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2019-04-19 5853-CR2-L1T1
Not the sharpest shot but I thought it was very interesting how the adult bald eagles protected their nest from this immature bald eagle. Earlier in the morning we saw one of the adults tussle with this immature balding eagle in a high flying talon show battle. Petty cool but it was too dark at that time to get any shots.
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🏁 | 2025 Bergpreis Planneralm, Styria 💚 Austria
photographer | Bernard Egger.. • collections • sets
📷 | 1987 Lancia Delta HF Integrale :: rumoto images # 1055 wp
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If a photographer can’t feel what he is looking at, then he is never going to get others to feel anything when they look at his pictures.
CSX Q038 meets NS 213 at the Graham interlocking in Charlotte, NC.
The diamond is protected by both signals and motorized derails on the CSX side.
Serve, Protect, and Conquer...
That was all he knew how to do.
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herpnthederp.wordpress.com/2015/10/08/serve-protect-and-c...
Kakadu National Park is a protected area in the Northern Territory of Australia, 171 km southeast of Darwin.
The park is located within the Alligator Rivers Region of the Northern Territory. It covers an area of 19,804 km2 (7,646 sq mi), extending nearly 200 kilometres from north to south and over 100 kilometres from east to west. It is the size of Slovenia, about one-third the size of Tasmania, or nearly half the size of Switzerland.
The park comprises several landforms – sandstone escarpment and plateaux, savannah woodlands, monsoon forests, tidal and freshwater rivers, wetlands and tidal deltas.
The name Kakadu may come from the mispronunciation of Gaagudju, which is the name of an Aboriginal language spoken in the northern part of the park. This name may derive from the Indonesian word kakatuwah, (via Dutch kaketoe and German Kakadu) subsequently Anglicised as "cockatoo”.
Aboriginal people have occupied the Kakadu area continuously for at least 40,000 years. Kakadu National Park is renowned for the richness of its Aboriginal cultural sites. There are more than 5,000 recorded art sites illustrating Aboriginal culture over thousands of years. The archaeological sites demonstrate Aboriginal occupation for up to 60,000 years.
The cultural and natural values of Kakadu National Park were recognised internationally when the park was placed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. This is an international register of properties that are recognised as having outstanding cultural or natural values of international significance. Kakadu was listed in three stages: stage 1 in 1981, stage 2 in 1987, and the entire park in 1992.
Approximately half of the land in Kakadu is Aboriginal land under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, and most of the remaining land is currently under claim by Aboriginal people. The areas of the park that are owned by Aboriginal people are leased by the traditional owners to the Director of National Parks to be managed as a national park. The remaining area is Commonwealth land vested under the Director of National Parks. All of Kakadu is declared a national park under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.
“Flagging the Crossing” - Crossing flaggers and crossing shanties at busy railroad and roadway intersections were once common on US railroads. Technology in the form of crossing signals and gates eventually replaced the flaggers and shanties. Yet surprisingly the practice lasted longer than one would have expected in some locations. One of these was in Mankato, MN on the Chicago & North Western. As seen here back in 1985, the flagger has left his shanty and is protecting motorists from a CNW freight that came southbound out of the Twin Cities on the former Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul and Omaha Railway (Omaha Road) route.
a small Black Ant with its flock of aphids from which it 'milks' honeydew.
UPDATE: this image has been Highly Commended in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition 2010!
Cologne New "Cranehouses"
First of three brandnew Business Houses situated directly between the shore of River Rhine and one of our harbor bassins. I am really happy, that the architects shared the old, small houses on the right side. In the roaring Twenties of the last Century, they were used as market places for fishermen and other dealers of daily goods...
two of the seven cygnets under mothers protection! This seemed to be their first walk outside the nest, mother is telling them here to get back to the water and off the road (where the others were waiting)
Mum and Dad protecting their new brood shortly after a crow showed too much interest. See more of Bradgate Park at: www.facebook.com/BradgateParkBlog/
This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Yaman Ibrahim.
Created with Midjourney AI engine. PP work in Adobe PS Elements Graphics Gradient Blue Texture for background.
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I took my Thursday Walk at Ribby in Västerhaninge. It was a fine, but chilly Autumn day. I noticed a man working at the Toothache Tree, clearing the underbrush, and made a mental note to head over there for a few photos of the protected tree. But I totally forgot about that and this was the last photo I took during my walk. POh, and in case you are wondering, this is nine photos stitched together, shot with one om my Nifty Fifty lenses.