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Common tern, Sterna hirundo. 6 July 2016. WWT London Wetland Centre, Barnes, London, England, UK.
This is a composite of an individual bird.
Please contact me to arrange the use of any of my images. They are copyright, all rights reserved.
And then it changed.
My sister, again... ;) played around with this edit, I quite likes it :D
it's pouring down today, allllllll day...how nice. so im still in my pj's :D its just one of those days :) x
IMPORTANTE: Hoy 6 de Marzo la curiosidad me mató, me vi frente a un hecho histórico que no podía dejar de documentar, haciendo a un lado algunas teorías y prejuicios que les tengo y se les tienen a las marchas del oficialismo, me adentré como ateo en procesión religiosa al cortejo fúnebre del presidente Chávez. Quería entender y ver de cerca el sentimiento real de esa gente más allá de lo que dicen los medios o las demás personas y sacar mis propias conclusiones. Yo NO CREO en la política ni en los políticos, pero tengo otras creencias, por eso respeto a la gente que opta creer en algo...
adorei a vitrine da kikikits..mas desisti de entrar.....a fila para pagamento dava a volta em todo o stand...rsrsrs..amigas..chega de fila...
tinha fila na Retalharte...entrava de 5 em 5.......ficar ali...mais de 50 minutos pra comprar um pedacinho de tecido japones......
fila da fuxicos e fricotes...pra comprar sianinhas importadas....aquelas fininhas são tão dificeis de achar..olha era fila pra todo lado...rsrsrsrsrs...
I decided that I would take some levitation photos today. I wish I had a wider-angle lens - maybe then it wouldn't look so much like I am trying to hang myself.
Black Blazer - F21
Grey Pencil Skirt- Banana Republic
Cami (unseen) - BR Outlet
Belt- Gap
Floral Scarf - Anthropologie
Shoes - Anthropologie, via ebay
Ring - on loan from sister M.
Seguramente cada día es una nueva oportunidad para hacer aquello que quieres, para perseguir tus sueños. Pero para los que les cuesta decidirse, como a mi, creo que los lunes es el perfecto día para empezar con los propósitos.
Mañana nuevas aventuras, mañana nuevos esfuerzos, mañana con más ganas, mañana se sigue luchando, MAÑANA ES LUNES!
Patri10
6 28 2012 !! airplane and sunset here . john hoellerich photo. fotogjohnh! and a 300mm lense hhere !!
The Basilica Cistern (Turkish: Yerebatan Sarayi - "Sunken Palace", or Yerebatan Sarnici - "Sunken Cistern"), is the largest of several hundred ancient cisterns that lie beneath the city of Istanbul (formerly Constantinople), Turkey. The cistern, located 500 feet (150 m) southwest of the Hagia Sophia on the historical peninsula of Sarayburnu, was built in the 6th century during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I.
Ancient texts indicated that the basilica contained gardens, surrounded by a colonnade and facing the Hagia Sophia. According to ancient historians, Emperor Constantine built a structure that was later rebuilt and enlarged by Emperor Justinian after the Nika riots of 532, which devastated the city.
Historical texts claim that 7,000 slaves were involved in the construction of the cistern.
The enlarged cistern provided a water filtration system for the Great Palace of Constantinople and other buildings on the First Hill, and continued to provide water to the Topkapi Palace after the Ottoman conquest in 1453 and into modern times.
This cathedral-size cistern is an underground chamber approximately 138 metres (453 ft) by 64.6 metres (212 ft) - about 9,800 square metres (105,000 sq ft) in area - capable of holding 80,000 cubic metres (2,800,000 cu ft) of water. The ceiling is supported by a forest of 336 marble columns, each 9 metres (30 ft) high, arranged in 12 rows of 28 columns each spaced 4.9 metres (16 ft) apart. The capitals of the columns are mainly Ionic and Corinthian styles, with the exception of a few Doric style with no engravings. One of the columns is engraved with raised pictures of a Hen's Eye, slanted braches, and tears. This column resembles the columns of the Triumphal Arch of Theodosius I from the 4th century (AD 379-395), erected in the 'Forum Tauri' Square. Ancient texts suggest that the tears on the column pay tribute to the hundreds of slaves who died during the construction of the Basilica Cistern. The majority of the columns in the cistern appear to have been recycled from the ruins of older buildings (a process called 'spoliation'), likely brought to Constantinople from various parts of the empire, together with those that were used in the construction of Hagia Sophia. They are carved and engraved out of various types of marble and granite.