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Prometheus

White marble sarcophagus

The scene on the sarcophagus depicts the creation of humankind by Prometheus.

Numerous deities are included in the scene.

Puteoli, from the mausoleum known as the mausoleum of Prometheus

Early 4th century AD

 

The Campania in the Roman era exhibition recently opened on the ground floor opposite the impressive Farnese collection. The 20 rooms are filled with sculptures and paintings from the 2nd century BC to the 3rd century that decorated public buildings in Naples and southern Italy (including some from Pompeii and Herculaneum).

 

→ See also Visit the National Museum of Archaeology in Naples for more on one of the finest collections of antiquities in the world, including the marvelous Farnese sculptures (including Hercules at Rest and the Farnese Toro) and the best artworks, mosaics, as well as frescoes from the excavations of Pompeii and Herculaneum.

NYC: Midtown / Rockefeller Center

 

Prometheus & Channel Gardens

 

Leica M10 | Nokton Classic 40/1.4 MC VM

Prometheus Engineer - Series 1 Alien - scifi sci-fi science fiction TV television show creature monster action figure toy toys space galaxy universe flying saucer spaceship Action Figures NECA Series 1 Alien Ridley Scott film movie xenomorph like aliens 2012

From the WPA-era murals at the NYPL main branch.

Prometheus by French painter Eugène Delacroix.

From Al Gezira Center for Modern Arts collection , Cairo

More about it here bit.ly/2X32wxf

2017 July 18, Freedom Square, Chaple, Depot, Discovery America Park Nikon D7200

Meateasy wallpaper. Published 1983. Apparantly unrelated to Twins (1988)

This … object … is quite difficult to capture just how I think I would like to – particularly with the restrictions placed on me with the 35mm fixed focal length of the X100. I can't get close in and wide enough to give the head space around it but I also can't step further away without bringing elements of the surrounding scenery in.

 

So…here's another view and one that I *think* I prefer to the last one. But I'm going to have to go back and shoot this head again. Hopefully get more time to try different angles and compositions, etc. Today the rain didn't help me with that.

Leica M2

Leica 50mm summilux II

Fuji Neopan Acros 100

Ilford DD-X 1+4

Plustek 7600i

 

www.gregoryniss.tumblr.com

For those that have seen Prometheus... My wife and I found a dead Hammerpede on the beach.

Bonfire at Newport Beach, OR.

I saw one of these last year along this same stretch of wall. However,

that was August 2006 so a different time of year? The dark colors are

faded on this one. Plus the gashes in the wings are interesting.

Troubleyn / Jan Fabre

(photo: Wonge Bergmann)

Still nothing there but lots of smoke and pain

Someone scattered a bunch of pennies in the breezeway. Someone else gathered them in a small area.

 

This moth was perched just above them. I think another moth pic I have was very close to this location.

This is the guy everyone is assuming is the Space Jockey or a mutated member of the crew. I'm not against either theory and think they are both have potential.

 

I noticed this a while ago and it looks even more apparent in this shot that the big guy has bare forearms.

Cassini has sighted Prometheus and Pandora, the two F-ring-shepherding

moons whose unpredictable orbits both fascinate scientists and wreak havoc

on the F ring.

Prometheus (102 kilometers, or 63 miles across) is visible left of

center in the image, inside the F ring. Pandora (84 kilometers, or 52

miles across) appears above center, outside the ring. The dark shadow

cast by the planet stretches more than halfway across the A ring, the

outermost main ring. The mottled pattern appearing in the dark regions

of the image is 'noise' in the signal recorded by the camera system,

which has subsequently been magnified by the image processing.

The F ring is a narrow, ribbon-like structure, with a width seen in

this geometry equivalent to a few kilometers. The two small, irregularly

shaped moons exert a gravitational influence on particles that make up

the F ring, confining it and possibly leading to the formation of clumps,

strands and other structures observed there. Pandora prevents the F ring

from spreading outward and Prometheus prevents it from spreading inward.

However, their interaction with the ring is complex and not fully

understood. The shepherds are also known to be responsible for many

of the observed structures in Saturn's A ring.

The moons, which were discovered in images returned by the Voyager 1

spacecraft in 1980, are in chaotic orbits--their orbits can change

unpredictably when the moons get very close to each other. This strange

behavior was first noticed in ground-based and Hubble Space Telescope

observations in 1995, when the rings were seen nearly edge-on from Earth

and the usual glare of the rings was reduced, making the satellites more

readily visible than usual. The positions of both satellites at that time

were different than expected based on Voyager data.

One of the goals for the Cassini-Huygens mission is to derive more

precise orbits for Prometheus and Pandora. Seeing how their orbits

change over the duration of the mission will help to determine their

masses, which in turn will help constrain models of their interiors and

provide a more complete understanding of their effect on the rings.

This narrow angle camera image was snapped through the broadband green

spectral filter, centered at 568 nanometers, on March 10, 2004, when the

spacecraft was 55.5 million kilometers (34.5 million miles) from the

planet. Image scale is approximately 333 kilometers (207 miles) per

pixel. Contrast has been greatly enhanced, and the image has been

magnified to aid visibility of the moons as well as structure in the

rings.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the

European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion

Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena,

manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA's Office of Space Science,

Washington, D.C. The Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras, were

designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging team is based at

the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo.

For more information, about the Cassini-Huygens mission visit, saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/ and the Cassini

imaging team home page, ciclops.org/.

 

credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

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