View allAll Photos Tagged Referencement

Large metal drawer with some of my reference files in plain yellow folders. Labels are written with my Brother P-Touch 1280VP.

Part of the 1st floor computer, magazines, and the reference desk. August 2010

Reference: APAAME_20160523_AZ-0137.jpg

Photographer: Andrea Zerbini

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

This time with pukifee and pukipuki and the fairyline hippogriff ~

This is a reference shot for the previous image. Click between them to compare the scenes.

 

Scale seems off, but this is because of the Trespasser engine having a different style of rendering. It makes everything look further away then it is in the CryEngine. It has taken me a while to adjust to this rendering difference, and i've been unable to replicate it with different FOV's.

 

The Brachiosaurs also throw the scale off, as they are undersized.

u4ia is dead, so I must preserve some files in the glorious Internet archives. RIP Offensive Combat.

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

A reference section of the Toronto Reference Library

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!

 

Name: Reede

Species: English Muntjac

Sex: Male

Location from: England

Other: A young adult that was evidently sourced from roadkill. Has some minor post mortem tooth damage.

 

Species Info: Muntjacs, AKA Barking Deer, are small portly deer with striking red coats. Their most notable feature are their long canines which are used for fighting. They have no seasonal rut- instead mating year-round due to being a tropical animal.

 

These deer are native to Asian regions but have been introduced to England, where they have become one of the most common deer species.

Recent research by the Airfield Research group has revealed that building was nicknamed "Dragon Mountain" by base personnel, Not the often quoted "Magic Mountain" . The first reference to Magic Mountain is in the research notes for the listing of the Building and is in error. The Dragon Mountain name makes more sense as the U2/TR-1 aircraft are nicknamed "The Dragon Lady" and personnel with the 17th RW called themselves "Dragon Keepers"

 

"The Avionics building, constructed c. 1989 by US Air Force, is a two storey, partly sunken reinforced concrete bunker, rectangular in plan. The building accommodates a drive-through access roadway and is capped with a rough concrete buster cap designed to absorb the impact of a missile before penetrating the bunker's roof.

 

INTERIOR: The purpose of the avionics building was to service the electronic components of reconnaissance aircraft and process the data retrieved. The interior of the building housed life support systems, stainless steel decontamination rooms, electronics workshops, photographic dark rooms, handling and storage areas. It is protected internally by subterranean 'portcullis' type blast doors on a hydraulic release mechanism. By the main doors are a suite of decontamination rooms and male and female toilets. An internal vehicular decontamination facility is also present. Large rooms on the lower floor housed the computers (now removed) where the data was downloaded and analysed. One of these rooms has a painted motto 'Aircrews live by the knowledge, skill, awareness and integrity of their maintenance people' over the door. A unique feature is the system for maintaining air pressure in the case of attack, by the use of compressed air cylinders on the lower floor, still present. All fixtures and fittings apart from the air cylinders and generators, floor surfaces, wall panelling and doors have been removed.

 

HISTORY: Land for an airfield at Alconbury was first acquired in 1938 as a satellite landing ground for RAF Upwood and when war broke out, the base was used by Blenheims from RAF Wyton. As part of the US 8th Air Force, it fulfilled a variety of roles until being handed back to the RAF in November 1945. In June 1953, the base was reactivated for the US 3rd Air Force and from 1959, Alconbury assumed its principal Cold War role as the home to various reconnaissance squadrons. In 1983, U2/TR-1 spy planes were permanently based at Alconbury, resulting in the construction of a number of hardened structures including the Avionics building and a number of Hardened Aircraft Shelters which have group value. Following the cessation of the Cold War, flying ceased in March 1995 and the base was released for disposal.

 

SOURCES. RCHME/English Heritage 'MPP Cold War Survey' 1999. Cocroft, W.D and Thomas, R.J.C 'Cold War, Building for Nuclear Confrontation 1946-1989', English Heritage, 2003.

 

SUMMARY OF IMPORTANCE: The hardened Avionics building at Alconbury airfield was constructed by the US Air Force in 1989. It is a very rare surviving example of this building type, and along with other buildings from this period, represents the physical manifestation of the global division between capitalism and communism that shaped the history of the late 20th century. The Avionics building is unique amongst the few such buildings in England, because of its size, form and internal survival of the vehicular decontamination unit and compressed air re-pressurising system. It is uniquely associated with the U2/TR1 aircraft, stationed only at Alconbury. As one of the last Cold War structures built in the country, it is the most sophisticated hardened structure remaining and as such has very special architectural and historic interest.

 

Listing NGR:TL2156676882"

Letter from Fr. Tighe to Father Provincial with references to location and number of patients, cut out by the censor (24 January 1917).

 

Fr. Patrick Tighe S.J.(n.2 August 1866, Dublin +5 April 1920, Sydney): (1916 - 1917): 1916: No. 1 General Hosp., Heliopolis, Egypt; 1917: 15th Battn., A.I.F., France. Retired

 

Educated at Christian Brothers School, North Richmond Street, then Carmelite Academy, Dominick Street and graduated with a B.A. in the Royal University prepared for at University College, Dublin and entered in 1891. He studied philosophy at Enghien, theology at Posilipo, Naples and tertianship in Mold, Wales. He was a teacher at Mungret College, rural missionary, retreat giver and was involved in parish work in Limerick and Gardiner Street. He was master of novices at Tullamore 1906 -07 and for a short time Rector of Mungret 1912 -13 before ill health sent him to Australia. Firstly working in Lavender Bay, 1913 - 15 before acting as a chaplain.On returning from the war, he worked in St. Mary’s, North Sydney. He died after an operation for a tumour.

 

'Appointed CF4 1 July 1915, departed Australia 16 July 1915 ('Demosthenes'), was allotted to 4th Brigade but does not appear to have served at Gallipoli. Served France and Belgium but was dogged by illness, including trench feet, influenza, bronchitis and suspected TB. Returned to Australia ('Kanowna') 14 January 1917, discharge medically unfit for further service and appointment terminated 5 April 1917. Although he spent a fair amount of time sick, he certainly also saw action, a Red Cross statement in his file recording him tending the last moments of a Trooper Green of the Leicestershire Yeomanry, who died in his arms near the RAP near Pozieres Ridge on the night of 27 or 28 August 1916 after being struck by a shrapnel from a shell that exploded as Green and a mate were passing through the trenches. This incident resulted in a certain amount of correspondence between AIF HQ, HQ 2nd Military District (New South Wales), Father Tighe and Mrs Green, the widow of Trooper Green, over the whereabouts of a ring that the dying Trooper Green was supposed to have given to Father Tighe.' GW

CHP1-60

 

Images are copyrighted therefore if you wish to reproduce the images permission is necessary. archives@jesuit.ie

Raw image, healthy adult male, un-dilated pupil

Road 574 on the Snæfellsnes peninsula in western Iceland. Image © Colin Henderson Photography. Permission required before use. To license this image, please contact me quoting the file reference, size required and your planned end usage.

Clip 1-

In this short clip I thought the movements and poses of this character were smooth yet fast paced. I think it would be a difficult task to animate the hands moving at that rate of speed and changing to a different pose each time. I thought it would be challenging If I use animation techniques to animate all of those different types of poses and showing a strong performance of the character. If I were to animate this I would have to get the timing right.

 

Clip 2-

I thought in this clip the character is flexible and that means I would have to work with the whole body of the model. I also think that I will be using other animation techniques that I have never used before. The characters movements are smooth and at some point, the speed is suddenly increased which is a complex key framing task. I think animating this will be tough and many mistakes will come my path. However I do think that that those mistakes will help me in general. I think doing this would help me increase my abilities to animate overall.

 

Clip 3-

In that short running clip. I thought it would be a funny and interesting short clip to animate. The character is running and looking back and forth. This character is also heavy and has sort of slow movements. I should be able to animate this showing that the character while he is running that he’s also carrying his own weight. In the first scene he comes in running and it takes him a considerable amount of time for him to stop before he could turn the other direction. The legs are wide spread and is trying to maintain his balance while still running at his fastest.

 

The final days of Plymouth's Central Library in the layout it's had for the past few years.

 

The Lending Library is much as it was when it opened in 1956.

 

The Reference Library has already been transformed into the History Room, but the banks of PCs will move.

 

The Scott Room, former Scott Lecture Theatre, will become the Scott Computer Room with most computers located there.

 

The former Local and Naval Studies Library will complete its transformation into the Quiet Room - a haven of peace in a busy city centre and already much appreciated by users.

 

The Music and Drama Library, in its present location for the past ten years, will move into the main body of the ground floor and its place will be taken by the Fiction collection.

 

Even the Children's Library will see some changes with a new entrance door.

 

At the same time, the library converts to self-service and the obsolete 3M security system is replaced by something that actually works.

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

Ulysse Nardin – Marine Diver Gold

1 2 ••• 9 10 12 14 15 ••• 79 80