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Charlotte Douglas International Airport, Charlotte, North Carolina, June 8, 2023, 11:15 a.m. Hauling dirt. A loaded eight-wheel tractor scraper and an empty dump truck pass each other on the new runway construction site. The tower in the background is the new air traffic control tower.
Resembles a piece of farm equipment, but is used to scrape a thin layer of biofilm from the top of the filter after head loss is excessive.
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Millenium Tower and 50 Fremont Street, the fourth and fifth tallest buildings in San Francisco. Two tower reaching for the heavens. I love the straight upward reaching lines. They're powerful and dramatic, yet clean, graceful and elegant.
I love this scraper, it is Swedish Steel. I use it allot. I am using it here to scrape of the spray glue residue and paper so I can see the pattern and grain beneath.
Oh the weather - reduced to...
Shots for a household objects comp on a forum - first time I've ever shot household objects
An archaeologist on site identified this unassuming rock flake as a small scraper. It's still sharp.
While Utah's desert country is better known for its abandoned Native American sites, the Fremont culture was just as prolific up in the alpine slopes of the Wasatch Range, and later the Utes and Paiutes.
Right frame
From Rincon Hill looking northernly--showing the new wholesale district and the large sky-scrapers of the banking and the insurance section, which have been rising from among the ruins--in the foreground are piles of bricks and other signs of reconstruction. The dome on the extreme left is that of the city hall.
The rebuilding of a big city seems to be a popular sort of entertainment, judg-ing by the interest shown in the April number of SUNSET MAGAZINE, which was largely devoted to the progress of the year. The sales of this number were phenomenal and the edition of eighty thou-sand copies was exhausted within five days. Demand for this number has come from everywhere. The whole world evidently desired to know how San Fran-cisco had fared in the twelve months of presumed dust and ashes. Pictures and figures told the story in the April number and they are telling it again in this June issue. The camera is not a good falsifier. The sun is so far away from civilization that it doesn't know how not to tell the truth. The photographs here reproduced were taken especially for this magazine. Hundreds more were secured, all equally significant but space does not permit their publication. They show temporary build-ings and permanent buildings, all telling of energy, hope and ambition. The ashes are still blowing and there's still con-siderable scrap iron for the junk pile, but every day shows a new hump, or a tower on the sky line.