View allAll Photos Tagged PanAfricanism

It was a great day to shoot coolies under the effeil tower in Paris. www.afrochic.book.fr

This is the typical AFROCHIC style! With a model like Priscy it's very easy to put in image exactly what i have on my mind. www.afrochic.book.fr

Photoshoots with model like LV is pleasure!!

She's a real EBONYBEAUTY

www.afrochic.book.fr

YOUR ESSENCE IS DIVINE LET IT SHINE...

 

MODEL/EMMA PROUD NUBIAN GODDESS.

Concept SHAKAZZ for AFROCHIC

Porphyritic metadacite to porphyritic meta-andesite from the Precambrian of Egypt. (cut & polished surface; ~13.2 centimeters across along the base)

 

“Imperial Porphyry” is a beautiful, important, historically-valuable decorative stone. It was initially quarried during the Egyptian Ptolemaic Dynasty and was also used in the Roman Empire. In later centuries, it was reused in southern and southeastern Europe.

 

This rock type comes from quarries at Mons Porphyrites in eastern Egypt. The locality name is the basis for the petrologic term “porphyritic”, which refers to a mix of large and small crystals in an igneous rock. Imperial Porphyry rocks are dark reddish to dark purplish with light-colored feldspar phenocrysts. The red-purple colors are the result of alteration of the original rock, which is dark gray-colored. These rocks are part of the Dokhan Volcanics, a greater-than-1 kilometer thick succession of late Precambrian-aged, terrestrial, intermediate to felsic volcanic rocks (= lava flows, volcanic tuffs, and volcanic agglomerates) - they are about 600 million years old. The nature, age, mineralogy, geochemistry, and paleotectonic setting of the Dokhan Volcanics indicate that Imperial Porphyry rocks are lava flows that accompanied subduction zone volcanism during the Pan-African Orogeny. Subduction was followed by a collision event along the Mozambique Belt in the late Precambrian, during which the ancient small supercontinent Gondwana formed (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gondwana). Gondwana was part of a larger supercontinent called Pannotia, which rifted apart in the latest Precambrian (upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d7/Pannotia.svg).

 

Geochemical analysis of Imperial Porphyry rocks shows that they are 62.2 to 64.4% silica, which makes them porphyritic quartz andesites and porphyritic dacites. A detailed mineral analysis of Imperial Porphyry is given in Makovicky et al. (2016). The mineralogy shows that the rocks have been subjected to fluid alteration and greenschist-facies metamorphism, possibly related to the Pan-African Orogeny and/or burial metamorphism and/or Red Sea rifting orogenesis. The reddish to purplish coloration is from partial hematitization of mafic minerals. Because the rocks are slightly metamorphosed, they are better referred to as "meta-andesites" and "metadacites".

 

Stratigraphy: upper Dokhan Volcanics, Ediacaran, upper Neoproterozoic, ~593-602 Ma

 

Locality: old Roman quarry at Mons Porphyrites, above Wadi Abu Maamel, Red Sea Mountains, Eastern Desert, eastern Egypt

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Geologic info. mostly synthesized from:

 

Makovicky et al. (2016) - Imperial Porphyry from Gebel Abu Dokhan, the Red Sea Mountains, Egypt, part I. mineralogy, petrology and occurrence. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie Abhandlungen [Journal of Mineralogy and Geochemistry] 193: 1-27.

 

Thez and Priscy illustrating the theme LOYALTY!

Album "NUBIANS" by Shakazz www.afrochic.book.fr

Liv posing in the streets of NY, it was fun!

Very nice portrait of SOSO in lingerie, she just knows how to pose. www.afrochic.book.fr

Skunder Boghossian, Night Flight of Dread and Delight, 1964, oil on canvas with collage, 143.8 x 159.1 cm (North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh)

Learn more at Smarthistory

Nuit blanche au CCF Oran

A pan-African truck my wife and I joined to travel round Zimbabwe some year ago. Yup, it was hot..

Well, I met an old man

 

Dying on a train.

 

No more destination,

 

No more pain.

 

Well, he said

 

"One thing before I graduate

 

Never let your fear decide your fate."

 

"Kill Your Heroes" - Awolnation

  

Children in Accra, Ghana, play while observing closing ceremonies of Africa Endeavor 2010.

 

Photo by U.S. Army Africa

 

To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at www.usaraf.army.mil

 

Official Twitter Feed: www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica

 

Official Vimeo video channel: www.vimeo.com/usarmyafrica

 

Join the U.S. Army Africa conversation on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ArmyAfrica

 

Africa Endeavor 2010 came to a close Aug. 20 with a ceremony held at the Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College parade grounds in Accra, Ghana.

 

AE 2010 is a U.S. Africa Command-sponsored initiative intended to enhance interoperability and information exchange among African nations via communication networks and subsequent collaborative links with the United States, African Union and other African partners that share common goals of stability, security and sustainment.

 

"Future operations in Africa depend on the combined multinational militaries of the nations represented here today in order to effectively communicate amongst themselves," said Maj. Gen. David R. Hogg, U.S. Army Africa commanding general.

 

During the annual two-week communications exercise, participants from 36 African nations, the AU, the Economic Community of Western African States, the Economic Community of Central African States, the United States and several European partners worked together to develop standard tactics, techniques and procedures to be used in future humanitarian assistance, disaster relief and peace support missions.

 

New areas of expertise addressed in Africa Endeavor 2010 included the first radio call to a vessel at sea from an AE event site. The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Mohawk sailing off the coast of Africa ran the test, allowing AE participants to challenge themselves in establishing land-to-sea communications. After a couple attempts, the land-to-sea radio call was a success, proving that African nations could maintain communication between inland locations and their maritime forces.

 

"We are fighting for unity and interoperability with our partners to establish high levels of efficiency," said Lt. Gen. Peter Blay, Chief, Defense Staff of the Ghana Armed Forces. "The outcome of AE 2010 has given assurance that we are on track to achieve the ultimate goal of interoperability between our forces."

 

Another incorporated training event was a satellite call conducted from the AE site in Accra to the AU Peace Support Operations Center in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The demonstration showed AE participants how useful reliable communication between the nations and the AU is during times of disaster relief.

 

"The newly incorporated signal techniques will be planned for and incorporated in future exercises," said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Britt Talbert, AE 2010 exercise director.

 

Through newly incorporated training and careful planning, AE 2010 proved to achieve its goal of taking a step forward in improving interoperability and creating new ties between African nations.

 

"By taking part in this event we have demonstrated a commitment to harness the power of communication technology for ensuring the long-term peace, stability, and prosperity of the African continent," said Hogg.

 

“Africa Endeavor is a great opportunity to meet people and it gives us an opportunity to check interoperability communications for all military personnel,” said Maj. Bachirou Farta of Burkina-Faso.

 

“Here we have the opportunity to know another country, and this is very important because of the many different cultures in Africa. When I go back to my country, I will teach my people many things from my good experiences here for the military,” he said.

 

African nations participating in AE 2010 included Algeria, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Chad, Djibouti, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, The Gambia, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sao Tome & Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Seychelles, Southern Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda and Zambia.

 

The first AE was held in Pretoria, South Africa, in 2006. Subsequent exercises took place in Abuja, Nigeria, in 2008 and in Libreville, Gabon, in 2009.

 

To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at www.usaraf.army.mil

 

Official Twitter Feed: www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica

  

1967 Ford Thunderbird Landau sedan.

 

Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois.

Sunday, October 25, 2015.

LINA is a model i love to shoot ...and i wonder why... www.afrochic.book.fr

African headwrap and clothes worn by Binta www.afrochic.book.fr

Ebonyqueen posing proudly www.afrochic.book.fr

Nice duo done by Thez and Priscy , Album "NUBIANS" by Shakazz www.afrochic.book.fr

To celebrate Pan African Women's Day, the United States Mission to the African Union wanted to honor the tremendous achievements of Pan-African women by acknowledging the many unsung heroes who have helped to make families stronger, communities more prosperous, governments more accountable, and nations more secure. Pan-African Women's Day is held annually across the world to celebrate the first Pan-African Women's Conference and the creation of the Pan-African Women's Organization (PAWO) in 1962 in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. Video by USAU.

 

youtu.be/-FuA0RcXQWI

Portait wall-painted of Portait wall-painted of at Muammar al Gaddafi Mouammar Kadhafi Colonel Quaddafi the Abode of Chaos (Creative Commons)

original version free on Flickr att the Abode of Chaos (Creative Commons)

 

Secrets revealed of the Abode of Chaos (112 pages, adult only) >>>

 

"999" English version with English subtitles is available >>>

HD movie - scenario thierry Ehrmann - filmed by Etienne Perrone

 

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voir les secrets de la Demeure du Chaos avec 112 pages très étranges (adult only)

 

999 : visite initiatique au coeur de la Demeure du Chaos insufflée par l'Esprit de la Salamandre

Film HD d'Etienne PERRONE selon un scénario original de thierry Ehrmann.

  

courtesy of Organ Museum

©2011 www.AbodeofChaos.org

I like the effect of this sweet nubianqueen. www.afrochic.book.fr

They seem surprised but happy with what they see! (JUST FOR FUN) www.afrochic.book.fr

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