View allAll Photos Tagged 35535

IC 35535 Milano C.le-Ventimiglia (alla Pilota verrà poi agganciata la E444R.011)

...che non sono ancora del tutto finiti, era usuale vedere Tartarughe in testa agli Intercity e a treni a lunga percorrenza, vedi notturni...anzi in quel periodo, circa cinque anni fa, le nostre erano ovunque per macinare chilometri e arrivare così alle revisioni che però volevano dire fine della storia in quanto non venivano effettuate e finivano così ritirate dal servizio in attesa di essere demolite. E così godiamoci il passaggio dell' E444R.011 al traino dell' IC 35535 Milano C.le - Ventimiglia deviato sulla linea lenta dei Giovi per lavori su quella veloce...il convoglio è formato da carrozze in livrea xmpr e in livre ibrida o Frecciaverde come la chiamavo io, quella di carrozze distolte dai servizi Frecciabianca, mentre transita nei pressi di Pietrabissara sotto il sole della mattinata inoltrata estiva

Ai tempi in cui i Caimani trainavano ancora treni passeggeri assistiamo al transito del pulitissimo E656.462 in testa all' IC 35535 (1535) Milano Centrale - Ventimiglia che oltre che essere deviato dalla linea Succursale alla storica per lavori viaggia pure sul binario illegale in uscita dal ponte di Pietrabissara in un'assolata mattinata di metà Agosto

...come in cielo così in terra...ormai è abituale vedere i complessi di E414 in totale livrea ICsun ma ogni tanto capita di trovare in giro ancora degli ibridi con solo metà convoglio nei nuovi colori, in cielo è anche peggio con il sole ormai sparito dietro ad un grande fronte nuvoloso. Ecco allora le E414.157 e 128 entrambe in livrea FB mentre espletano l' IC 35535 (1535) Milano C.le - Ventimiglia in doppia livrea, qui in entrata a Tortona

Scatto più che altro dimostrativo dell'imponenza del ponte in muratura a Pietrabissara che mostra il passaggio, su di esso, dell' IC 35535 Milano C.le - Ventimiglia trainato dall' E402B.168 in livrea Frecciabianca...purtroppo mi sono accorto troppo tardi del pannello distanziometrico che copre in parte il muso della loco....mentre per i pali della catenaria non ci si può far niente!!!

Ecco l' E444R.051 ancora in buona forma traina l' IC 1535 Milano C.le - Ventimiglia, rinumerato 35535 poichè si ritroverà deviato sulle linee dei Giovi, transitando in velocità sulla Genova - Milano nel lungo rettilineo tra Pontecurone e Tortona in una bella mattinata di fine Luglio

First Leeds 35535, a 2018 Wright Streetdeck Micro Hybrid, was seen in Leeds City Centre, whilst operating a service 13A to Thorpe Lane. New to First West Yorkshire.

VH-NOE Boeing B.767 33AER (MSN 35535) Vietnam Airlines LFPG 11-06-1995

Bain News Service,, publisher.

 

Sir W.H. Beveridge

 

[between ca. 1920 and ca. 1925]

 

1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.

 

Notes:

Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.

Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).

 

Format: Glass negatives.

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see George Grantham Bain Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/274_bain.html

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Bain News Service photograph collection (DLC) 2005682517

 

General information about the George Grantham Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.35535

 

Call Number: LC-B2- 5926-3

 

First Leeds Wright StreetDeck

The Grade II Listed Stowmarket Railway Station on the Great Eastern Main Line in Suffolk, East Anglia, England.

 

The station was opened by the Ipswich & Bury Railway in 1846 with red brick main buildings in a flamboyant Jacobean manner by Frederick Barnes.

 

Building the railway from Ipswich to Bury St Edmunds proved challenging. When the Eastern Union Railway opened the line to Ipswich Stoke Hill railway station in 1846 this was located south of the existing tunnel. The Ipswich and Bury Railway built the tunnel which proved a challenge and then a further challenge awaited the railway’s engineers at Stowmarket area where local marsh swallowed up a lot of material with test probes finding the bog was 80 feet deep.

 

On 26 November 1846 the first test train ran to Bury St Edmunds with stops at most stations on the route, accompanied by the inevitable lavish celebrations. The official opening followed on 7 December 1846 when a special train ran from Shoreditch (later Bishopsgate railway station) to a temporary station at Bury St Edmunds.

 

The EUR was in financial trouble and effectively hemmed in by the Eastern Counties Railway (ECR) making further expansion difficult. Following negotiations in 1853, The ECR took over the working of the EUR (and thus Stowmarket statin) on 1 January 1854, a situation formally sanctioned by the Act of 7 August 1854.

 

1854 also saw the completion of the link from Bury St Edmunds to Cambridge thus linking Ipswich and Stowmarket to Cambridge. By the 1860s the railways in East Anglia were in financial trouble, and most were leased to the ECR; they wished to amalgamate formally, but could not obtain government agreement for this until 1862, when the Great Eastern Railway was formed by amalgamation. Thus Stowmarket became a GER station in 1862.

 

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Boeing 737 Next Gen - MSN 35535 - B-5413

Airline Shenzhen Airlines

Registration : B-5413

Country : China

Date : 1992 -

Codes ZH CSZ

Callsign : Shenzhen air

Web site : www.global.shenzhenair.com

 

Serial number 35535 LN:2895

Type 737-87L

First flight date 23/04/2009

Engines 2 x CFMI CFM56-7B26

 

12/05/2009 Shenzhen Airlines B-5413

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/35535

 

This image was scanned from a postcard in an album belonging to Francis Richard (Frank) Moore (1878-1964), whose family was based at Bishop's Bridge near Maitland, New South Wales at the time the postcard was sent. Mr Moore was a teacher who taught in schools in northern NSW and in Sydney. The postcards were collected at the turn of the twentieth century.

 

After Mr Moore's death, the album passed to his sister, Eliza Jane Keily, née Moore (1890-1968). The image is published here with permission of the family.

 

If you wish to reproduce the image, please acknowledge the Collection and the University of Newcastle Library.

Please contact us or leave a comment if you have any information about the image.

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Swedish Air Force SAAB J35F Draken 35535/F10/0 dumped at Satenas in June 2000

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Cessna 310 c/n 35535 ex-N5345A Sabena Flying School Grimbergen

A Robin A. Walker photo

Ethel May Francis was born on 17 March 1894 in Hamilton, Newcastle NSW. On 17 December 1916, she married Ray Milton Sterling, the son of American shipowner Captain Edward Robert Sterling, at St Peters Church in her hometown of Hamilton. Two years later, their daughter Margaret Francis Sterling was born on 8 August, and within three months, records indicate that Mrs Sterling sailed to San Francisco with her daughter on the VENTURA. In the US, the couple lived in Seattle, Washington with Ray Sterling's parents, Captain E R Sterling and Helen B Sterling. Ray Sterling was captain of the six-masted barquentine E R STERLING throughout his career following his father's footsteps.

 

For more information see our blog post on the Sterlings: bit.ly/OsqaFc

 

This photo is part of the Australian National Maritime Museum’s Samuel J. Hood Studio collection. Sam Hood (1872-1953) was a Sydney photographer with a passion for ships. His 60-year career spanned the romantic age of sail and two world wars. The photos in the collection were taken mainly in Sydney and Newcastle during the first half of the 20th century.

 

The ANMM undertakes research and accepts public comments that enhance the information we hold about images in our collection. This record has been updated accordingly.

 

Photographer: Samuel J. Hood Studio Collection

 

Object no. 00035539

View large: www.flickr.com/photos/smartjunco/3453520237/sizes/o/

 

Hords of Boeing employees working on the P-8A today. Skymark should fly on Monday as BOE116.

 

Left to Right:

Skymark JA737U, 737-8FZ. Line 2888, Cn# 29680.

Fly Dubai A6-FDB, 737-8GQ. Line 2829, Cn# 35795.

RyanAir EI-EBF, 737-8AS. Line 2893, Cn# 37539.

Continental N37434, 737-924ER. Line 2891, Cn# 33528.

US NAVY N541BA, 737-8FV (P-8A Poseidon). Line 2599, Cn# 34394.

Shenzhen B-5413, 737-87L. Line 2895, Cn# 35535 .

GOL PR-GGL, 737-8EH. Line 2890, Cn# 36148.

RyanAir EI-EFA, 737-8AS. Line 2892, Cn# 37539.

Southwest N935WN, 737-7H4. Line 2894, Cn# 36641.

 

Out back:

Fly Dubai A6-FDA, 737-8GQ. Line 2794, Cn# 35794. (Interior being installed in 4-81 Bldg)

 

Website plug:

drewski2112.livejournal.com/

 

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Mycena alba (Bres.) Kühn., syn.: Mycena corticola ss. Bres., Omphalia alba Bres., Marasmiellus albus (Bres.) Singer

White bonnet, DE: Weisser Rindenhelmling

Slo.: belkasta čeladica

 

Dat.: Dec. 07. 2014

Lat.: 46.35535 Long.: 13.69859

Code: Bot_853/2014_DSC5112

 

Habitat: alpine valley, river bank at the foot of steep north side of a mountain, locally almost flat terrain, calcareous ground, river bank vegetation mostly consisting of Salix eleagnos, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies and some Fagus sylvatica; humid air and ground, partly sunny, exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 525 m (1.720 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: growing in bark crevices of a live, standing, grown up Ostrya carpinifolia covered by liverworts (Frullania sp. or eventually Radula sp.), mosses and lichens.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, left bank of river Soča between villages Soča and Trenta, about 100 m downstream of the river bridge leading to the farmhouse 'Matevž', Trenta 3, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: According to Breitenbach (1995) (Ref.:1) only three 'winter' species of very large genus Mycena (over 200 species worldwide (Ref.:2) and 64 described in Slovenia (Ref.:3)) have round or almost round spores. Descriptions of Mycena alba in literature nicely fit to this observation. The species is considered rare almost everywhere (Ref.:2). There are only a few observations in Slovenia registered in the Boletus Informaticus data base so far. However the mushroom is probably much more frequent as data show. There is no doubt that it is overlooked frequently, since it is small. As far as I was able to check Ostrya carpinifolia has not been recorded yet as a host.

 

Growing solitary in a group of more than 30 pilei all around a single tree trunk from 0.5 m to 1.8 m above ground level; pilei diameter 4 - 9 mm, stipe 5 - 8 mm long, diameter about 0.5 mm; taste poorly tested since the fungi are so small, apparently indistinctive; smell indistinctive; flesh quite firm considering miniature size of fruit bodies; SP faint, probably white.

 

Spores smooth. Dimensions: 7 [7.7 ; 8] 8.8 x 5.7 [6.5 ; 6.8] 7.6 microns; Q = 1.1 [1.2] 1.3; N = 32; C = 95%; Me = 7.9 x 6.7 microns; Qe = 1.2. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water; live material. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF

 

Ref.:

(1) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.3. Verlag Mykologia(1995), p 260.

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 428. S rundoder fast rund

(3) A. Poler, ed., Seznam gliv Slovenije (in Slovene) (Slovenian checklist of Fungi), 2nd Ed., Assoc. of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (1998), p 51.

(4) home.online.no/~araronse/Mycenakey/alba.htm

(5) www.museum-joanneum.at/fileadmin//user_upload/Stundienzen...

  

Title

Symbols - Daytime, bottle - Narragansett Lager Beer Billboard, Parking Lot Entrance, Car Entering, next to Building with Large Lighthouse over Doorway, Scollay Square

 

Contributors

researcher: Gyorgy Kepes (American, 1906-2001)

researcher: Kevin Lynch (American, 1918-1984)

photographer: Nishan Bichajian (American, 20th century)

 

Date

creation date: between 1954-1959

 

Location

Creation location: Boston (Massachusetts, United States)

Repository: Rotch Visual Collections, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)

ID: Kepes/Lynch Collection, 72.35

 

Period

Modern

 

Materials

gelatin silver prints

 

Techniques

documentary photography

 

Type

Photograph

 

Copyright

 

(c) Massachusetts Institute of Technology

 

Access Statement

 

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0

 

creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

 

Identifier

KL_001800

 

DSpace_Handle

hdl.handle.net/1721.3/35535

Ray Milton Sterling was born on 20 December 1894 in his parents' native Halifax in Nova Scotia, Canada. On 5 July 1916, Ray Sterling arrived in Sydney with his father on board E R STERLING. At this point, he was listed as 1st Officer. On 17 December 1916, Ray Sterling married an Australian woman, Ethel May Francis, at St Peters Church in her hometown of Hamilton. Two years later, their daughter Margaret Francis Sterling was born on 8 August, and within three months, records indicate that Mrs Sterling sailed to San Francisco with her daughter on the VENTURA. In the US, the couple lived in Seattle, Washington with Ray Sterling's parents, Captain E R Sterling and Helen B Sterling. Ray Sterling was captain of the six-masted barquentine E R STERLING throughout his career following his father's footsteps.

 

E R STERLING was originally built in Belfast in 1883 as a four-masted iron ship by the name LORD WOLSELEY. In 1904, it was renamed EVERETT G GRIGGS and modified into a six-masted barquentine. It was sold and renamed E R STERLING in 1910, and was broken up in 1927.

 

For more information see our blog post on the Sterlings: bit.ly/OsqaFc

 

This photo is part of the Australian National Maritime Museum’s Samuel J. Hood Studio collection. Sam Hood (1872-1953) was a Sydney photographer with a passion for ships. His 60-year career spanned the romantic age of sail and two world wars. The photos in the collection were taken mainly in Sydney and Newcastle during the first half of the 20th century.

 

The ANMM undertakes research and accepts public comments that enhance the information we hold about images in our collection. This record has been updated accordingly.

 

Photographer: Samuel J. Hood Studio Collection

 

Object no. 00035538

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