View allAll Photos Tagged Multiples
Search engines will now display multiple Sitelinks within search results.
You don't have to rank #1 for the search engine to list Sitelinks for your domain!
Part of the Jackson Multiple Resource Study
Jackson, Breathitt County, KY
Listed: 02/21/1986
The Jackson Commercial District is composed of thirteen contributing buildings, two non-contributing buildings and two non-contributing sites. The majority of the contributing buildings are two-story brick structures, vernacular in design, with three to five bay facades. Despite alterations, portions of the original first floor cast iron storefronts can be seen on many of the buildings. The district is located on both sides of Main Street from Court Street West to Broadway Street. Built over a time period from 1892 to 1922, these buildings housed Jackson's major merchandising, banking and professional services during boom era.
The Jackson Commercial District is significant-under-criteria A and C. It is significant under criterion A because of its association with the town's major commercial development as a result of its being the railhead for the Lexington and Eastern Railroad and, subsequently, the gateway to the eastern Kentucky coalfields while Louisville and Nashville RR extended the rail lines. Major buildings from this era are located in the district and once contained a general store, hotel, and professional offices associated with Jackson's boom era from 1892 to 1922.
The Jackson Commercial District is also significant under criterion C because of the architectural integrity of the district considered as a whole. Despite alterations to first floors and changes in window sashes on some upper stories, the buildings are Jackson's best examples of the vernacular style of the era. Technology and craftsmanship are apparent in the cast iron storefronts, pressed metal cornices, brick corbelling, and stone work.
Theoretically, modelling a multiple bonk system is more difficult than modelling a binary bonk, as the dynamical system involved, the n-bonk problem, may exhibit chaotic behavior.
Many configurations of small groups of bonks are found to be unstable, as eventually one bonk will approach another closely and be accelerated so much that it will escape from the system. This instability can be avoided if the system is what Johnson has called hierarchical. In a hierarchical system, the bonks in the system can be divided into two smaller groups, each of which traverses a larger orbit around the system's center of mass. Each of these smaller groups must also be hierarchical, which means that they must be divided into smaller subgroups which themselves are hierarchical, and so on.
In this case, the bonks' motion will continue to approximate stable Gullichsenian orbits around the system's center of mass, unlike the more complex dynamics of the large number of bonks in bonk clusters.
All my photos are available for multiple purposes, specially for publishing, so if you are interested in to get copies and use permissions, don't hesitate in to contact me (e-mail: visiontorres@gmail.com). The payment of royalties is necessary, but the fees are pretty cheap. I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Esta y otras fotografías están disponibles para su venta en formato digital en alta resolución y en versiones impresas de alta calidad en edición limitada (previa solicitud). Se pueden adquirir los derechos de uso con fines comerciales, educativos o académicos. Para establecer contacto: E-mail: visiontorres@gmail.com