View allAll Photos Tagged Number
The boys of Mess #7 take a break from drill during training camp at Caesar's Creek near Harveysburg, Ohio on April 25, 2009.
Mess #7 is part of the 6th Ohio Volunteer Infantry's Company A.
(L to R) Eric Grothaus, Fred Previts, Evan Cornett, Don Buczek, and Rufus Guy.
(Photo courtesy of Don Buczek)
Haven't really been on flickr in a while. Just shooting a lot but not really in front of the computer to often. Just want to say thanks for the comments everyone and I appreciate you checking out my photostream. Peace and Keep Creating!
Little black plastic number gear thingies that I found whilst taking a mechanical thing apart.... Couldn't resist turning them into funky earrings...
Live Report for OneMetal: Oathbreaker & Steak Number 8 @ Underworld, Camden - 14/5/16
Words: by Anastasia Psarra: www.onemetal.com/2016/06/06/oathbreaker-steak-number-8-un...
The Phoenix tie the game at two apiece through Nico Aaltonen.
Photo by Richard Amor Allan.
© Manchester Phoenix 2015. All rights reserved. This photo may not be reproduced, edited or manipulated in any way without prior expressed consent of the photographer.
1 of 25
death of a librarian. words, design and construction by moira clunie, 2001. consummated press.
Spider Number 3: Another orb weaver (male) resting alongside other spiders all grouped together on my balcony railing one late summer day. [Location: Blue Mountains, NSW]
Gnomon is the Greek name of the addition to a polygon in order to get the next polygon from the same type. A good example is the transition from square to square. From the square of one (which is 1) to the square of two (which is 4) we pass by adding 3, and from the square of 2 (which is 4) we move to the square of 3 (which is 9) by adding 5, And so on. And the ancient Greeks had also an even Gnomon, completing the rectangle to the rectangle above it. The name gnomon is borrowed from the part of a sun dial that casts shadow and which has, along with the shadow, a shape of an angle, like the letter L in Latin.
The gnomon of the odd shapes is always in the form of 2x+1, and the gnomon of the even shapes is always in the form of 2x. 2x+1 and 2x covers all the natural numbers.
*
Photo: Gnomon & Sundial in Givat Ram campus, The Hebrew
University, Jerusalem
Lime Rock Park Weathertech IMSA weekend July 2017. Classes include IMSA WeatherTech and the Continental Tire Sportscar Challenge.
Number 1, a white 1992 Vauxhall Nova - K364 UFR - driven by Paul Ramsay, seen cornering while making a run at Monklands Sporting Car Club's Forrestburn Speed Hill Climb, August 2013.
Press "L" to view large.