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This ornament was made as a gift to a friend's parents for always making me feel welcomed in their home. The "frame" is made of thirty pieces of paper and the central "cube" is made of twelve pieces.
Messiah Complex, M2TM Final @ The Roadhouse, Birmingham, 1st July 2012
© 2012 Tony Gaskin - Stagedive Photography
A large complex with two main parts - the older White castle, a repurposed 13th Century gothique castle rebuilt in classicist style, and the younger 19th Century Red castle in neogothique style. The area was forified in ancient times already, the original stone fort was changed into a chateau in 1620, but it completely burned down in 1796. The owners decided to build it up again, and this was the opportunity to give it the actual look and size. The Red castle was built as a sort of economic area, it was not completely done like it was intended, but the area size was nevertheless doubled. The youngest part is the White tower from 1887, which stands apart of the White castle in the southern edge.
學校/團體參觀立法會綜合大樓
学校/团体参观立法会综合大楼
Visits to the Legislative Council Complex by schools/organizations (2019.01.12)
Messiah Complex, M2TM Final @ The Roadhouse, Birmingham, 1st July 2012
© 2012 Tony Gaskin - Stagedive Photography
The 41 Complex Fires consisted of 5 lightning caused fires that burned more than 15,200 acres on the Darby Ranger District of the Bitterroot National Forest. All of the fires were located in the Sapphire Mountains approximately 10 miles east of Hamilton. The largest fire, Up Top, grew to more than 12,300 acres and burned across Skalkaho Highway, closing the road to motorists for several weeks. The fire burned completely around the historic Gird Point Lookout which was saved by firefighters. More than 530,000 gallons of water and 150,000 gallons of fire retardant were dropped on the fires and more than 350 firefighters were assigned to the 41 Complex. To see more fire photos visit www.inciweb.org/incident/2544
Smoke plume of the Cygnet Complex of Wild Fires
© Katie LaSalle-Lowery
On Facebook: www.facebook.com/BigSkyCountryPhotos
Framed prints & more: katie-lasallelowery.artistwebsites.com
學校/團體參觀立法會綜合大樓
学校/团体参观立法会综合大楼
Visits to the Legislative Council Complex by schools/organizations (2017.07.06)
This is the Philae Temple Complex, located on Agilkia Island, though it was originally located on Philae Island at Aswan in Upper Egypt. Constructed between 380 and 362 BC under Nectanebo I of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, the primary temple structure of the complex was built to honor Isis, the mother goddess and most important female deity in the Ancient Egyptian religion. The temple also gained quite a few smaller temples dedicated to various deities, including Hathor, and it is believed that the site was the last active Ancient Egyptian religious site after all pagan religious practices were banned by the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD, in favor of Christianity, with the last known Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic carving being found at the site, dating to the late 4th Century. In 537 AD, religious ceremonies were halted at the site by the local commander, and the structure then became the Church of St. Stephen, with many of the carved reliefs being vandalized and the stone columns and walls having carvings of crosses and other religious symbols being added, while the temple structure itself remained largely intact for over a millennia. The temple complex includes the Vestibule of Hadrian, a tall Roman-era structure, and several Ptolemaic-era column capitals that were never completed, and remain in an unfinished state. The temple attracted a lot of attention in the 19th Century due to its picturesque location, immaculate state of preservation, and lack of sediments or debris obscuring the structure. The darkest period in the structure’s history began in 1902, when the British government, which controlled Egypt at the time, constructed the Aswan Low Dam on the Nile River, with the water level behind the dam rising up over the base of the temple, damaging the structure. The dam was raised twice, further covering more of the structure and leading to yet more damage. When the Aswan High Dam was under construction in the 1960s, UNESCO stepped in and moved the temple to higher ground, rescuing it from its watery grave.
Bobea elatior complex (including B. brevipes A Gray, B. elatior Gaudichaud, and B. mannii Hillebrand)
Hawaiian names: `ahakea
Family: Rubiaceae - the coffee family
The genus Bobea is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. The B. elatior complex has been recorded from Kaua`i, O`ahu (Wai`anae Mountains and Ko`olau Mountains), East Moloka`i, Lāna`i, Maui (West and East Maui), and the island of Hawai`i.
General chots taken at the ICP in Chico and staging at Concow on Hwy 70. Firing operations By Cal Fire on Hwy 70 east of Scooters. Fire Train was located at Pulga.
Title: Large animal and surgery complex - 28
Digital Publisher: Digital: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
Physical Publisher: Physical: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University
Description: photograph date: Unknow; Large Animal Medicine and Surgery Complex
Date Issued: 2009-10
Format Medium: Slide
Type: image
Identifier: Photograph Location: Large animal and surgery complex-25
Rights: It is the users responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holders for publication of any materials. Permission must be obtained in writing prior to publication. Please contact the Cushing Memorial Library for further information
Reprocessing of The Orion Molecular Cloud Complex (or, simply, the Orion Complex) is a star forming region with stellar ages ranging up to 12 Myr. Two giant molecular clouds are a part of it, Orion A and Orion B. The stars currently forming within the Complex are located within these clouds. A number of other somewhat older stars no longer associated with the molecular gas are also part of the Complex, most notably the Orion's Belt (Orion OB1b), as well as the dispersed population north of it (Orion OB1a). Near the head of Orion there is also a population of young stars that is centered on Meissa. The Complex is between 1 000 and 1 400 light-years away, and hundreds of light-years across.
The Orion Complex is one of the most active regions of nearby stellar formation visible in the night sky, and is home to both protoplanetary discs and very young stars. Much of it is bright in infrared wavelengths due to the heat-intensive processes involved in stellar formation, though the complex contains dark nebulae, emission nebulae, reflection nebulae, and H II regions. The presence of ripples on the surface of Orion's Molecular Clouds was discovered in 2010. The ripples are a result of the expansion of the nebulae gas over pre-existing molecular gas.
📌Anápolis - Goiás, Brazil, 02-28-22 and 02-27-22
📷Canon 600d Astromod
🔍Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II
🔭Fixed Tripod
☄@novaastrophotos
📋 Exif: 35,58 minutes of total exposure.
02-28
Lights: 451x4" ISO 1600 f2.8
Darks: 140x4"
Bias: 75x1/4000s
02-27
Lights: 421x4" ISO 1600 f3.2
Darks: 100x4"
Bias 52x1/4000s
Stacking and Processing done with Pixinsight and Photoshop.
A United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket with NASA’s Orion spacecraft mounted atop is seen after the Mobile Service Tower was finished rolling back early on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2014, at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Space Launch Complex 37, Florida. Orion is scheduled to make its first flight test on Dec. 4 with a morning launch atop the Delta IV Heavy. The spacecraft will orbit Earth twice, reaching an altitude of approximately 3,600 miles above Earth before landing in the Pacific Ocean. No one will be aboard Orion for this flight test, but the spacecraft is designed to allow us to journey to destinations never before visited by humans, including an asteroid and Mars. Photo credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)