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Soapwort contains soap-like chemicals called saponins, that create a lather when crushed. In Europe, soapwort was grown near woolen mills and used to wash the wool. Because it is a gentle detergent and contains fungicides that aid in the preservation of cloth, it has been — and still is — used to clean delicate fabrics and tapestries, most famously the Shroud of Turin. Early American colonists brought soapwort from England to clean clothes, pots and pans, hair and skin, and even wash away poison ivy oils. [Source: www.seacoastonline.com/story/lifestyle/2008/07/30/soapwor...]
Presumably, if you know you have a nut allergy you're sure to dash out, buy a bucket of not-for-human-consumption peanuts & scoff them down if you're not explicitly warned !
City contains a sturdy keep, grand cathedral, bustling market street and open-air plaza within its walls— and tilled farms, shrubbery, and rocky areas without.
Learn more about this MOC's design/process and see more pictures on my blog.
Prize for the "No Bley" Category of the 2019 Summer Joust.
EGP 140 857-4 mit einem Containerzug auf der KBS 100 zwischen Schwarzenbek und Hamburg in Friedrichsruh
EGP 140 857-4 with a container train on the KBS 100 between Schwarzenbek and Hamburg in Friedrichsruh
Pack contains:
Shine appliers for
-Legacy Bodies F/M
-Maitreya Body
-eBODY Reborn
-Belleza GenX
-Inithium Kupra & Khara
-Lelutka EvoX Heads
-Genus Heads (regular)
------------------------------------------
➦Taxi to The Fetish Fair
----------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------
Gizza Creations
Outfit :GizzA - WIlson Series contains of a selection of pants (with color changer HUD for 4 colors) , tank tops (with 2 colors per pack) and 1 color leather vest
Avialble in Gizza Main-store:
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/GizzA%20Creations/…/72
Shoes - Jakob boots Black
A booklet containing a set of 12 high quality public relations slides for distribution to the media at the occasion of the encounter of the European comet probe "Giotto" at comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup in July 1992 ... 31 years ago.
This was still at the start of the digital age. Some of the images in the slides had been created digitally, but were then photographed off a high-resolution colour CRT screen with a 35 mm camera on slide film, which was then professionally reproduced. This means that the number of existing copies of these slides must be very limited by now, especially in such mint condition.
I received them back then, stored them in my cupboard and forgot all about them, until now. I think I will have the slides scanned.
This snowflake has a lot going for it, with strong and solid outer lines containing dainty details in the branches, what’s not to love? It gets better when you view large, so do just that!
This is an asymmetric crystal, but you might not see it at first. The bottom branch is growing out further than the others, and the top branch is making a slight effort to do the same. It’s hard to say why, and could likely be because of the way the snowflake was falling. The aerodynamic properties of a snowflake are one of the reasons for strange thee and two-fold symmetry. The image was positioned so that this top-to-bottom difference still filled a square crop perfectly.
This is also a great example of a “button”. My term, but others are free to use it! The center of this snowflake contains another crystal that was originally part of a column that grew two plates. The bottom plate gained more momentum and eventually formed branches, and the top plate was forced into slow, stable growth. It grew small but thick, creating a jewel-like center to this snowflake.
Much of the “dainty” feel of the thick inner branches is caused by bubbles forming in the ice, appearing almost like lace along this part of the snowflake. The patterns and details on the outer parts of the branches are caused by changes in surface thickness, revealing the contours on the ice. One can also see contours on the reverse of the crystal, in the form of inward crystal growth. See the semi-circular dark areas reaching about a third of the way up each branch? These are indentations in the ice, but on the opposite side of the crystal. Ice is transparent, after all!
It’s a simple snowflake, but that by no means diminishes its beauty. This design has fewer flaws that break the rules of symmetry, so even with some obvious asymmetric features it still feels remarkably balanced. Snowflakes of this configuration are rare, and I seek them out whenever possible.
We’re in the middle of our first big winter storm of the year here in Ontario. Unfortunately, high winds, tiny crystals and massive volume of snow make it very difficult to isolate anything interesting… and those that are interesting are hardly “perfect” specimens. That didn’t stop me from shooting a few tonight, and I hope to feature one of them tomorrow!
To get a better understanding of the photographic process, and the science behind how snowflakes are formed, pick up a copy of a book that you wish was under your Christmas tree: Sky Crystals – skycrystals.ca/book/ - 304pg hardcover book dedicated to the physics and photography of snowflakes.
Take the joy of winter a step further with “The Snowflake”. This print took 2500 hours to produce, and you’ll see why once you check it out: skycrystals.ca/poster/ - worth every minute of time spent on it.
Strand
April 2010
Panasonic Lumix
Hope you all have a FAB Thursday tomorrow...away for the day....
Is that the right way so say...para-glider??? (sweetuig-vlieër)
Am 23.Februar 2022 wollte ich den Blick von oben auf den kleinen Ort Lorchhausen am Rhein im Rheingau an der rechten Rheinstrecke (KBS 466) endlich mal wieder mit klarer Wintersonne umsetzten:
Der nächste Güterzug gen Süden gefiel mir dann noch besser:
Die ÖBB 1293 075 kam mit dem mit bunten Containern voll beladenen DGS 41943 von Rheinhausen nach Linz Vorbf. West in Österreich für das Tochterunternehmen Rail Cargo Carrier.
Der Zug hatte gerade die markante Pfaarkirche Kirche Sankt Bonifatius passiert.
Links davon der Turm ist die alte St.-Bonifatius-Kirche die seit 1879 als Wohnhaus genutzt wird.
This trio of images contains evidence from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory that a clump of stellar material has been jettisoned away from a double star system at incredibly high speeds. This system, known as PSR B1259-63/LS 2883 – or B1259 for short – is comprised of two objects in orbit around one another. The first is a star about 30 times as massive as the Sun that has a disk of material swirling around it. The other is a pulsar, an ultra-dense neutron star left behind when an even more massive star underwent a supernova explosion.
Credits: NASA/CXC/PSU/G.Pavlov et al
Read more about Chandra:
p.s. You can see all of our Chandra photos in the Chandra Group in Flickr at: www.flickr.com/groups/chandranasa/ We'd love to have you as a member!
_____________________________________________
These official NASA photographs are being made available for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photographs. The photographs may not be used in materials, advertisements, products, or promotions that in any way suggest approval or endorsement by NASA. All Images used must be credited. For information on usage rights please visit: www.nasa.gov/audience/formedia/features/MP_Photo_Guidelin...
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Pigeon Key is a small island containing the historic district of Pigeon Key, Florida. The 5-acre (2.0-hectare) island is home to 8 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places, some of which remain from its earliest incarnation as a work camp for the Florida East Coast Railway. Today these buildings serve a variety of purposes, ranging from housing for educational groups to administrative offices for the non-profit Pigeon Key Foundation. The former Assistant Bridge Tender's House has been converted into a small museum featuring artifacts and images from Pigeon Key's colorful past. It is located off the old Seven Mile Bridge, at approximately mile marker 45, west of Knight's Key, (city of Marathon in the middle Florida Keys) and just east of Moser Channel, which is the deepest section of the 7-mile (11 km) span.
The island was originally known as "Cayo Paloma" (literally translated as "Pigeon Key") on many old Spanish charts - said[by whom?] to have been named for large flocks of white-crowned pigeons (Columba leucocephala Linnaeus) which once roosted there. During the building of Henry Flagler's Overseas Railroad Key West Extension between 1908 and 1912, there were at times as many as 400 workers housed on the island. While these workers built many bridges along the route through the lower keys, the Seven Mile Bridge, spanning the gap between Knight's Key and Little Duck Key remains the largest and most impressive component of what was once referred to as "the 8th Wonder of the World". A number of buildings from the Flagler era remain on the island and are now part of the Pigeon Key Historic District.
Pigeon Key was one of the locations for the "Bal Harbor Institute" in the 1995 series of Flipper. It was seen in three episodes during season one including the pilot episode. It was also the site of the Finish Line of The Amazing Race 18 "Unfinished Business" in 2011.[2]
Lok D 9 schiebt einen mit Containern beladenen Wagenpark
in den Frankfurter Osthafen bzw. zum dortigen Containerterminal.
It contains eight minifigures:
Batman
Robin
Batgirl
Alfred Pennyworth (Batsuit)
Polka-Dot Man
Wicked Witch of the West
Two Flying Monkeys
The Batmobile contains four vehicles:
Batmobile
Batwing
Bat-Tank
Batcycle
It will retail for $129.99.
The "Gartner" Train, hauled by the Taurus RailJet Loco 1116 227 westbound in Transit at Vienna-Hütteldorf Yard.
www.gartnerkg.com/servicessolutions/intermodalerverkehr/
Press L for more details
Press F11 for full page
© Andreas Berdan - no unauthorised copying permitted
The building's residences contain floor to ceiling windows.
Units in this high-rise offer spectacular views over the Atlantic Ocean, downtown Miami, and Biscayne Bay.
The 29th floor is was designed for amenities, including a health spa and gymnasium.
This residential tower contains one to four bedroom floorplans.
The unit prices range from about US $500,000 to $8,000,000 as of summer 2005.
The building contains an impressive four story lobby.
The tower was designed with laminated glass windows in order to protect residences from extreme atmospheric conditions.
All of the glass used in the construction of the tower underwent wind tunnel and missile impact tests.
This structure surpassed La Gorce Palace in 1997 as the tallest building in Miami Beach, and was the city's tallest until completion of Blue and Green Diamond in 2000.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
www.emporis.com/buildings/128241/portofino-tower-miami-be...
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
Five wildfires – the biggest of which are the Palisades and the Eaton fires – are still currently burning (as of 10 January 2025) in areas of north Los Angeles. At least 10 people are known to have lost their lives and many more properties have been burnt to the ground.
This image, captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-3 mission on 9 January 2025, shows the Palisades fire at lower left and the Eaton fire at upper right, with smoke seen reaching Catalina Island and the Santa Barbara reserve to the south of the fires.
See also the image of 7 Jan just after fires broke out.
Copernicus Sentinel-3 measures Earth’s oceans, land, ice and atmosphere to monitor and understand large-scale global dynamics. It provides essential information in near-real time for ocean and weather forecasting.
Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2025), processed by ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
NGC 1068 is a relatively nearby spiral galaxy containing a black hole at its center that is twice as massive as the Milky Way’s. NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory shows a million-mile-per-hour wind is being driven from NGC 1068’s black hole and lighting up the center of the galaxy in X-rays.
X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical/IR: NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI (HST and JWST); Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/J. Schmidt and N. Wolk
#NASAMarshall #NASA #astrophysics #NASAChandra #Space #Chandra #Telescope #beautiful #space #science #astronomy #galaxy #supernova #Hubble #JWST #NASAWebb #NASAHubble
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London | Architecture | Night Photography
EXPLORE # 281
We had another wet night and day in London, it just didnt stop! i just managed to take a couple of reflection shots in London at night in Covent Garden ;-)
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Covent Garden (pronounced /ˈkɒvənt/) is a district in London, England, located in the easternmost parts of the City of Westminster and the southwestern corner of the London Borough of Camden. The area is dominated by shopping, street performers, and entertainment facilities, and it contains an entrance to the Royal Opera House, which is also widely-known simply as "Covent Garden", and the bustling Seven Dials area.
The area is bounded by High Holborn to the north, Kingsway to the east, the Strand to the south and Charing Cross Road to the west. Covent Garden Piazza is located in the geographical centre of the area and was the site of a flower, fruit and vegetable market from the 1500s until 1974, when the wholesale market relocated to New Covent Garden Market in Nine Elms. Nearby areas include Soho, St James's, Bloomsbury, and Holborn
In 1913, responding to political feeling against large holdings of real property, and wishing to diversify his investment portfolio into less politically sensitive fields, the Duke of Bedford agreed to sell the Covent Garden Estate to the MP and land speculator Harry Mallaby-Deeley for £2 million. The following year Mallaby-Deeley sold his option to buy to the pill manufacturer Sir Joseph Beecham for £250,000. After delays caused by the First World War and the death of Sir Joseph, the sale was finalised in 1918, the purchasers being Sir Joseph's two sons, Sir Thomas and Henry. The transaction included the market, 231 other properties, and sundry other rights. The property was part of Beecham Estates and Pills Limited from 1924 to 1928 and from 1928 it was owned by a successor company called Covent Garden Properties Company Limited, owned by the Beechams and other private investors. This new company sold some properties at Covent Garden, while becoming active in property investment in other parts of London. In 1962 the bulk of the remaining properties in the Covent Garden area, including the market, were sold to the newly established government-owned Covent Garden Authority for £3,925,000.[3]
By the end of the 1960s, traffic congestion in the surrounding area had reached such a level that the use of the square as a market, which required increasingly large lorries for deliveries and distribution, was becoming unsustainable. The whole area was threatened with complete redevelopment. Following a public outcry, in 1973 the Home Secretary, Robert Carr, gave dozens of buildings around the square listed building status, preventing redevelopment. The following year the market finally moved to a new site (called the New Covent Garden Market) about three miles (5 km) south-west at Nine Elms. The square languished until its central building re-opened as a shopping centre and tourist attraction in 1980. Today the shops largely sell novelty items, though street performers can be seen almost every day of the year, both on the pitches within the market, and on the West and East Piazza's/James Street outside. More serious shoppers gravitate to Long Acre, which has a range of clothes shops and boutiques, and Neal Street, noted for its large number of shoe shops. London's Transport Museum and the side entrance to the Royal Opera House box office and other facilities are also located on the Piazza.
In August 2007, Covent Garden launched the UK's first food Night Market. Fresh produce from over 35 different stalls included Neal's Yard's specialist cheeses, Spore Boys' mushroom sandwiches, Gourmet Candy Company, Ginger Pig sausages and Burnt Sugar fudge. The aim of the Night Market was to bring Covent Garden back to its roots as the "Larder of London". Organisers are hoping to make it a permanent event in 2008 as part of a wider initiative to regenerate interest in the Covent Garden area.
Covent Garden Market and Piazza was bought by Capital and Counties in August 2006 for £421 million.[4] In March 2007 Capco also acquired the shops located under the Royal Opera House.[5] The complete Covent Garden Estate owned by Capital and Counties consists of 550,000 sq ft (51,000 m2). and has a market value of £650 million.[4]
Covent Garden Market reopened as a retail centre in 1980, after the produce market was moved to its current location in Nine Elms. Currently one of the most famous and popular parts of the covered Covent Garden market is Apple Market, a small subsection of the main market. [6] Street entertainment at Covent Garden was first mentioned in Samuel Pepys' diary in 1662.[7] Today Covent Garden is the only part of London licensed for street entertainment with performers having to undertake auditions for the Market's management and representatives of the performers' union and signing up to timetabled slots.
Currently performers operate in a number of venues around the market, including the North Hall, West Piazza, and South Hall Courtyard. The courtyard space is dedicated to classical music only. There are street performances at Covent Garden Market every day of the year, except Christmas Day. Shows run throughout the day and are 30–40 minutes in length.
In March 2008, Capital and Counties proposed to reduce street performances by approximately 50%. In the Courtyard, shows currently run back to back from 10:30 am to 7:00 pm, with short breaks in between each show, allowing for two shows each hour. Under the new proposal, performances would be cut to one 30-minute show each hour. The musicians and performers staged a demonstration "busk" in the Piazza against these cuts on 27 March with the opera singer Lesley Garrett who is supporting their campaign.[8] They have organised a petition which so far has over 5,000 signatures including Ken Livingstone, Brian Paddick, Vasko Vassilev, Brian Eno and Victoria Wood.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covent_Garden
London Rain at Night ....in Covent Garden ~~~~
Late Gothic church containing an altarpiece of absolute value and a series of interesting frescoes. These include an important depiction of the Battle of Lepanto, which can be compared with a representation of the same event in the beautiful Collegiate Church of Casei Gerola, the neighbouring village.
CONTAIN
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GIANNI
KARIO
JAKE
SLINK
AESTHETIC
➠AVAILABLE IN Boyberry mesh STORE
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Marketplace
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"Salt & Light" is my new monograph softcover book, containing the first installment of my "Mojave Monochrome" Project.
These are often called, "Zines." However, calling this publication a zine sells it a bit short. This is a genuine softcover portfolio book, or "monograph." What is a monograph? A monograph is a collection of images and writing from an artist that strives to tell a cohesive visual story through art and writing. It is usually a "project," or series of images created around a central theme.
Why would you want to buy something like this? You view images all the time for free on the internet. However, they rarely fit together to tell a story, much less through creative art. The writing that accompanies most online images is rushed and very brief. This writing is long-form literary prose and is designed to be read slowly and in print. Likewise, my images are created to be seen in person, not on a screen. There is no substitute for holding a printed work of art in your hands in real life. Further, none of the nearly 6000 words of writing in this book is available online, as it was all authored specifically for print. All the images were made on black & white medium format film using the camera in this picture, specifically for this project.
If you would like to join in on my adventures or see a little behind my creative process, this book is an easy and affordable way to do that, and support my work in the process. It is an inspiring, uplifting, and beautiful piece of work that can become a part of your personal library and art collection. I hope you will consider buying one for yourself, and for anyone in your life who may appreciate art and literature.
I'm asking you to please consider enriching your life and supporting my artwork by purchasing one today for just $14.99 for the print edition, or only $7.99 for the digital eBook edition, at lowerylandscapes.com/saltandlight. You know you will enjoy it!
Vivía con miedo al mañana y un día aquello que tanto temía cobró vida... con el tiempo pensó que necesitaba de él para vivir. La costumbre se convirtió en necesidad y la necesidad en obsesión. Permaneció sumisa, sujetando los temores que en cualquier momento pudo apartar. Era una acumulación de miedo que terminaría por estallar.
···
She lived in fear of tomorrow and one day what she feared came to life ... over time she thought needed that to live. Custom became necessity and necessity became obsession. She remained submissive, holding the fears that at any moment she could push away. It was an accumulation of fear that would eventually explode.
This picture contains so many of my passions.
First of all - the photography itself. I love to take pictures of beautiful, impressive landscapes. Especially in the mountains.
And my newest but by now most intense passion is mountain biking. I'm a newbie, but I have fun riding trails and learn how to manage my fears about falling down ;-).
And because all of this I visited Whistler in August. And I definitely have to come back. With my bike. And with friends. And then I will not only copy the mountains, I will defeat them by bike!
Tilted red tower marks entrance to Polish war museum by Kwadrat, Gdansk
An angled tower wrapped in red concrete panels and glazing contains the entrance to this second world war museum, which is mostly housed beneath the surface of a public plaza in the Polish city of Gdansk. A jury headed by Daniel Libeskind awarded Studio Architektoniczne Kwadrat the project for the Museum of the Second World War following an international competition in 2010. The studio, which is based in the nearby town of Gdynia, said it put forward a proposal that was "a bit risky", but also "something unusual, very distinctive and memorable".
A tower rising 40.5 metres above the new public square provides the dominant feature of the building, which is located next to a canal in a district called Wiadrownia that was destroyed during fighting in 1945. "The idea behind the design is simple enough," said the architects, "to position the main part of the museum underground so as not to completely use up the small plot of land intended for investment. We have concealed the other functions in a sculptural form. In this way, it was possible to find space for a vast square, and the whole premise became symbolic."
The project comprises three distinct but connected parts, with the underground spaces dedicated to the past, the plaza representing the present, and the tower symbolising the future. The monolithic tower features surfaces set at angles as much as 45 degrees from the vertical, lending it a dynamic appearance that alters when viewed from different directions. Three of its four trapezoidal facades are clad in terracotta-red panels, while the fourth side and kinked roof are filled in with glazing that allows natural light to flood into the interior.
"This simple sculptural form, devoid of literal meaning, evokes various associations," said the architects. "It has already been likened to a bastion, a barrier, a crumbling house or a bunker, and when illuminated at night, it resembles a burning candle. At the same time, it fits in with the city image and the geometry of shipyard cranes – the symbol of the port of Gdansk."
The glazed facade of the tower incorporates an entrance at its base, which is situated at basement level and is reached by a wide set of steps leading down from the plaza. The tower contains a library, lecture halls and a restaurant with a viewpoint looking out across the city skyline. The majority of the 23,000 m2 building is located beneath the paved public square, which aims to provide people with a place to meet, socialise and relax. Staircases descend from the entrance through a large void to the level of the ticket office, cloakroom and exhibition spaces dedicated to telling the story of the war in Poland. A corridor with a narrow skylight at its apex guides visitors through a series of austere exhibition rooms featuring a palette of concrete, steel and oak details.
In addition to digital displays and physical exhibits, the spaces include several recreations of places such as a pre-war shopping street, ruined buildings surrounding a Soviet tank, and the interior of a Warsaw apartment reflecting different stages of the conflict. At the level of the plaza, a bridge connects the tower with a long, narrow volume containing offices. A walkway that passes beneath the bridge is lined with gabion cages filled with red brick and rubble from Gdansk. A further wedge-shaped structure that emerges from the square contains the entrance to an underground parking garage. Both this volume and the offices are clad in the same red tiles as the tower to create a consistent aesthetic across the museum's different spaces.
Contains many elements of Gaudí's architecture, and is one of the most original examples of home-grown art nouveau in Barcelona: modernisme.
Contiene muchos elementos de la arquitectura de Gaudí y es uno de los ejemplos más originales del modernismo barcelonés.
DB Cargo 152 147-5 mit einem Containerzug auf der KBS 110 zwischen Winsen und Lüneburg in der Nähe von Sangenstedt
DB Cargo 152 147-5 with a container train on the KBS 110 between Winsen and Lüneburg near Sangenstedt
185 361-3 mit einem Containerzug aus Hamburg Altenwerder auf der KBS 110 zwischen Winsen und Lüneburg in Sangenstedt
185 361-3 with a container train from Hamburg Altenwerder on the KBS 110 between Winsen and Lüneburg in Sangenstedt
Contains: Top, Pants, Heels & Necklace.
Sizes for Maitreya, Slink & Belleza Bodies.
Intro Promo Price: 99 L$
LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Eros/120/109/26
Markeplace: marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Maci-LT-PROMO-Jenny-Outfit-f...
- Contains 3 Shades (Faded / Worn / Fresh)
- Appliers Hud Catwa / Genus / Lelutka
- Bom System (Bake on Mesh)
- Colors: Red / Black
** Available in the Mainstore **
For more information just look "About".
The set contains four silver flowers with a precious stone. Three versions of the inscription on the heart and one heart without an inscription, with the image of two hearts.
Already available on the marketplace. You can find the link if you look at my "about" section.
Let me express in advance to all my deepest gratitudefor your precious support.
Seitdem ein regionales Sägewerk den Güterbahnhof in Wiesau erworben hat, herrscht dort reges Treiben. So kommt dort mindestens einmal werktags auch der Containerzug aus Hamburg an, wird entladen und beladen und fährt am gleichen Tag wieder in die Hansestadt. 223 143 hat den Zug in Hof übernommen und befindet sich nun auf den letzten Metern zum Zielbahnhof Wiesau.
Boxes left the house and were put in the container. This container will now head back to Southampton and begin it's journey to meet us in the US. Safe travels to our big red box!
Captrain 185 649-1 mit einem Containerzug auf der KBS 100 zwischen Hamburg und Büchen in Schwarzenbek
Captrain 185 649-1 with a container train on the KBS 100 between Hamburg and Büchen in Schwarzenbek
The jumping spider family (Salticidae) contains more than 500 described genera and about 5,000 described species,making it the largest family of spiders with about 13% of all species.Jumping spiders have some of the best vision among arthropods and use it in courtship, hunting, and navigation. Although they normally move unobtrusively and fairly slowly, most species are capable of very agile jumps, notably when hunting, but sometimes in response to sudden threats or crossing long gaps. Both their book lungs and the tracheal system are well-developed, and they use both systems (bimodal breathing). Jumping spiders are generally recognized by their eye pattern. All jumping spiders have four pairs of eyes with one pair being their particularly large anterior median eyes.
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If you are interested in a digital copy or a print of this photograph (or other photographs), please drop me an Email: Bovolophotography@gmail.com