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Evolutionary history of TRIM5 and the primate species involved in this study.(A) Graphical depiction of the TRIM6/34/5/22 genomic locus of primates as well as a depiction of the hypothetical ancestral mammalian genomic locus. (B) Phylogenetic tree showing the evolutionary relationship of primate species representative of the most prominent genera of primate evolution. The following species were examined in this study: human (Homo sapiens), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), white-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus leucogenys), olive baboon (Papio anubis), rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta), guereza colobus (Colobus guereza), Peruvian red-necked owl monkey (Aotus nancymaae), common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), Bolivian squirrel monkey (Saimiri boliviensis boliviensis), dusky titi (Callicebus moloch), and grey mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus). These species are highlighted using ‘*’ as well as bold lettering. This phylogenetic tree was adapted from Bininda-Emonds et al. 2007, and uses the revised dates published with the corrigendum on the original article.
Long time ago, in a galaxy far far away... my friend invited me to his studio
so that I could check how he works with all these strobes, softboxes etc.
Shooting nice chicks is obviously fun but at that time I thought studio
wasn't my kind of thing. I simply lacked patience for fiddling with all these
studio gadgets and found it pretty boring. However, right now, apart from
photojournalistic stuff, I'm more and more drawn to the studio.
I just feel that creating a certain effect and mood with light might be
a real fun. Well... who knows, when I get my "studio skills"
right, maybe I'll try shooting nice lassies again ;)
Sorry for the strong post-production but I really liked this image
being more "graphical" than "photographic".
Gary Barlow face very graphical - this was one of the first Take That / Gary Barlow's I did.... This exact photo I also drew on my school rooms wall that was about 5 meters high.... Best job EVER!! =)
Prodigy MadMaze Online Game "Place of Power" graphical screenshots. Artwork by John Prusinski, Al Sirois, Gregg Smith, Kathy Prusinski, and possibly Bette Herod. The game first launched in 1989 on the Prodigy dial-up online service.
A recreation of MadMaze is playable on the web at: www.vintagecomputing.com/madmaze
To learn more about the Prodigy Restoration Project, visit www.prodigy88.com
To learn more about Prodigy itself, visit: www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/07/where-onli...
To read more about MadMaze, visit: www.vintagecomputing.com/index.php/archives/171/prodigy-l...
Pop Art style Graphical Portrait, Jez, created by DGFX from scratch. Drawn using portrait images as reference
Multi colour graphic. It takes two photo editing programs and about 2 hours to do, i multi layer and multi expose the image and redraw it adding colour, swapping out the canvas a few times, just working with blocks of colour.
This bronze Font Cast by Bernhard Witte (German collegiate goldsmith) B 7/8/1868 D 11/12/1947, he did much of the work on the Abbey between 1907-1932. The font is a copy of the font in Hildesheim Cathedral in Germany. The figures on the side of the font, give a graphical account of Christian Baptism - for example, the Israelites passing through the Red Sea, and the baptism of Christ in the River Jordan.
At the base of the font, there are four kneeling figures. These figures are the symbols of the four great rivers of paradise, Gihon, Tigris, Phison and Euphrates. The font weighs 317 kg. The heavy cover is raised by means of a system of counterweights above the ceiling.
Official list entry
Heritage Category: Listed Building
Grade: II*
List Entry Number: 1209774
Date first listed: 10-Jan-1951
Statutory Address 1: CHURCH OF ST MARY, BUCKFAST ABBEY, BUCKFAST ROAD
Location
Statutory Address: CHURCH OF ST MARY, BUCKFAST ABBEY, BUCKFAST ROAD
County: Devon
District: Teignbridge (District Authority)
Parish: Buckfastleigh
National Park: DARTMOOR
National Grid Reference: SX 74147 67411
Details
Abbey church. Built 1907-1932, on the foundations of the medieval Cistercian abbey church (except the east end). FA Walters. For the Benedictine monks who established a house here in 1882. Most of the building work was carried out by a small group of monks working under a master mason. Snecked local grey limestone with Ham Hill dressings; copper roof. Style "mixture of English Cistercian and French early Gothic" (Pevsner). 1965 east end Blessed Sacrament chapel to the designs of Paul Pearn. Plan: church with 8-bay lean-to aisles plus galleried western bay; central crossing tower; transepts with chapels; 3-bay choir with choir aisles; east end Blessed Sacrament chapel with undercroft. EXTERIOR: west end of nave with flanking projecting buttresses containing stairs to gallery, rising as pinnacles with broach spire roofs, bases and pinnacles decorated with blind arcading. Round-headed west doorway with shafts, left and right shafts with cushion capitals and carved gable. Doorway has 3 orders of zigzag, billet and chevron moulding on engaged shafts; 2-leaf door with elaborate ironwork. Above the doorway a recessed 3-centred blind moulded arch containing 2 round-headed windows with shafts and a roundel window above. Above the archway blind arcading decorates the gable. West ends of lean-to aisles have smaller versions of the buttresses flanking the nave and paired round-headed openings (one blind) with roundels above. North side of 9-bay nave has pilasters and a corbelled parapet. Round-headed triforium windows linked by string rising as continuous hoodmould. Nave with parapet and round-headed windows, the hoodmould string interrupted by the pilasters. Small gabled porch in second bay from the west with set-back buttresses, parapet and round-headed outer doorway with shafts and chevron-carved arch. Easternmost 2 bays of aisle with taller roof and blind arcading above the windows. North end of north transept with tall paired arches containing 4 tiers of glazed blind and glazed windows, either round-headed or roundels. East side of transept has one-bay chapel. The choir continues in the same style with lean-to choir aisle roofs. 1965 concrete east end chapel on 4 columns with shallow gabled roof. Tower with 3 stages above nave roof. Clasping pilasters; corner pinnacles with 2 tiers of blind arcading and broach spires, crow-stepped parapet. Lower stage has lancet windows in round-headed recesses, middle stage has small lancet windows in moulded arched recesses; 2-light plate-traceried louvred belfry windows. INTERIOR: Stone-vaulted, the aisles with transverse vaults. Arcades with piers with engaged shafts and chamfred and moulded arches. Nave rib vault with red sandstone infill. Triforium has a pair of 2-light pointed arches to each bay with super-ordinate round-headed blind arch. Aisle walls decorated with blind round-headed recesses containing triple round-headed arches on shafts with moulded bases and carved capitals. Stone-vaulted west end gallery on piers with canted bays to parapet. Tower arches on short paired shafts with moulded bases and carved capitals. Crossing has corbelled stone gallery; transepts have simple galleries on moulded corbels with cast-iron railings. Choir has similar detail to nave but carved, not moulded capitals and stone infill to the vaulting of choir and choir aisles. East end of sanctuary has 2 round-headed arches and 2 round-headed windows above the triforium with a central shaft rising to a carving of the Coronation of the Virgin. The furnishings, floors, painted decoration and stained glass are unexpectedly lavish, particularly the outstanding metalwork, which is mostly 1928-1932 by Bernhard Witte of Aachen, inspired by German Romanesque metalwork and described in some detail in Pevsner. The stained glass is a remarkable collection, mostly still in the medievalising Victorian tradition and of the highest quality. In addition the church contains a C16 ivory crucifix donated by the Clifford family of Ugbrooke, the leading Roman Catholic family in Devon. 1965 Blessed Sacrament chapel by Paul Pearn conceived as a setting for ambitious mosaic stained glass designed by Father Charles Norris, one of the Buckfast Abbey monks. Historical note: the rebuilding of the abbey church by the Buckfast monks was well-publicised in the national and local press and one of the monks with an interest in photography recorded much of the work: the archive is held by the abbey. Buckfast Abbey became an important focus for Roman Catholicism in Devon in the late C19 and C20 with the monks serving private chapels in the area, including Ugbrooke in Chudleigh for the Clifford family and Dundridge in Harberton for the wife of Sir John Harvey. (Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Devon: London: 1989-: 222-226).
© Historic England 2022
Finding more graphical design elements in the reflection and signage in our tourist town, Steveston.
I was wandering and point & shoot like a tourist. This is kind of fun.
This set of favorites is well represented with landscapes and outdoor scenes, which usually only account for a minority of my faves. The remainders very typically reflect my interest in graphical composition and unusual perspectives. I hope there's enough variety in these 20 images that you will find a favorite of your own.
These small thumbnails don't do the original images justice. You will see more details if you view the mosaic first in the large or original size, then come back to this page for the links to the original photos, listed below.
1. Surf on the rocks at sunrise, Bamburgh beach by bitrot, 2. Endurance - Cape Kiwanda, Pacific City, Oregon by Jim Patterson Photography, 3. Autumn in Bridal Veil Falls State Park Oregon by David Gn Photography, 4. ----*-!--- onwatersedge, 5. Aurora over Rusty Shack - Hafnarfjörður, Iceland by orvaratli, 6. Milky Way - Jökulsárlón, Iceland by orvaratli, 7. Krakowskie Błonia on Sunday morning by ekropka, 8. NYC ♥ metro by paolo brunetti, 9. Inside the Octagon by yushimoto_02, 10. ipotesi di deriva by cavarica, 11. Diner Delight by AnneMcDonald, 12. et cetera by barbera*, 13. Untitled by cavarica, 14. Seaside by Arni J.M., 15. in flux HanslH, 16. A new hope by HanslH, 17. Berlin Reichstag by HanslH, 18. Berlin Reichstag II by HanslH, 19. Charles Sheeler building by houze, 20. The View From Where Alderman Landed by Jeff Engelhardt.
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
Prodigy MadMaze Online Game "Place of Power" graphical screenshots. Artwork by John Prusinski, Al Sirois, Gregg Smith, Kathy Prusinski, and possibly Bette Herod. The game first launched in 1989 on the Prodigy dial-up online service.
A recreation of MadMaze is playable on the web at: www.vintagecomputing.com/madmaze
To learn more about the Prodigy Restoration Project, visit www.prodigy88.com
To learn more about Prodigy itself, visit: www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/07/where-onli...
To read more about MadMaze, visit: www.vintagecomputing.com/index.php/archives/171/prodigy-l...
This is a graphical depiction of the amount of energy I felt over time as a result of an experiment of mixing a bottle of 5-hour Energy into my morning coffee on approximately 15 March 2011.
Graphical Recording from the 2013 Kaiser Permanente iRetreat, by Sally Butler, who is also Organizational Effectiveness Principal Consultant, Kaiser Permanente Colorado
This is a graphical design For the Background of a music that is suppose represent the music event.
Here i have layered several ideas from expressive experiments that were made whilst listening to music.
Graphical Recording from the 2013 Kaiser Permanente iRetreat, by Sally Butler, who is also Organizational Effectiveness Principal Consultant, Kaiser Permanente Colorado
National Graphical Association membership card which belonged to the guide who showed us around the type tour in his past life as a printer.
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Well worth a morning of your time - www.typevents.com/index.php?id=79,0,0,1,0,0
The Periodic Spiral is a graphical representation, illustrating the relationship between the chemical & physical properties, and the occurrence of the elements. Also known as the Helix Chemica, the diagram below is scanned from Hackh`s Chemical Dictionary, 3rd Edition, 1944. Drawn by E.C.Pozzi in 1937.
Researching alternative interpretations of the periodic table for my attempted redesign. Think I'm going to stick with the basic "Left Step" arrangement.
Just trying to figure out how much info and levels of organization to include. There's a lot more too it than I originally imagined. At the moment, I'm using source material courtesy of www.webelements.com/ for my attempt.
To see more cool scientific information designs of the table, visit The Chemogenesis Web Book.
This informative graphical representation will help you to go through all the benefits of using microfocus Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) in Project planning, requirement gathering, testing and deployment, cross-project reporting, with this, QA team and managers are able to organize project structure, which on the other hand maybe a tedious task.
www.impactqa.com/infographics/advantages-of-micro-focus-alm/
#qaservicescompany
#qaconsultingcompany
#testautomationservices
#qaservices
A mind map is a graphical way to represent information, ideas and concepts. It helps you to analyze, comprehend, synthesize, recall and generate new ideas better. Just as every great idea, its power lies in its simplicity. Mindmapping engages your brain in a much richer way, both analytical and aristic manner. Best of all, it is FUN! Let us start off by creating your very first mindmap.
Step 1: Decide A Topic
This determines the focus of your mindmap. It should be no more than a few words. By keeping your topic simple, you will be able to understand more aspects of it through mindmapping. Place that topic in the center of the page, preferably in bold or CAPITALISED letters.
Step 2: Set Your Creativity Free
Illustrate your mindmap with images and different colours to represent its content. Our brains associate pictures and colours better than plain text.
Step 3: Generating Ideas
Start writing what comes to your mind. Be very succinct in your choices of words as you mindmap. Keep it to as little words as possible.
Step 4: Continue Branching
Branch out from your main topic and extend your thoughts from one idea to the next. Draw lines between the thoughts to create lateral thinking. Form different branches for your sub-topics as necessary.
That's all you need to take notice for your mindmapping. For practical examples, give us a call.
Our SUPERTUTORs shall guide you and your child step-by-step.
Get Complimentary Diagnosis Report to analyse your child's strengths & weaknesses in school.
Visit www.TuitionSuperMart.com
Or call 6886 4987 for more info.
A graphical composition captured on the upper car deck of a Washington State ferry. I've had a Fuji X-Pro1 for a couple of weeks now, and I rarely go anywhere without it.
October 21
Sometimes, this 365 is getting harder and harder to keep, and sometimes it's just a pleasure, being at the right time, right place. I will never get tired of sunsets.
Add some graphical lines and i'm the happiest man on earth.
Please press L or click on the picture, because the frame suits better the square format !
Our friend Noel lent us this book as well as the _Y The Last Man_ graphic novel series, which was awesome. _Persepolis_ is an amazing autobiographical graphic novel of Marjane Satrapi who grew up in regime changing Iran in the 70s and 80s. I'm hoping to check out the movie from our library soon.
In graphical perspective, a vanishing point is a point in the picture plane π that is the intersection of the projections (or drawings) of a set of parallel lines in space on to the picture plane. When the set of parallels is perpendicular to the picture plane, the construction is known as one-point perspective and their vanishing point corresponds to the oculus or eye point O from which the image should be viewed for correct perspective geometry. Traditional linear drawings use objects with one to three sets of parallels, defining one to three vanishing points.
Prodigy MadMaze Online Game "Place of Power" graphical screenshots. Artwork by John Prusinski, Al Sirois, Gregg Smith, Kathy Prusinski, and possibly Bette Herod. The game first launched in 1989 on the Prodigy dial-up online service.
A recreation of MadMaze is playable on the web at: www.vintagecomputing.com/madmaze
To learn more about the Prodigy Restoration Project, visit www.prodigy88.com
To learn more about Prodigy itself, visit: www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/07/where-onli...
To read more about MadMaze, visit: www.vintagecomputing.com/index.php/archives/171/prodigy-l...
A mind map is a graphical way to represent information, ideas and concepts. It helps you to analyze, comprehend, synthesize, recall and generate new ideas better. Just as every great idea, its power lies in its simplicity. Mindmapping engages your brain in a much richer way, both analytical and aristic manner. Best of all, it is FUN! Let us start off by creating your very first mindmap.
Step 1: Decide A Topic
This determines the focus of your mindmap. It should be no more than a few words. By keeping your topic simple, you will be able to understand more aspects of it through mindmapping. Place that topic in the center of the page, preferably in bold or CAPITALISED letters.
Step 2: Set Your Creativity Free
Illustrate your mindmap with images and different colours to represent its content. Our brains associate pictures and colours better than plain text.
Step 3: Generating Ideas
Start writing what comes to your mind. Be very succinct in your choices of words as you mindmap. Keep it to as little words as possible.
Step 4: Continue Branching
Branch out from your main topic and extend your thoughts from one idea to the next. Draw lines between the thoughts to create lateral thinking. Form different branches for your sub-topics as necessary.
That's all you need to take notice for your mindmapping. For practical examples, give us a call.
Our SUPERTUTORs shall guide you and your child step-by-step.
Get Complimentary Diagnosis Report to analyse your child's strengths & weaknesses in school.
Visit www.TuitionSuperMart.com
Or call 6886 4987 for more info.