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Couldn't think of anything else to shoot today, there was a map lying around so I got out a compass and took a few shots. Yeah another cop out shot day, lol.

I was astounded by Bill Rankin's map of Chicago's racial and ethnic divides and wanted to see what other cities looked like mapped the same way. To match his map, Red is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Gray is Other, and each dot is 25 people. Data from Census 2000. Base map © OpenStreetMap, CC-BY-SA

2013 Esri International User Conference Map Gallery

It's only complicated if you don't have Google Maps.

This map is in the public domain and I downloaded if from Wikipedia. There are notes on this map.

 

Best seen LARGE (click on link).

 

If you choose original above you can see a great deal of detail but you will have to scroll to see it all. Flickr will not let me insert that link for some reason.

 

See at Wikipedia

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

At Camden town tube. On the map, the Xs look hand-drawn just south of Camden.

Map of the Tokyo Disney Resort, Urayasu, Chiba, Japan

Collection of old maps scanned from books and other print sources Download them all at Photoshop Roadmap.

Mirrored from a good site, forgot the name. --- talon

Sent to:

Aileen, Germany 11/01/2015 FB

The estimated mean annual river discharge into the Mediterranean for recent years is about 10.000 m3/s, with a dry season in midsummer and a peak flow in early spring (Struglia et al. 2004). Ranked according to annual discharge, the ten largest rivers contributing to the Mediterranean Sea are the Rhone, Po, Drin-Bojana, Nile, Neretva, Ebro, Tiber, Adige, Seyhan, and Ceyhan. These rivers account for half of the mean annual discharge, with the Rhone and the Po alone accounting for already one-third of it (Ludwig et al. 2009). Of the three continents that discharge into the Mediterranean Sea, Europe dominates, with a climatological mean annual discharge that accounts for half of the total. The European discharge clearly determines the seasonal cycle for the Mediterranean. Discharge from Asia and Africa is considerably smaller. Discharge into the Adriatic Sea, the Northwestern Basin, and the Aegean Sea, combined, accounts for 76% of the whole. About one-third of the total basin discharge flows into the Adriatic (3.700 m3/s) (data from Ludwig et al. 2009). The Nile, with a catchment area an order of magnitude greater than any other Mediterranean river, has a mean annual discharge of 2.800 m3/s to the Aswan Dam. The discharge is reduced to about 5% of that amount (150 m3/s) by the time it reaches the Mediterranean Sea.

 

For any form of publication, please include the link to this page:

www.grida.no/resources/5897

 

This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: GRID-Arendal

Pyrrho

Government: Parliamentary Democracy

Last Known Ruler: Prime Minister Dauntelle Illeve

Land Area: (approx.) 309,000 square miles (158,000 sq. misons); Earth comparison: about the size of Oman

Geography and Climate: Pyrrho is a single island with no satellites whatsoever. It rises from some of the deepest waters known on Aquanus, and its land varies from lowland tropical forests to flat grasslands and rolling hills to arid, dry mountains. Temperature averages vary widely from area to area.

Highest Point: Mt. Lucreau 18,999 ft. (2.57 misons)

Eternitudes/Infinitudes (rough) With Respect to the Center of Aquanus: .1.03 to +1.35S; .1.67 to +2.05W

Capital City: Galbereo, est. pre-invasion popuation: 1.05 million

Best Known For: Politics, Galbereo (the largest city on Aquanus), business acumen, ships and shipbuilding, music, culture

Interesting Fact: The only known survivor to have sailed the Bay of Whoops to the Edge and return wasn’t a Zephyr, but a Pyrrhonian.

Deatil of the pattern around the eye of the puffer fish.

 

My new book on photography needs a good publisher!

Toulouse - Bords de Garonne

Map of Utila Honduras vacation

Height from heat data to derive parametric limits for form generation.

As of December 2011, these were the projections for Streetcar frequency by fall 2012. They were premised on a $9.4 million operating budget for Streetcar in FY 2013, much of which depended on large budget increases from TriMet and PBOT.

Live at Punkish Noisiseish all dayerish End o Year bash, Bar 42, Worthing, 17.12.2017

Porto Cupecoy is the most luxurious, culturally-rich residential experience in the Caribbean islands.

 

The luxury residential resort of Porto Cupecoy enjoys a prime location on the island of Sint Maarten, the Caribbean’s premiere island.

 

Since Porto Cupecoy is situated on the Dutch side of the island but is just a short distance from the French border, residents can also enjoy the sophistication and natural beauty of the island’s French side.

 

www.portocupecoy.com

Map of Central Switzerland using QGIS 3.6 and Blender. That's Interlaken between the two lakes.. Just realised how it got its name... :-)

 

SRTM raster. Using adaptive subdivision surface allowed me to upscale rasters to 14k x 12k. Used QGIS/gdalwarp to prepare heightmap and map tiles. Approx 2x vertical exaggeration. Using top-down orthographic camera.

 

Map tiles from OpenStreetMap (wmflabs OSM no labels)

 

Map layer shader uses a 95/5% mixture of Diffuse/Ambient Occlusion. It turns out ambient occlusion works a bit like 'sky view factor' in GIS, and is a LOT faster to compute in Blender, but is less pronounced. Used two soft blackbody sun lamps, NW 4500K, SE 9000K (shadowless fill light)

Heart = Registration Table

Star = Elevators

 

Saturday Locations:

Room 120A = Designers/Entrepreneurs

Room 120B = Beginning Developers

Maps of racial and ethnic divisions in US cities, inspired by Bill Rankin's map of Chicago, updated for Census 2010.

 

Red is White, Blue is Black, Green is Asian, Orange is Hispanic, Yellow is Other, and each dot is 25 residents.

 

Data from Census 2010. Base map © OpenStreetMap, CC-BY-SA

Illustration based on a poem by Henry Vaughan called 'The World', which was used in excerpt by Bertrand Russell in his 'History of Western Philosophy' to depict a pre-socratic vision of the world.

 

For the book Mapas/Maps, published by Mastodonte Editorial

 

mastodonteeditorial.com/libros/

DO NOT ADJUST YOUR COMPUTER SCREEN!

 

Unlike yesterday's map from 1807, Pigot reverts back to North at the bottom, south at the top. Comparison with the 1650 and 1750 maps, which are drawn with the same orientation, shows the extent of the city's growth.

 

Strangeways, a relatively underdeveloped area containing an old workhouse, can be seen at the bottom of the map between the rivers Irk and Irwell. At the top of the map can be seen the open fields of Petersfield.

 

In 1805 the Lee and Phillips Factory in Salford became the first to be lit by gas. In 1806 the Portico Library opened. In the same year the Mersey-Irwell Naviagtion enabled the first packet boat to travel from the New Bailey Bridge to Rucorn. This canal would later become part of the Manchester Ship Canal. In 1808 the Manchester and Salford Waterworks Company was established, to provide much-needed water supplies for the mills and the newly-arrived immigrant workers.

 

The wonderful engraving complete with mill, scroll and packaged goods can be understood as representing life in the city in the early 1800s in this context of industry, learning and commerce.

 

Click on the magnifying glass to zoom in to the large size of the map.

Map of Disneyland from the 1988 Disneyland Guidebook from September, 1988.

For more stories like this, visit www.jaysjourneys.com.

 

The Back-Story

 

I had tried unsuccessfully 3 times to hike the High Divide loop this year. The first time I just got lazy and decided that a weekend at home sounded nice. The second time, my job at the last minute required me to be at home for some on-line training over the weekend. The third time I was due for an overnight hike and thought I would drive out to the campground at Sol Duc on a Saturday, camp and get a really early start the next morning and do the whole loop in a day. As I was packing to leave on Saturday the 19th, I got a phone call and learned that my brother had passed away. Needless to say my plans for the weekend had changed. I won’t get into all the details but I will say that his passing was unexpected and the cause at this point is unknown. Needing time to reflect on his life, needing some time to myself to reflect on the things that are important to me and my family and really needing to finally get this trail on my ‘been there done that’ list, I decided to head out on Saturday the 26th of Sept 2009 to hike it.

  

The Hike

 

I got up at 4:45 AM and was out the door by 5:00. Driving from Silverdale, I got to the trailhead at 7:15 AM, beating Google Maps drive time prediction by 15 minutes. I was on the trail at 7:20 and it was already light out but the sun had not yet arrived in the Sol Duc River Valley. Taking my time hiking, not wanting to maintain a breakneck speed, yet not taking much in the way of rest breaks, I figured if I maintained a 2 mph pace throughout the hike I would be done with the hike in about 9 hours or so. I figured I should be done around 4:30 PM giving me plenty of daylight left as this time of the year it gets dark around 7:15 PM. So after hiking for a couple miles, I had Yogi on the brain and I was intermittently calling out “hey bear, Yogi bear” to give warning to any bears that might be in the area, even though I knew they were probably all up in the higher alpine zone eating berries. After calling out to the bears on my third or fourth time, I heard a crashing in the woods to my left. I looked up to see what was moving and it was a big Roosevelt bull elk. He ran up the trail in front of me and paused long enough for me to take his picture but my flash went off and the picture came out black. The elk ran again and I figured he was gone so I put my camera away. No more than 500 yards up the trail, I look up and there he is again, standing in the middle of the trail. I dug my camera out to shoot him but he was on to me and he bolted again. OK, this time I’m not going to put the camera away. I hiked on and he was on the trail again just like last time except now I had my camera out, I just needed to turn it on. Snap, damn flash again! This time he runs up hill. I tried desperately to take his picture but it just wasn’t meant to be I guess. I did get one but it was so blurry you can barely tell there is an Elk in it. Oh well. I hiked on. Before coming here I had asked a few people which was the best direction to go on the loop. Clockwise or CCW? I received advice from both people claiming one way was better than the other. In the end, I listened to my friend Mike’s reasoning that the lighting was better for photos during the time of day I would be hiking if I went CW, but I can see why a lot of people would go the other direction, the views are different. If you go clockwise, you will have a long gradual approach before you gain much elevation. It is mostly a river valley hike in the woods for a good 5 or 6 miles before you get many views. Eventually you do start to climb a little and you will get to Sol Duc Park where there is a campground. I didn’t see anyone at the campground when I arrived, in fact I only saw one couple on the trail up to this point. They were camped at the little campsite at Rocky Creek near the Appleton Pass junction and it looked like they had just woke up. I had already been on the trail for a couple of hours by that point. When you get close to Sol Duc Park, the forest opens up a little and there are some nice meadows filled with blueberries. My sense of smell is not what it used to be, due to allergies and medications to allergies I have taken in the past. Something has to have a pretty strong scent usually before I can smell it, so maybe it was my imagination or maybe it was real, but I could swear I could smell the blueberries. It smelled just like blueberry pie to me, and it was such a strong scent. The blueberries themselves were everywhere. I stopped several times to munch on them, they were fantastic. I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many blueberries, the bushes were just loaded with them. The bears wouldn’t go hungry this year! So after Sol Duc Park, the trail climbs again for a mile or two and crosses a little stream. The creek is the outlet stream of Heart Lake. I have seen Heart in pictures on-line and in books for many years and was excited to see it in person. When I got close, a couple returning from their overnight hike stopped and I asked them if they had seen any bears. The gentleman said that he saw the biggest bear he had ever seen the night before near the privy and said it must have weighed at least a thousand pounds. I pointed out the bear I could see up on the mountainside that looked like a speck it was so far away. Him and his wife said they saw it earlier but had lost track of it and were happy to see it again. Now I don’t know if black bears get up to a thousand lbs or not, but I will take his word that it was a big bear. I’m not surprised really with the amount of berries they have to eat this year. So I finally reach Heart Lake and I’m not too impressed. Maybe it’s all the people congregating near the outlet stream as I first see it, I don’t know. I didn’t even stop. I just kept on hiking past it. Once I got near the top and looked down, I was much happier and could see the famous heart shape it was named for. I was very close to my first views of Olympus and I was pretty stoked! I hiked on and finally reached the divide. It was magnificent. Olympus was much bigger than I imagined. Of course I had seen Olympus before, just never this close. I was very impressed. I hiked a little further and stopped to take a bunch of pictures and videos. I could see clouds down in the Hoh Valley and I wanted to make sure I got some good shots before any clouds obscured the view. After taking a bunch of photos, I was standing there just mesmerized by the beauty of the whole thing, reflecting on the hike. Thinking about my brother and the life he led. Thinking about my life and what I could do to improve upon it, how I could be a better husband and father. All of a sudden, during my reverie, some of the clouds from the valley started spinning around all crazy like and I took what I consider to be one of the better photos I have ever taken. It certainly is odd to say the least. I won’t go so far as to say I see Jesus in it or that its anything other than a big swirl in the cloud, but look at it and let it speak for itself. I don’t think I could ever come close to taking that picture again, even if I made it my life’s ambition. I think it was a one in a million shot, at least for me. So getting done with the photo shoot, I hike on and start seeing more people on the trail. I get to a point where I can finally see the Seven Lakes Basin and I pass a guy with a day pack coming from the other way. I said to him “nice day for a day hike”. He said it was and that he thought we were at about the half way point. I looked at my GPS and we were indeed about 9 miles into it. The trip was half over. On I hiked with Olympus on the left of me and the Lakes Basin on the right. Expansive views in every direction. These are the reasons for which I hike. Soon I came to a little side trail and there was a guy sitting there picking blueberries. After consulting my map I came to the conclusion that this was the side trail to Bogachiel Peak. I asked the blueberry picker how far it was to the top and he said “only five minutes, definitely worth it”. Two minutes later as I stood at the top, someone’s cell phone rings and he starts a conversation with someone else, laughing about how he can’t believe he has reception up here blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Bogachiel was too crowded for me so I took a couple pictures and left. The berry picker asked how I liked it and I said it was nice but a little crowded. He apologized and said that was his group up there which made me feel like a jerk for saying that. Sometimes I forget that the mountains are for everyone and not just my own pleasure. It’s hard to share sometimes but I don’t go there to be around people and phones and all that nonsense. I go to the mountains to free myself from it. To be able to fart or scratch my butt whenever I want to, or unlike when I’m in my car, to actually be able to pick my nose and not be seen doing so! I won’t go so far as to say that I’m looking forward to hike naked day, but I think you catch my drift. Soon I’m walking over to the junction of the Hoh Trail which rests on a neat little saddle. There are more people congregating here so I pass them and take a few shots of the junction which also marks the beginning of my downhill trek and final leg of the hike. Only 8 miles to the car! So on the way down, the trail skirts below Bogachiel Peak and with the fall colors, the hillside is very beautiful. As I’m hiking down I keep hearing a shrill whistle that I think is a hawk but all I see flying around is a big raven. I keep hiking and the whistle gets louder and louder occurs every time the big raven flies by. I notice movement on the hillside and see a great big old marmot watching me and I realize that it is the marmot whistling not a hawk. So this is why it’s called a whistle pig. I have seen lots of Marmots before, but I never recall hearing one whistle. It is much louder than I thought it would be. It must have been whistling to warn it’s friends of the big raven that was flying around. Down the trail I went, looking over my shoulder the whole way to see what I might have missed by doing the trail clockwise. Soon I was at the Seven Lakes Basin trail. I passed a couple of ladies on their way up and they said hi as we passed. One of the ladies turned and said “oh by the way there is a big bear sitting on the trail about 40 paces down the way”. I say oh really? She says no just kidding. Hardy har har. I actually wanted to see a bear other than one so far away it looked like a little speck, oh well. After a while I let a couple of people pass me as they keep gaining on me every time I stop to take a picture. Before long I am passing them again as they stop to throw rocks in an un-named lake just before Deer Lake. I stop too as I haven’t had lunch yet and I wanted to give them a chance to hike ahead of me so I don’t have to listen to them prattle on about God knows what (did I mention I enjoy my solitude?). It must have been around 2:00 PM or so when I stopped and it was nice to take a break after so many hours without really stopping for more than five minutes at a time. I took a good 20 minute break, ate a sandwich and took some pictures of the little lake. Soon I was hiking again and came to another lake, could this be the Deer Lake I see on the map? More photos of the nice reflections on the lake and I was off again. Not much further and I see a little wooden boardwalk style trail going through a marshy area and I see a sign that says welcome to Deer Lake. Oh good, now only a little over 3 ½ miles to go. Up to this point in my hiking career, the farthest I have ever hiked was a trip I did when I was much younger up to Flapjack Lakes and back which, if memory serves me correctly is about 16 miles round trip. On this hike I felt pretty tired at about mile 12 but once I got to around mile 16 I felt like a second wind had come on. Down the trail I went, deeper into the valley towards the Sol Duc. I eventually came to a bridge crossing the Canyon Creek which the trail follows from Deer Lake. Not much farther now. I finally reached Sol Duc Falls. There were people milling about and I felt kind of sorry for them. Sol Duc Falls is pretty but nothing compared to what I had seen today. Oh yeah, as an afterthought I took a picture of the falls too. Only .7 miles to go! Up ahead I saw someone that looked familiar. It was the day hiker that I passed going the other way at the top of the divide. I called to him and he slowed down to let me catch up so we could chit-chat. I compared notes with him and found out that he started hiking only five minutes earlier than I did. Upon further investigation I discovered that he had been to several of the same hikes that I had done this year. We both hiked Burroughs Mountain at Mount Rainier on the same weekend. We both hiked some of the same hikes in the gorge this spring. We both hiked Umtanum over near Yakima this year. What a small world, and how odd to go in different directions of the loop starting and ending at almost the exact same times. Before I knew it I was back at my car. The time was 4:40 PM so I was pretty close to my estimation of 9 hours hiking time. What a great hike. Maybe I will do it again next year from the other direction.

 

This trip report is dedicated to the memory of my brother Jeff Steveson.

Aug 25th 1959 – Sept 19th 2009

Rest in Peace Brother

   

europa durante las invasiones barbaras (siglos V al X)....donde el elemento germanico.....la sangre nueva... se mezcla con antiguas tradiciones....aun siento que debo aprender cosas de ahí....en mi vida llena de deudas siento q aqui hay un tema pendiente....pero todas las deudas se pagan

The team used my site map during the major redesign of a client’s web site. In this document, I added version tracking, template assignment, and content coding. Version numbers were paired with wireframe version numbers. The content development and front-end development teams easily traced document changes as the project progressed through its iterative life cycle.

Contribution: 75% The other 25% represents a chunk of work I inherited from the previous IA who created the initial style template and preliminary structure.

Tube map from the 80s.

Hillcrest is a one-way private drive from S Bluff Blvd that exits onto Crescent Dr - maps don't show the drive connecting.

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