View allAll Photos Tagged Extinction
Well,maybe not.Located on 10th St and Waverly Place The Three Lives and Company bookshop may live to see a third life,but just not at this location.The building the quaint,little shop is found in is up for sale and the owners have opted not to renew Three Lives' lease.The company may have to look for a new home if they can't work out a deal with the building's new owner.Three Lives moved to the Waverly Place location in 1983,thirty-three years ago.Moving again could prove to be challenging this time around with way the real estate market has changed in the area in recent years.www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20160615/west-village/three-live...
powered by:
two common morning glories / Purpur-Prunkwinden (Ipomoea purpurea)
on our terrace - Frankfurt-Nordend
"Climate change isn’t an ‘issue’ to add to the list of things to worry about, next to health care and taxes. It is a civilizational wake-up call. A powerful message — spoken in the language of fires, floods, droughts, and extinctions — telling us that we need an entirely new economic model and a new way of sharing this planet. Telling us we need to evolve."
(Naomi Klein)
Dauphin commun (Delphinis delphis) victime probable de la surpêche. Pors Carn, Plomeur, Finistère, France . 28/08/2022
The setting sun descends behind a layer of marine fog.
From the Lawrence Hall of Science, Berkeley, California
Nikkor 600mm, f/4, set to f/11.
Das Bienensterben geht weiter. Denke nun bitte niemand, es habe etwas mit dem Menschen und seinen wohldurchdachten Aktivitäten zu tun. Ich war froh, als ich diese summende Sammlerin fand.
If we don't counteract, the last bees will soon disappear.
Schiziostylis coccinea, major.
Has Buds waiting to open, whilst behind it a leaf has fallen, in decay.......
I read the label on the stake in the ground below...... ;-)))))))
In St James Park.
Looking out on Stinson Beach from Mount Tamalpais State Park
Marin County, California
Twenty-image stack, mean.
Atlantic Royal Flycatcher - male - Vulnerable - Royal Flycatcher is very widespread, with a distribution that extends from southern Mexico south to the Atlantic Forest region of southeastern Brazil. Throughout this broad area, Royal Flycatcher inhabits the lower levels of humid evergreen or deciduous forests, although it also ranges into mature second growth, and edges. Royal Flycatcher exhibits notable geographic variation across this range, and so some authors recognize as many as four species of royal flycatcher: a northern species that occurs from Mexico to northern Colombia and northern Venezuela; a Pacific species (occidentalis) that is restricted to southwestern Ecuador and adjacent Peru; an Amazonian species, which is widespread in northern and central South America east of the Andes; and an Atlantic species (swainsoni), that occurs only in southeastern Brazil. Two of these populations, occidentalis and swainsoni, are potentially at risk of extinction. All of these taxa are flycatchers with a long bill and tail; the plumage is mostly brown, with a rufous or ochraceous tail. The most notable feature of Royal Flycatcher is the long ornate crest, which is red to orange (paler in females), with black and blue spotting. This crest usually is recumbent, giving the flycatcher a distinctive "hammerhead" appearance. When fully erect, however, the crest also is flared laterally; although it is rare to see the crest erected in a free flying Royal Flycatcher, these birds are well known for fanning the crest when held in the hand, while rhythmicaly swaying the head from side to side. The nest of Royal Flycatcher is a very long, sack like structure suspended from a slender branch or vine, and frequently is placed over a stream (or a small clearing) in the forest. Birds of The World.
The Atlantic Royal Flycatcher raises its fan very rarely. It took me more than 3 hours observing this individual to get this photo. I can say it was my Christmas gift.
Wishing a very Merry Christmas full of love, peace and joy!
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NS TripleCrown Roadrailer 256 heads into downtown Lafayette, Indiana on the former Wabash. With the operating costs, age, and continued used of largely proprietary parts to service the aging trailers on these trains, Ford has decided to officially end the last two remaining Roadrailers on July 1st, 2023, a true end of an era for this region. But at the end of the day, it’s also really hard to believe these trains managed to last for as long as they did (5/9/23).
Dodo (Raphus Cucullatus) extinct 1760. Artwork by Walden wwaallddeenn.tumblr.com/
Doing things differently
Perhaps some of you may recognize that this is one of the shooting scenes in Transformers 4: Age of Extinction
Long after man has gone the Earth will rise up and take back the Land and make it beautiful once more.
These are the ruins of the barracks used by the slate quarry workers.
Anyhow I'm hoping to outlive Extinction Rebellion. The way they are going they are going to kill themselves off.
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@the Man Cave
blaink: The Jail backdrop
LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Match/150/114/2
Maistore LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Wadsworth/166/110/998
Facing extinction. Of everything going on in the world - this is the subject that truly astonishes me that we are not talking about how we are facing extinction.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street and reportage photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Taken in in July 2019 when an Extinction Rebellion protest closed roads in a few major cities including here, at Tollbooth Steeple in Glasgow. Irrespective of your opinions of the actions of the Extinction Rebellion group, their motives should be a rallying cry for us all. We are living through a mass extinction era that is almost entirely man-made and we still have the power to stop the worst of it from coming to pass - if we act now! *
We share one world, one tiny planet in the vastness of space, where each ecosystem is delicately balanced with the next. The more we screw up the greater the knock-on effects will be. Every day is Earth Day.
#EarthDay #ClimateEmergency #ExtinctionRebellion
* I am not a member of Extinction Rebellion and I do not condone unlawful protest, I am just a photographer documenting life in the city. I do, however, see and understand the irrefutable science behind our climate emergency.
We stand to lose many species to extinction in the coming years unless something changes. I think about that whenever I'm out photographing nature. Future generations may not be fortunate enough to see what we see today.
Only by coming together in peace can we hope to address the problems that threaten the existence of all life on this planet we share. We need to constantly remind ourselves of what we will lose if we cannot learn to work together.
Created for Kreative People Treat This 51: www.flickr.com/groups/1752359@N21/discuss/72157648912021582/
Source image provided by skagitrenee: www.flickr.com/photos/skagitrenee/15604584302
White Ibis photo is my own. All rights reserved. Do not use without explicit permission.
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