View allAll Photos Tagged Slaughter
Photos pour le nouvel EP de Slaughter Messiah !
Let's keep in touch !
I arrived at Slaughter Sinkhole about an hour to an hour and a half late for the CITO effort, but I still was able to go after the Earthcache located here. This involved hiking down into the sinkhole and heading the small pond inside. Arrived at the pond and located one of the tire collection points for the earlier CITO. Thought it would make an interesting photo about the cleanup effort.
By the way, this is one of Missouri's largest sinkholes at nearly a quarter mile wide and over 160 feet deep. It was the first of many sinkholes I visited during a four day stretch.
Southern Campaign of the American Revolution Parks Group Superintendent John Slaughter at the 235th Anniversary Ceremony of the 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain. (Civil War Trust/Lindsey Morrison)
The new, recycled FREITAG SHOP ZURICH, is entirely made from used freight containers.
March 2006, the Containers arrived in Zurich. The steel-slaughter action starts... hard work for tough people!
((Raumbau AG, Zürich))
Pantropical Spotted Dolphins January 24 , 2014
An entire family of Pantropical Spotted dolphins was obliterated this morning in the killing cove. Despite worldwide media attention on Taiji, the dolphin killers continue to hunt, kidnap and murder dolphins.
The killing is not limited to just one species. After decimating a bottlenose pod over the weekend and a Striped dolphin pod yesterday, they kidnapped 6 captive and brutally slaughtered 40-45 Pantropical Spotted dolphins today.
11 killing boats herded the pod toward the killing cove in less than 3 hours. The Spotted dolphin pod was found far south of Taiji, and was driven for miles.
Exhausted and panicked, the dolphins clung together and adults were seen protecting their young calves. It was a heart breaking visual for those of us documenting the process.
Once the pod was pushed under the tarps, thrashing could be heard as babies were ripped from their family and tossed into the transport skiff. Four dolphins were taken for the first transfer to the Taiji harbor holding pens. The skiff returned filled with bloody water from the injured dolphins. More thrashing echoed above the cove as the slaughter began and 2 more dolphins were taken prisoner and transferred out from the cove to the harbor holding pens. The thrashing continued over 10-15 minutes as the pod was pithed one by one and left to eventually die in the shallow water. An eerie silence and a crimson colored cove indicated that the mass murder had ended. The loud “thumps” we heard were the bodies being hurled into the skiffs for transport to the butcher house. Two skiffs were piled high with dead bodies and of course covered and hidden with tarps, because Taiji is so proud of the their culture and tradition.
Our Live Stream footage is archived at livestream.seashepherd.org/ — at Taiji Japan.
Sites for more information :
Sea Shepherd Cove Guardians Page (official)
www.facebook.com/SeaShepherdCoveGuardiansOfficialPage
Cove Guardians
www.seashepherd.org/cove-guardians
Photo: Sea Shepherd
If you're ever in Monmouth, go and have a look at the Slaughter House arches. I don't think I've done them justice but they're a great photographic location.
We came ashore at the Slaughter River Campground to hunt down the Lewis & Clark campsite marker. I saw this sign and liked its ruggedness, its historical feel.
From www.nps.gov/history/nR/travel/lewisandclark/sla.htm:
The Lewis and Clark Camp at Slaughter River was one of the few sites used by the explorers on both their outgoing and return trips. The party first camped here on May 29, 1805. Here they discovered the remains of over 100 buffalo, which the explorers assumed were killed at a buffalo jump. Indians in the high Plains used jumps to kill buffalo before the advent of steel-tipped arrows, lances and rifle-muskets. The Indians would entice a herd near the edge of a butte, eroded cliff or river gorge and then instigate a stampede that forced the buffalo over the edge. Lewis explained:
. . . for this purpose one of the most active and fleet young men is scelected and disguised in a robe of buffaloe skin, having also the skin of the buffaloe's head with the years and horns fastened on his head in form of a cap, thus caparisoned he places himself at a convenient distance between a herd of buffaloe and a precipice proper for the purpose.the other indians now surround the herd on the back and flanks and at a signal agreed on all shew themselves at the same time moving forward towards the buffaloe; the disguised indian or decoy has taken care to place himself sufficiently nigh the buffaloe to be noticed by them when they take flight and runing before them they follow him in full speede to the precipice.the decoy in the mean time has taken care to secure himself in some cranney or crivice of the clift which he had previously prepared for that purpose. the part of the decoy I am informed is extreamely dangerous, if they are not fleet runers the buffaloe tread them under foot and crush them to death, and sometimes drive them over the precipice also, where they perish in common with the buffaloe . . . (DeVoto 1997, 121)
2008-07-22_10.34.22_MissouriBreaksNM
US Congresswoman Louise Slaughter (NY-28) holds a press conference at the University of Rochester's Goergen Hall to outline local projects funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Welcoming her to the podium is University President Joel Seligman.
The development on these images is off because I was using Fomapan W27 and I forgot I was supposed to agitate every 30 seconds and only agitated every minute.
Film: 35mm ORWO UN54 ISO 100
Filter: None
Camera: Voigtlander Bessa R3a, 40mm F 1.4 Nokton Classic
Developer Fomapan W27 (XTOL type developer)
Scanned Epson V600 2400 dpi
Edited in Adobe Elements 10
20160209BR3a-033
Catalog #: 02-S-00480
Last Name: Slaughter
First Name: Guy
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
The Upper Slaughter Manor is a five-star hotel in Upper Slaughter, Glocestershire.
View this location in Google Maps | Google Earth
(Download Google Earth)
Taken last weekend in the cotswolds. I like this subtle use of the HDR technique. I need to play with it a little more, but can see it being a viable alternative to my Lee ND Grads (I never thought I would say that!)
These photos were taken in a slaughterhouse in rural Tennessee over a two year period. They show the hard work of a family owned slaughterhouse competing with industrial based slaughterhouses. I used many different film and camera setups. These are from the many rolls of black and white film shot with either a Nikon FM2 or a Yashica T4. I shot in either Tri-X 400 or T-Max 400. The shots were taken on breaks or at the homes of the workers. All Rights Reserved, Copyright Joshua Harriman 2008.
This large green pinfire freeform cabochon is a Slaughter Mountain fire agate gemstone. It measures 25 x 13 x 5 mm and weighs 18.5 carats. This fire agate has a great green pinfire layer structure with splashes of orange that refracts well in most light conditions. It is polished, has a flat bottom, and is ready for final setting.
Slaughter Mountain is known for some of the best fire agate gemstones in the world, with intense color variations from bright reds and oranges to intense greens, purples and blues. The mountain, which is the highest point in the Gila Mountains, is over 6500 feet in elevation and lies within Graham County, Arizona. The fire agate mineral deposit is located on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, and it's mining is carried out by members of the San Carlos Apache Tribe.
Photo courtesy of www.FireAgate.us
Two days before to after each moon event in May and June horseshoe crabs come up to shore during the high tide to mate en masse on the Atlantic coast of Delaware (and probably other places as well). It's pretty amazing to see the piles of them milling about on the shore. These spawning events are also very important for migratory birds which stop by to feed on the eggs in the morning.
Near the Mitchell Exchange and close to I-94, is this slaughter house.
Growing up as a kid, every-time i went to school, the school bus would drive by the building and all you can smell in that area was the guts of cows and pigs.
The lower part of the trail up Slaughter Canyon in Carlsbad Caverns National Park.
The park has some wonderful backcountry -- it's not just about the caves!
We spent more time here than planned because of high-country snow. The CCNP end of the mountains are 3000-5000 feet; the Guadalupe Mountains NP end is 5500-8500.