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Bit of a catchup upload of photos some left behind from Summer, and a bunch of October into November.
www.paulwoolleyphotos.com also has many more as well.
Royal River Park maintenance shed, Yarmouth, ME
Leica IIIa / Leitz Summar 5cm
Kodak High Definition 200
Definition: A peaceful, little over middle age, man with a wild rough nature and very hard to capture. Many middle-aged unmarried women would love to catch a 'Wield Turkey'.
Olá suas senhoras novamente, desta vez aqui é a minha revisão do Clarins Color Definition 3D Radiance Pó Facial!
Pó facial Clarins Paris 3D Radiance
O “Pó Facial Radiance 3D de Definição de Cores Clarins” faz parte de sua coleção de outono e é edição limitada. Eu vi seus outros produto...
meumoda.com/2018/08/14/clarins-color-definition-3d-radian...
Party pics from the Definition 6 House of Blood party.
For more party pics, check out our blog post: bit.ly/s8P0yr
Photo credit: Kelly Samardak
HEALTH's "Passport to Living Happy & Healthy" event at Alvin Ailey Studios in New York, Tuesday, March 4, 2014.
Attendees shared their definitions of Health on a photo wall.
By definition, an albino deer is totally absent of body pigment and is solid white with pink eyes, nose, and hooves. Often confused with an albino, a piebald deer is slightly more common and is also a genetic mutation. Piebald deer can have varying amounts of white hair. Some piebald deer can be almost pure white except small patches of regular brown hair, while others carry just patches of white hair with otherwise normal markings. Otherwise, an albino or piebald white-tailed deer will have the normal characteristics of other white-tailed deer.
Albinism is a recessive genetic trait that is found in animals where the gene responsible for hair, tissue, or skin coloration is missing. By definition, this is why they have no body pigment. Since albinism and piebaldism are recessive traits, both parents must carry the trait to have albino or piebald offspring. The genes responsible for piebald and albino deer are not dominant and oftentimes the deer carrying these genes are biologically inferior to others in the deer herd.
So if an albino buck were to breed a doe that is not, they could only have an albino offspring if she carried the recessive genes for albinism. These offspring would carry the recessive gene but would have normal pigmentation. When two whitetails breed that carry the recessive genes, they have around a 25 percent chance of producing an albino fawn. Research says that your chances of seeing an albino in the wild are about one in 30,000, although there are some areas in the north that seem to have higher occurrences of true albino whitetails.