View allAll Photos Tagged Localized
Data from the CRISM instrument shows a localized, unique spectral phase consistent with polyhydrated sulfate or zeolite here on the Mawrth Vallis channel floor, with implications for the regional history. We want to look for potential textural differences between new hydrated mineral and adjacent clays.
Image cutout is less than 1 km (under a mile) top to bottom and the spacecraft altitude was 285 km (177 mi) and north is to the right. For full observation details including images with scale bars, visit the source link.
www.uahirise.org/ESP_022578_2030
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Arizona
Last night fog moved back in from the east across Rapid City. However it was very localized in the evening. This is the westside looking at the Baken Park area.
Tight, localized rain showers blow inland from the Pacific toward the Makapu’u lighthouse on the easternmost point of the island of Oahu.
I miss being outdoors.
A very localized rain shower over San Francisco Bay approaches Berkeley. I don't recall ever seeing any weather system quite this well defined over the Bay from up in the hills, where this photo was taken.
Several minutes later it started to pour....
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Back to 1987...I was in Palenque during a vacation travel thru Mexico . In this phenomenal place I met an Indian who sold me a bow and arrows - handsmade - this a is really good reminder of this trip.
Of course the picture was taken a few days ago, not in 1987 and not in Mexico - but I localized it to the place where I got this souvenir.
A localized beetle from Cerambycidae family. Hard to photograph since it is found active and usually on the ground.
53 natural light exposures made with Sony NEX-7, Olympus Zuiko Auto-1:1 Macro 80mm f/4 lens on Olympus Telescopic Auto Tube 65–116.
The tritons were quite well hidden in the little pound. It was not easy to localize and photograph them.
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An oddly localized windstorm has recently cleared out some of the growth around the viaduct across Ship Pond Stream at MP 17.2 on CP's Moosehead Sub; while it isn't as open as it has been in the past, it is once again possible to shoot from 'railfan rock' without having the view of the trestle obscured by trees.
Some of you may have heard of the storm we experienced two mornings ago. It was highly localized, geographically hitting my area exclusively, and was the most powerful I've ever experienced. Winds of 80 mph, hail, and torrential rains pounded the area for a full hour in a notable display of nature's power and fury. We lost power for 28 hours and the damage was tremendous, primarily to the trees, and the sound of chain saws will be filling the air for some time to come as the roads continue to be cleared and the "leaners" removed. Boats were tossed and docks twisted, some homes being damaged by the falling trees, but I happily escaped, with only the branches and layers of leaves scattered thickly around the house to clean up.
On my surveillance, I met an older woman who said in the 50 years she's lived here, she's never seen anything like it. It seems that lately, there are many events that no one has previously seen...like temperatures and snow amounts. As my friend Rich Eye says, "global weirding" for sure.
I could fill an album with the photos I took yesterday recording the devastation but don't want to take up days in presenting it. I tried a collage and that didn't work so I'm left with the unhappy small images in comments. I really hate this as the photos are actually better than they appear, but I hope they provide at least some feel for the experience. And today, the sun shines, the loons call, the birds sing...and all is once again right with the world...
An example of an asbestos containing pipe insulation material with localized physical damage. This material consists of a non-asbestos canvas outer wrap; 3-layers of brown, non-asbestos corrugated paper; and a light beige inner asbestos paper layer against the pipe surface (35% chrysotile).
This material appears as though it was subjected to a "spot-check" by probable metal salvager(s) (or "scrapper") looking for copper. In fact, numerous similar rips and tears in damaged pipe insulation were found throughout this particular debris-ridden building. As economic times worsen, certain depressed developments of large urban areas often contain abandoned buildings that are infiltrated by individuals searching for copper pipes, cables, wiring, roof flashing or other types of recyclable metals for scrap-value.
Schleswig-Holstein, Germany Mar 17, 2008
Schauer mit Fallstreifen im Abendlicht.
Creative Commons license: BY Marcus Böckmann, Noncommercial, No Derivative
Rolling out the last few kilometers to its terminus of Fuji City, a 2 car JR 313 Series EMU rolls over the Urui River bridge on a crystal-clear winter afternoon. Fuji-San can be seen prominently and clearly with its beautiful snowcapped peak dominating this corner of Shizuoka Prefecture.
JR Minobu Line
JR 313 Series
Fuji, Shizuoka Pref., Japan
Localized fog in Salem-Beverly Harbor, Massachusetts, USA, unrelated to the mixed clouds. Tamron 18-270mm.
... si cae en mis manos un flotador de sandía y estoy en la piscina, pues ... era inevitable.
Please, you can follow me on ...
500PX .
Likholefossen is a waterfall in the municipality of Gaular, it is localized by the farm Hov in Eldalsdalen.
The origin of the name is from the old days when some of the farms at the end of the valley couldn't transport their dead ones to church in one day, they would then store the coffin underneath flagstones in the waterfall.
The area by the fall has been one of the focus point for the National Tourist Route Gaularfjellet to highway 13, it is among others build a spectacular bridge across the waterfall. The bridge makes it easier to access the Waterfall Path on the southside of the river.
The waterfall is a part of the protected Gaular Watercourse.
(Haemorhous mexicanus) I can't localize sounds, like bird songs, well any more, with the artefact introduced by two hearing aids, but this bold boy was advertising his eligible mating status from high in a bare tree, so he was easy to spot. Exactly as he intended, I'm sure.
We watched this storm cloud build and work the upper valley. It was quite beautiful and dramatic. Snow squalls raced over the ridges and fell into the valley floor.... Wonderful crazy weather. Methow Valley, Wa
Waze en català
Per a Android, Iphone i Blackberry de la xarxa de conductors per compartir informacions i rutes.
Baixa-la: waze.com
Copyright Susan Ogden
Today was day 3 of periodic storms...it was so pleasant most of the day that i got a call from my dear friends Butch and Joyce to go out to lunch and then walk the beach to look for sea glass. We had a beautiful afternoon sea glass searching and walking. At about 3:30 we went our separate ways. I decided to stop at a beach a little closer to my house because the clouds were so pretty and i thought....just a few more pictures!!
I suppose i should pay more attention to what is on the other side of the dunes instead of the ocean! This storm approached and was heading to the north east so i stayed to watch and hopefully get some nice storm shots. Suffice it to say i was so enthralled with THIS view that i did not watch what was approaching behind me! i got caught in the backside of the storm and had to duck under someone’s oceanfront house to wait it out and stay as dry as i could...along with Mark the Third (who is water resistant ...but it is the lens that is not!) I managed to get some nice shots of the storm and fortunately it passed quickly allowing me to get to the car and get home....where within an hour we had round two of stormy weather....it was bright and sunny over the sound and to the south east...but looking out off my front deck the sky was dark and ominous and it was thundering with little flashes of lightning....and over the ocean to the east was a huge, vibrant rainbow!!
I have a new found love! Photographing storms!!
Uncommon and occurring only in isolated localized populations. My first sighting of this species.
The Eyed Brown may be confused with Appalachian Brown, but the habitat is different.
While the Applachian Brown is usually encountered in the shade of shrubby and forested wetlands, the Eyed Brown has a sunny disposition. It flies in open sedge meadows and may also be found in Cattail marshes and near slow-moving streams, but not in dry meadows.
The larval host plant are various native sedges.
NS local C42 works the yard in Lewiston, passing by the JVRR 2106 engine painted in original PRR colors
A heat burst is a rare meteorological phenomenon where a sudden, localized increase in temperature occurs, often accompanied by strong, gusty winds and a rapid drop in humidity. It typically happens at night or in the early morning when a dying thunderstorm's downdraft collapses, forcing warm, dry air from aloft to rush downward to the surface. This compresses the air, causing it to heat up significantly—sometimes by 10-20°F (5-10°C) or more in minutes.
Between 8:38PM and 9:38PM (the last 10 secs of this clip), the temperature rose from 68.9F to 77.5F and the relative humidity fell from 42% to 24% as gusty winds dominated. The strong rain shafts forming is when this weather event occurred.
Milky Way
Date: 24.08.2022
Localization: Poland, near Buczek, in the middle of the forest
Description: This is my first try to do some astrophoto. I hope next one would be better :D
Localized to Central America, this small flycatcher is a classic empid with a prominent eyering and yellowish tones. Seen on a non-birding trip. El Silencio Lodge & Spa. Bajos del Toro. CR.
One of the Milwaukee locals makes the return to Butler Yard with a pair of tank cars in tow and cloud of snow trailing just before sunset on a chilly March afternoon.
UP 1034
Maianthemum bifolium (Asparagaceae) 143 20
Maianthemum bifolium (false lily of the valley or May lily) is often a localized common rhizomatous flowering plant, native from western Europe to the east to Siberia, China, and Japan.
Non-flowering stems usually have only one waxy leaf, but on flowering plants there is one basal leaf that withers away before flowering, and two stem leaves produced alternately up the 10–20 cm tall stems, which are topped off with many star-shaped white flowers. The leaves are heart to triangular with small fine hairs on the veins. The flowers have four tepals, four stamens, and have two chambers in the pistil; flowering is in mid-spring to early summer. This species is found in the wild growing in open forests and on damp soils in grassy ditches and thickets.
From Wikipedia.