View allAll Photos Tagged INTERACTION
To interact, is sometimes the only way to achieve goals. And maybe the smartest...
Best viewed on black.
This past November I was in the Everglades (Flamingo) and watched an Osprey take a fish. After landing and starting to consume the fish, a Turkey Vulture landed at the other end of the branch. The vulture started to sidle over to the Osprey (the fish) without making eye contact with the Osprey. This was as about as close as the Osprey could take before taking flight...
brunoat.com | brunoat.com/gallery
If you are interested in this picture, please contact me, or buy a print here, but do not use my photographs without my consent, thanks.
Si te interesa esta fotografía, contacta conmigo, o compra una impresión aquí, pero por favor, no uses mis fotografías sin mi consentimiento, gracias.
8/11/21
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Do not use my photos and/or footage without my consent. Breaking this rule will result in a report for copyright theft.
Originally, this was going to be finished in a weekend, but I decided to use the mirror background which I promptly ran out of. Once I got more mirrors, it went pretty fast. But then...This was a real challenge to grout, but definitely worth it in the end :)
Mirror, glass gems, and beads on
24"x10" upcycled shelf. (difficult to photograph!)
2008, Please excuse the blue tone through these images. These are ready-to-print files which were enhanced for the particular paper i was using.
models - me and paul vinella
A two-day RECAP event for professionals in the arts, education and research as well as organisations and businesses in the public, private and third sectors, who are interested in the ways the arts are being used in organisational settings. Emphasis will be placed on participation, interaction, co-creation and reflexivity.
For more information please visit: www.chester.ac.uk/recap
Or visit their Facebook page at: www.facebook.com/creativityresearch
© Tom Simcock 2015.
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This “etch-a-sketch” appearance indicates the presence of dust devil activity in the Thyles Rupes region of Mars.
The dark streaks are a result of a surface-atmosphere interaction that creates thermally-driven vortices. These Martian vortices are giant dust devils that “vacuum” the bright surface dust revealing the darker subsurface rock.
This image was taken in the late southern summer and shows that the dust devil direction of movement changes with the winds as the season progresses from spring to fall. Dust devils are sensitive to changes in low-speed ambient winds and will follow the dominant daytime wind direction.
The direction of the vortex is visible by the scallop pattern that is left behind as a dust devil will erase the front part of the circular track as it follows the wind.
Image cutout is less than 5 km (3 mi) across and the spacecraft altitude was 249 km (155 mi). For full observation details including images with scale bars, visit the source link.
www.uahirise.org/ESP_013751_1115
NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona