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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.
Reference: APAAME_20160918_DLK-0385.jpg
Photographer: David Leslie Kennedy
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works
This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!
Name: Juniper
Species: Pronghorn Antelope
Sex: Male
Location from: South Dakota
Other: An adult male sourced as waste from 2018’s pronghorn hunting season. This guy in particular died while chewing on an ungulate nasal bone.
Species Info: Pronghorns aren’t actually antelopes, but their own species and are closest related to giraffes. They are known for their speeds (often called “speed goats”) and are the only “horned” animal to routinely shed their horns.
They are native to the West of the North American continent.
Okay this is where my inner arms has the tattoo drop off - it's just a small pond of blank inner arm after that point :/
Reference: APAAME_20081009_FFR-0810
Photographer: Francesca Radcliffe
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works
Reference: APAAME_20160523_RHB-0050.dng
Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works
The history of the cartographic science in Greece starts in 1889 with the foundation of Military Geographic Service. The trigonometric network was based on the coordinates of the old Athens' Observatory (37°58'20.132"N and 23°42'58.815"E)
In order to cartograph a big terrain, e.g. a whole country, the whole area must be covered by a network of reference points which must be fixed in position. Such a reference point can be viewed in this image.
In the outer circle it says "Millitary Geographic Service" and in the inner "Trigonometric Network". It is located on the Sympetro mountain in Kos.