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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.
Michigan School for the Blind
Listed 7/26/2018
Lansing, Michigan
Reference number: 100002714
The Michigan School for the Blind Campus was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on July 26, 2018. It is located in Lansing, Michigan, west of downtown, on several parcels of land that total some forty-five acres. There are six buildings that remain from the time the school was closed in 1995. These include the early twentieth century Neoclassical Revival Main Administration (1916, 1918, and 1924) and High School (1912) buildings, the Colonial Revival superintendent’s residence (1914), and the Modern Movement library, elementary school, and gymnasium buildings (1960s). There are also two historic pump house buildings also on the site (1920s.) The campus includes a “quad” green space, various plantings, and mature trees, with concrete walkways connecting the buildings, and the decaying remains of a running track. The Administration and High School buildings are vacant and in poor condition, yet retain a great deal of historic integrity. The library, elementary school, and gymnasium retain a high degree of historic fabric and continue in use. The library houses the Neighborhood Empowerment Center, a nonprofit collective; the elementary school and gymnasium are used by the Mid-Michigan Leadership Academy, a charter elementary school. The Superintendent’s house is well-maintained, exhibits a high degree of historic integrity, and is currently vacant and for sale.
The Michigan School for the Blind represents a dedicated attempt by the State of Michigan to effectively educate the blind population in a segregated educational setting to better accommodate their need for training and instruction. The philosophy of a specific educational setting for the blind reflects the broad pattern statewide and nationally in the late nineteenth to late twentieth century prior to the change in education practices of the late twentieth century when the blind population was incorporated into mainstream educational systems. The Michigan School for the Blind campus is also significant for its early and midtwentieth century examples of school architecture in the Neoclassical Revival, Colonial Revival, and Modern Movement styles. The early twentieth century architecture reflects the popular revival style of educational institutions of that period and the design of buildings sited around a quad reflects the typical design of educational campuses popular at that time. The second major period of construction and growth of the campus is exemplified by the popular clean-lined Modern Movement school designs of the 1960s with adaptable and light-filled interiors. The Period of Significance begins with the date of construction of the oldest existing building in 1912 and ends in 1966, when the last existing structure was completed.
National Register of Historic Places Homepage
Reference: APAAME_20051003_RHB-0321
Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-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.
Reference thermal image made with Therm-App 19mm lens as part of the tests of my new-to-me x3 germanium keplerian telescope.
Comments are warmly welcomed.
For more thermal images covering a diverse range of subjects please visit (and join!) the Therm-App (and others) thermal imaging group at www.flickr.com/groups/therm-app-users/
Reference: APAAME_20040601_RHB-0208
Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works
reference: flickr.com/photos/hauntedpalace/181011984
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.
here's the moon taken at 18mm with the kit lens. f3.5 for 10 seconds at iso800. handheld.
this is right after the previous pictures of the moon taken with a 1000mm focal length telescope.
Reference: APAAME_20050518_RHB-0194
Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works