View allAll Photos Tagged Maximus
This famous large structure of ancient Rome is known as Circus Maximus (or the Hippodrome). It was located due south of Caesar's Imperial Palace.
Here were held a variety of games and entertainment, but the primary sport was horse chariot racing.
Romanum men run their races about once a week here. Check the Romanum Calendar.
An iron sight, un-suppressed version of the Maximus. Stays truer to the 0.7 original, the "Gladiator," by Operator EMTECH.
Circus Maximus as it appears today. It looks more like a park now but you can still make out the elongated oval track. Sort of like Churchill Downs with a raised center.
Limax maximus (literally, "biggest slug"), known by the common names great grey slug and leopard slug, is a species of slug in the family Limacidae.
Leopard Slug
Limax Maximus
it left shortly after taking it's portrait.
Limax maximus (literally, "biggest slug"), known by the common names great grey slug and leopard slug, is a species of slug in the family Limacidae.
Fluorescence of a harvestman from the southeastern atlantic forest / fluorescência de opilião da mata atlântica do sudeste
This fossil of Lepidotes maximus, a type of prehistoric ray-finned fish that lived in the Jurassic Period (183–125 Million Years Ago) shows the remarkable preserved details of is scales and fins. This Fossil is on display at Museum für Naturkunde, in Berlin, Germany.
File Size21.3MB
Camera ModelCanon EOS 7D Mark II
Shooting Date/Time6/10/2019 3:12:12 PM
Shooting ModeAperture-Priority AE
Tv(Shutter Speed)1/13
Av(Aperture Value)5.6
Metering ModeSpot Metering
Exposure Compensation-1 1/3
ISO Speed400
Auto ISO SpeedOFF
LensEF70-300mm f/4-5.6 IS II USM
Focal Length143.0mm
Image Size5472x3648
Aspect ratio3:2
Image QualityRAW
FlashOn
Flash TypeExternal Flash : E-TTL flash metering
E-TTL II flash meteringEvaluative flash metering
Flash Exposure Compensation-3
Shutter curtain syncFirst-curtain synchronization
FE lockOFF
White Balance ModeColor Temperature(5200K)
AF ModeOne-Shot AF
AF area select modeSpot AF
Picture StyleStandard
Sharpness3
Contrast0
Saturation0
Color tone0
Color SpacesRGB
Long exposure noise reductionDisable
High ISO speed noise reductionStandard
Highlight tone priorityDisable
Auto Lighting OptimizerStandard
Drive ModeSingle shooting
Live View ShootingOFF
Comment
it left shortly after taking it's portrait.
Limax maximus (literally, "biggest slug"), known by the common names great grey slug and leopard slug, is a species of slug in the family Limacidae.
In diesem Jahr ist die Hyazinthen-Zucht in unserem Garten erstaunlich erfolgreich. Wir haben extra einen Vermessungsingenieur zur Bestätigung der enormen Größe bestellt. Allen Foto-Fans freundliche Frühjahrsgrüße!
One of a series of shots taken of this elephant on the road in southern Sri Lanka, during my last trip in 2020. Sadley being a so called "essential worker" during a pandemic has seveirly curtailed my photography, but I hope to do more as the year goes on.
So with the weather here in the UK being so bad, and you all know I have to be photographing something the birds in my garden would be a great subject. Now with a bag of sunflower seeds and some just in date bread I was arm with the Canon 5D MRKIII And the 100-400mm L Lens.Shot with a high shutter speed to just light the side of the Maximus Love it.Cheers Chris.
Middle foreground tree marks spot of southwestern chariot turning post or meta
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circus_Maximus
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Historic City of Rome UNESCO World Heritage Site
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Nikon D50 + Nikon Nikkor 18-55mm 1:3.5-5.6G AF-S DX SWM aspherical
www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond50
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_D50
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_AF-S_DX_Zoom-Nikkor_18-55mm_f...
_DSC4905 Anx2 Q90 f25
The Decumanus Maximus was once the main street of the ancient Roman city of Umm Qays (Gadara) in northern Jordan.
Centaurothamnus maximus, native to Asia-Temperate (Arabian Peninsula - Gulf States (Saudi Arabia) & Yemen (Southwest regions))...local common name of "Kharshaf"...taken at the Huntington Botanical Garden, San Marino, (California, USA)...in literature listed as endangered but no record on the IUCN...belonging to the Asteraceae, it has obvious similarities to Artichokes & Cardoons...Cheers from Oz