in Antwerp.
2000 Audi S3.
Previously registered W596 OSW and T26 ARN.
Photo with kind permission of [https://www.flickr.com/photos/34679063@N04].
Car: Triumph 2000 Mk1.
Date of first registration: 1st November 1966.
Registration region: Bristol.
Latest recorded mileage: 39,160 (MOT 21st April 2018).
Last change of keeper: 17th April 2015.
Date taken: 13th March 2016.
Location: Queen Square, Bristol, UK.
RS 2000.
Taken on Dartmoor China clay mines.
Taken in 1984 with Hasselblad 500cm and Planer syncro compur 80mm f2.8 lens,.
Kodak VPS film 100 asa, converted to b/w .digitised on my Nikon Z9 with the Z nikor 105mm macro lens. Comercial shoot for the owner.
Great to see an LS400 out in the wild, and I can't recall many in black.
Relatively low mileage, 131k at its most recent MoT - those I've known all seem to be around 160-170,000.
CART 2000 Season
Motorola 300, Gateway International Speedway, Madison, Illinois, September 17, 2000
Playing with the zoom pull on the 35-350mm lens as Helio zooming through the pit exit lane
My last appearance on graduation was in June of 2000, and that was not even my graduation. Whether i don’t like the experience or being claustrophobic but I’m not graduation person. After that year I lost all feelings for graduations. Give me my diploma & call it a day. No feelings, no memories. Leaving that graduation in Brooklyn college & walking out of that gate choking on pain I said to myself “never again”. Call me strange but I don’t like two things; graduations & traditional weddings (unless it’s somewhere in the nature or by the water, NO CATERING Halls!)
CART 2000 Season
Motorola 300, Gateway International Speedway, Madison, Illinois, September 17, 2000
Gil de Ferran in his championship season
CART 2000 Season
Motorola 300, Gateway International Speedway, Madison, Illinois, September 17, 2000
Penske fleet leaving pit lane
2000. Painted at Leeside. You can still see the raw concrete above. For the new jacks, this guy has been around even longer than this.
A 365 unit heads away from Canterbury East past the charming signalbox.l may have a shot of a CIG doing the same,certainly have one on video entering the platform l am on shortly after this.
Metadata Data Date: April 26, 2000, Visualization Date: April 26, 2000
Credit: Image created by Reto Stockli with the help of Alan Nelson, under the leadership of Fritz Hasler
Recalling the famous Apollo-era pictures of Earth taken by lunar astronauts, this digital image is a spectacular portrait of the Western Hemisphere at the time of one of the strongest hurricanes ever observed in the Eastern Pacific.
This combination of science, engineering and artistry was generated by researchers in the Laboratory for Atmospheres at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, using data from three different Earth-observing satellite instruments.
The research team's goal was to assemble an image that recreates the visceral impact of viewing Earth from space with human eyes. The prominent storm raging off the west coast of North America is Hurricane Linda. Other obvious features include the shallow waters of the Caribbean and sediments around the mouth of the Amazon River.
The underlying image of the full disk of Earth and its clouds was taken on September 9, 1997, by a Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) operated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and built by NASA. The ocean data was collected in late September and early October 1997 by NASA's Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) satellite. The land color is portrayed by a vegetation index calculated using data collected from September 9-19, 1997, by Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) instruments carried aboard NOAA's Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites (POES).
These data are draped across a digital elevation model of Earth's topography from the U.S. Geological Survey. The complete computer image file is 26 megabytes, making it one of the most detailed Earth images ever created by NASA!
The researchers chose to translate the digital data over land into a color scheme where heavy vegetation is green and sparse vegetation is yellow. The heights of mountains and depths of valleys have been exaggerated by 50 times their actual levels so that vertical relief is visible. The shadows for the mountains were calculated from the exaggerated heights.
The presence of the Moon in this image is an artistic addition. The lunar image was collected by GOES in September 1994, and has been magnified to about twice its relative size.
West Virginia, USA. We build things and we let them rot rather than tear them down. It is a dilemma. Where are the people who left this behind?