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Followed comments from park ranger to find them , Spotted roadside playing along with a pair of Rainbow Bee-eaters , photographed against the light shadow recovered during two minutes post processing.

 

White-browed Woodswallow, Artamus superciliosus

(05-11-2017 @ Hattah-Kulkyne NP )

 

Native to Australia.

Illustrated by Marguerite Davis. “Summer Fun” copyright 1932, by J. Mace Andress and Annie Turner Andress. Ginn and Company. Actually a health primer.

“Up to the Sky and Back” by Katherine Orr. An enchanting way to learn about the water cycle.

 

Child Library Readers, Book Two of the Life Reading Service published by Scott, Foresman and Co. Written by William H. Elson and Lura E. Runkel, various illustrators.

Illustrations mainly by L. Kate Deal and Blanche Maggioli.

1925.

Naturgeschichte des Thierreichs

Stuttgart :Scheitlin & Krais,1851.

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/46340073

Taken along the summit rim trail of Mount Vesuvius. Looking at a portion of the interior of the Gran Cono crater.

 

When I was a child, my father spent hours, with Chicago Motor Club maps spread out before him, planning a family trip to the Pacific Northwest and the Cascade Range. In his own childhood he'd been to Crater Lake in Oregon and for good reason thought it the most beautiful place on Earth.

 

While in my early years we did get to many splendid places in the West, including the Yellowstone Caldera and the Canadian Rockies, we never quite made it all the way to the Cascade peaks that form the magnificent (and dangerous) continental volcanic arc a little inboard from the subducting Juan de Fuca Plate. As a matter of fact, I didn't get to them by myself until my middle adulthood, long after I'd been to the tops of Vesuvius, Etna, and Stromboli.

 

Of that Italian triad, Vesuvius was my first ascent. And it was the first place I'd ever visited that seemed to be chronologically unhitched from the landscape below and around it.

 

Whether they're currently erupting or not, the world's great volcanic summits invest one with the feeling that the planet itself is still very young and forming. It's an eerie thing to suddenly find oneself in an early chapter of the Earth's creation—the Hadean, perhaps, or the dawn of the Eoarchean, some 4 Ga before the birth of our species.

 

That makes it all the more ironic that the geology here is actually remarkably young. This fact is made abundantly clear in one of my main sources for this series, "Volcanic Evolution of the Somma-Vesuvius Complex (Italy)," Sbrana et al., Journal of Maps, January 2020.

 

If I'm interpreting one of that article's illustrations correctly, the upper portion of the crater wall shown in the photo above was almost all produced in the 1944 eruption, during the Allies' torturous advance up the Italian peninsula. Only the lowest quarter of the visible strata are older; and they just date to the period 1913-1930.

 

Incidentally, notice that I used the term strata for rock units that are obviously igneous. If you're someone who's taken a single geology course, perhaps as a 100-level science elective in college, you probably think that strata (synonymous with layers and beds) are the sole intellectual property of sedimentary rocks.

 

So it appears I'm violating a basic understanding uttered by countless Earth-science instructors. But it turns out that what they told you is something I call a beginner's truth—an educatively helpful fact that is partly abrogated as one gains additional experience.

 

It's true that a nice set of stacked beds is an excellent way to identify sedimentary rocks. But in composite volcanoes like Vesuvius, also known as stratovolcanoes for good reason, you'll see striking patterns of alternating layers, too. In this case, though, they're not made of sandstone, limestone, or some other clastic or chemically precipitated type. Instead, they're a succession of tephra (ash, lapilli, pumice, and other ejected particles) and lava flows that poured onto the surface while still in a liquid state.

 

In Part 1 of this set, I discussed the petrology and predominant rock types of Vesuvius' more recently erupted material. But in this post, instead of focusing on the arcanities of tephrite, phonolite, and their intergradations, let's just identify what beds are lava and which are the tephra.

 

Fortunately, this is one of the best places in the world to see the inner structure of a stratovolcano: the crater is about 500 m (1,640 ft) wide and 300 m (984 ft) deep. And its almost-vertical walls are nothing less than the opened pages of a geology textbook.

 

First of all, the sunlit, reddish-brown material blanketing the rim is mostly tephra. When you actually walk on it, it has a crunchy, granular to dusty texture.

 

Farther down the wall, in the shade, the tephra takes on a darker aspect. In contrast, the lava strata are lighter-toned and more massive (thicker). See how many different layers you can actually count. Each bed represents its own geologic story worthy of remembrance.

 

The other photos and descriptions of this series can be found in my Integrative Natural History of Mount Vesuvius & the Gulf of Naples album.

       

Showa Japan era natural history school textbook for elementary-age children. I love everything about this book, from the stylized endpapers, the lush illustrations and the period photographs. My guess is that it was published sometime in the late 1960s.

 

Concentration (8/12)

  

As a junior this year, there’s a lot I’m stressing over: SATs, ACTs, AP exams, tests, final exams, colleges, etc.

Naturgeschichte des Thierreichs

Stuttgart :Scheitlin & Krais,1851.

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/46340105

shhhh, I'm studying! #blytheadayaugust #blythedoll #blythe #pictapgo #rhonnadesigns

“Elson Basic Readers, Book Two” by William H. Elson and William S. Gray. Published by Scott, Foresman and Co., 1931. Illustrator(s) unknown.

A supercell scrapes the landscape near Coldwater Kansas.

Textbookace.com, used textbooks, textbooks, college textbooks

From Man in Structure and Function, 1943

So the wind asked the poppies

to lead in the dance.

has been in a little, black frame on my wall for 30 years, cut from an abandoned, torn up, grade school science book...

Doncaster Toll Bar (claret and blue) half an opposition attack at Hall Bower Lane, Huddersfield, during a first-versus-second clash with Newsome Panthers in the Premier Division of amateur rugby league's Yorkshire League.

 

A 36-22 win extended to three games Newsome's 100 per cent start to the 2023 Yorkshire League season. It was Toll Bar's first league defeat. Their 2022 success ensured the Doncaster team qualified for the 2023 Challenge Cup. At Newsome, Toll Bar paid heavily for conceding four tries - all converted - in the opening quarter.

 

Match statistics

 

Newsome Panthers versus Doncaster Toll Bar

 

Yorkshire League, Premier Division (level eight, 2.30pm kick-off)

 

Admission: free. Programme: none. Attendance: 160 (h/c). Newsome Panthers 36 Doncaster Toll Bar 22 (half-time 24-10). Scoring sequence: 6-0 (3mins), 12-0 (8mins), 18-0 (18mins), 24-0 (20mins), 24-4 (24mins), 24-10 (39mins), 28-10 (55mins), 28-16 (60mins), 32-16 (63mins), 36-16 (66mins), 36-22 (75mins).

The Château de Chenonceau is a French château spanning the river Cher, near the small village of Chenonceaux, Indre-et-Loire, Centre-Val de Loire. It is one of the best-known châteaux of the Loire Valley.

 

The estate of Chenonceau is first mentioned in writing in the 11th century. The current château was built in 1514–1522 on the foundations of an old mill and was later extended to span the river. The bridge over the river was built (1556-1559) to designs by the French Renaissance architect Philibert de l'Orme, and the gallery on the bridge, built from 1570 to 1576 to designs by Jean Bullant.

 

An architectural mixture of late Gothic and early Renaissance, Château de Chenonceau and its gardens are open to the public. Other than the Royal Palace of Versailles, it is the most visited château in France.

 

The château has been designated as a Monument historique since 1840 by the French Ministry of Culture. Today, Chenonceau is a major tourist attraction and in 2007 received around 800,000 visitors.

 

In the 13th century, the fief of Chenonceau belonged to the Marques family. The original château was torched in 1412 to punish the owner, Jean Marques, for an act of sedition. He rebuilt a château and fortified mill on the site in the 1430s. Jean Marques' indebted heir Pierre Marques found it necessary to sell.

 

Thomas Bohier, Chamberlain to King Charles VIII of France, purchased the castle from Pierre Marques in 1513 and demolished most of it (resulting in 2013 being considered the 500th anniversary of the castle: MDXIII–MMXIII), though its 15th-century keep was left standing. Bohier built an entirely new residence between 1515 and 1521. The work was overseen by his wife Katherine Briçonnet, who delighted in hosting French nobility, including King Francis I on two occasions.

 

In 1535 the château was seized from Bohier's son [fr] by King Francis I of France for unpaid debts to the Crown. After Francis' death in 1547, Henry II offered the château as a gift to his mistress, Diane de Poitiers, who became fervently attached to the château along the river.[8] In 1555 she commissioned Philibert de l'Orme to build the arched bridge joining the château to its opposite bank. Diane then oversaw the planting of extensive flower and vegetable gardens along with a variety of fruit trees. Set along the banks of the river, but buttressed from flooding by stone terraces, the exquisite gardens were laid out in four triangles.

 

Diane de Poitiers was the unquestioned mistress of the castle, but ownership remained with the crown until 1555 when years of delicate legal manoeuvres finally yielded possession to her.

 

After King Henry II died in 1559, his strong-willed widow and regent Catherine de' Medici forced Diane to exchange it for the Château Chaumont. Queen Catherine then made Chenonceau her own favourite residence, adding a new series of gardens.

 

As Regent of France, Catherine spent a fortune on the château and on spectacular nighttime parties. In 1560, the first-ever fireworks display seen in France took place during the celebrations marking the ascension to the throne of Catherine's son Francis II. The grand gallery, which extended along the existing bridge to cross the entire river, was dedicated in 1577. Catherine also added rooms between the chapel and the library on the east side of the corps de logis, as well as a service wing on the west side of the entry courtyard.

 

Catherine considered an even greater expansion of the château, shown in an engraving published by Jacques Androuet du Cerceau in the second (1579) volume of his book Les plus excellents bastiments de France. If this project had been executed, the current château would have been only a small portion of an enormous manor laid out "like pincers around the existing buildings."

 

On Catherine's death, in January 1589, the château went to her daughter-in-law, Louise of Lorraine, wife of King Henry III. Louise was at Chenonceau when she learned of her husband's assassination, in August 1589, and she fell into a state of depression. Louise spent the next 11 years, until her death in January 1601, wandering aimlessly along the château's corridors dressed in mourning clothes, amidst sombre black tapestries stitched with skulls and crossbones.

 

Henri IV obtained Chenonceau for his mistress Gabrielle d'Estrées by paying the debts of Catherine de' Medici, which had been inherited by Louise and were threatening to ruin her. In return, Louise left the château to her niece Françoise de Lorraine, at that time six years old and betrothed to the four-year-old César de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme, the natural son of Gabrielle d'Estrées and Henri IV. The château belonged to the Duc de Vendôme and his descendants for more than a hundred years. The Bourbons had little interest in the château, except for hunting. In 1650, Louis XIV was the last king of the ancien régime to visit.

 

The Château de Chenonceau was bought by the Duke of Bourbon in 1720. Little by little, he sold off all of the castle's contents. Many of the fine statues ended up at Versailles.

 

In 1733 the estate was sold for 130,000 livres to a wealthy squire named Claude Dupin. His wife, Louise Dupin, was the natural daughter of the financier Samuel Bernard and the actress Manon Dancourt, whose mother was also an actress who had joined the Comédie Française in 1684. Louise Dupin was "an intelligent, beautiful, and highly cultivated woman who had the theatre in her blood." Claude Dupin, a widower, had a son, Louis Claude, from his first wife Marie-Aurore de Saxe, who was the grandmother of George Sand (born Aurore Dupin).

 

Louise Dupin's literary salon at Chenonceau attracted such leaders of the Enlightenment as the writers Voltaire, Montesquieu, and Fontenelle, the naturalist Buffon, the playwright Marivaux, the philosopher Condillac, as well as the Marquise de Tencin and the Marquise du Deffand. Jean-Jacques Rousseau was Dupin's secretary and tutored her son. Rousseau, who worked on Émile at Chenonceau, wrote in his Confessions: "We played music there and staged comedies. I wrote a play in verse entitled Sylvie's Path, after the name of a path in the park along the Cher."

 

The widowed Louise Dupin saved the château from destruction during the French Revolution, preserving it from being destroyed by the Revolutionary Guard because "it was essential to travel and commerce, being the only bridge across the river for many miles."

 

In 1864 Marguerite Pelouze [fr ], a rich heiress, acquired the château. Around 1875 she commissioned the architect Félix Roguet to restore it. He almost completely renewed the interior and removed several of Catherine de' Medici's additions, including the rooms between the library and the chapel and her alterations to the north facade, among which were figures of Hercules, Pallas, Apollo, and Cybele that were moved to the park. With the money Marguerite spent on these projects and elaborate parties, her finances were depleted, and the château was seized and sold.

 

José-Emilio Terry, a Cuban millionaire, acquired Chenonceau from Madame Pelouze in 1891. Terry sold it in 1896 to a family member, Francisco Terry. In 1913, the château was acquired by Henri Menier, a member of the Menier family, famous for their chocolates, who still own it to this day.

 

During World War I Gaston Menier set up the gallery to be used as a hospital ward. During the Second World War, the château was bombed by the Germans in June 1940.[20] It was also a means of escaping from the Nazi-occupied zone on one side of the river Cher to the "free" zone on the opposite bank. Occupied by the Germans, the château was bombed by the Allies on 7 June 1944, when the chapel was hit and its windows destroyed.

 

In 1951, the Menier family entrusted the château's restoration to Bernard Voisin, who brought the dilapidated structure and the gardens (ravaged in the Cher flood in 1940) back to a reflection of its former glory.

 

Chenonceaux is a commune in the French department of Indre-et-Loire, and the region of Centre-Val de Loire, France.

 

It is situated in the valley of the river Cher, a tributary of the Loire, about 26 km (16 mi) east of Tours and on the right bank of the Cher.

 

The population of permanent residents hovers about 350, but there is a large influx of tourists during the summer months because the village adjoins the former royal Château de Chenonceau, one of the most popular tourist destinations in France. The château is distinctive in being built across the river. The village is also situated in Touraine-Chenonceaux wine-growing area, and bordered on its northern edge by the Forest of Amboise.

 

Name

The difference in spelling between the Château's name (Chenonceau) and the village (Chenonceaux) is attributed to Louise Dupin de Francueil, owner of the château during the French Revolution, who is said to have dropped the "x" at the end of its name to differentiate what was a symbol of royalty from the Republic. As a result of her good relations with the village, the Château was spared the iconoclastic damage suffered by many other monuments during the Revolution. Although no official sources have been found to support this claim, the Château has ever since been referred to and spelled as Chenonceau.

 

Mme Dupin hosted the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in Chenonceau as tutor to her children, and among her descendants was the writer George Sand, born Aurore Dupin.

 

Philibert de l'Orme (pronounced [filibɛːʁ də lɔʁm]) (3-9 June 1514 – 8 January 1570) was a French architect and writer, and one of the great masters of French Renaissance architecture. His surname is also written De l'Orme, de L'Orme, or Delorme.

 

Biography

Early career

Philbert de l'Orme was born between 3 and 9 June 1514 in Lyon. His father was Jehan de L'Orme, a master mason and entrepreneur, who, in the 1530s, employed three hundred workers and built prestigious buildings for the elite of the city.[3] When Philibert was nineteen he departed Lyon for Italy, where he remained for three years, working on building projects for Pope Paul III. In Rome he was introduced to Cardinal Jean du Bellay, the Ambassador of King François I to the Vatican, who became his protector and client. Du Bellay was also the patron of his friend Francois Rabelais. In about 1540 de l'Orme moved to Paris, and was soon occupied with royal projects.

 

Royal architect of Henry II (1548-1559)

On April 3, 1548 he was a named architect of the King by Henry II. For a period of eleven years, he supervised all of the King's architectural projects, with the exception of changes to the Louvre, which were planned by another royal architect, Pierre Lescot. His major projects included the Château de St Maur-des-Fossés, the Château d'Anet, the Château de Chenonceau in the Loire Valley; the royal Château de Madrid in the Bois de Boulogne; the Château de Vincennes, and major modifications to the Palace of Fontainebleau.

 

He also made a reputation as a writer and theorist, and as an innovator in building techniques. He invented a new system for making the essential wooden frameworks for constructing stone buildings, called charpente à petits bois, which was quicker and less expensive than previous methods and used much less wood. He demonstrated it before the King in 1555, and put it to work in construction at the new royal Château de Montceaux and at the royal hunting lodge La Muette [fr] in the Forest of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.

 

Out of favor - architectural theorist (1559-1563)

The death of Henry II of France on July 10, 1559 suddenly left him without a patron and at the mercy of rival architects who resented his success and his style. Two days later, on 10 July, he was dismissed from his official posts, and replaced by an Italian artist and architect, Francesco Primaticcio, whose work was much in fashion. He had joined a religious order, and decided to turn his attention to meditation, scholarship and writing. He made another trip to Rome to inspect the new works of Michelangelo. Beginning in 1565 wrote the first volume of a work on architectural theory, which was scientific and philosophical. It was published in 1567, and was followed by new editions after his death in 1576, 1626 and 1648.

 

Royal architect again (1563-1570)

Under Charles IX and Catherine de Medici, he returned to royal favor. He was employed on the enlargement of the Chateau of Saint Maur (1563) and, along with Jean Bullant, on additions to the Tuileries Palace (1564). He died in Paris in 1570, while this project was underway.

 

Reputation

In the 17th century, during the period of Louis XIV style that followed his death, his reputation suffered. The grand stairway that he built at the Tuileries Palace was demolished in 1664, as was his Château de Saint-Léger in 1668, to make way for classical structures. In 1683, he was denounced by François Blondel of the Royal Academy for his "villainous Gothic ornaments" and his "petty manner". Nonetheless, his two major theoretical works on construction and design continued to be important textbooks, and were regularly republished and read.

 

His reputation rose again in the 18th century, through the writings of Dezallier d'Argenville, who wrote in 1787 that he had "abandoned the Gothic covering in order to redress French architecture in the style Ancient Greece." D'Argenville wrote the first biography and catalog of works. Though few of his building survived to be studied carefully, later important academic works on de l'Orme were written in the 19th and 20th centuries by art historians including H. Clouzot and Anthony Blunt.

 

One of De l'Orme's primary accomplishments was to change the way architects trained and studied. He insisted that architects needed formal education in classical architecture, as well as in geometry and astronomy and the sciences, but also needed practical experience in construction. He himself was an accomplished scholar of ancient Greek and Roman architecture, as well as a humanist scholar. He argued that architects needed to be able to design and manage every aspect of the building, from the volumes to the lambris to adding up the cost, making detailed three-dimensional drawings of vaults, judging if wood was dry enough, and knowing to stop digging the foundation when the first sand was encountered. He had scorn for those architects who could design a facade but had no knowledge actual construction. His opponents scorned him for his background as the son of a masonry contractor. He was referred to by Bernard Palissy as "The god of the stone masons", which deeply offended him.

 

His other major accomplishment was to resist the tendency to simply copy Italian architectural styles; he traveled and studied in Italy, and borrowed much, but he always added a distinctly French look to each of his projects.

 

The first major building of de l'Orme was the Château of Saint Maur (1541), built for the Cardinal Jean du Bellay, whom de l'Orme had met during his time in Rome. Its plan showed the influence of the Italian villas; and, like the Italian buildings, it was decorated with frescoes.

 

Much of his work has disappeared, but his fame remains. He was an ardent humanist and student of the antique, he yet vindicated resolutely the French tradition in opposition to Italian tendencies; he was a man of independent mind and a vigorous originality. His masterpiece was the Château d'Anet (1552–1559), built for Diane de Poitiers, the plans of which are preserved in Jacques Androuet du Cerceau's Plus excellens bastimens de France, though only part of the building remains. His designs for the Tuileries (also given by Androuet du Cerceau), begun by Catherine de' Medici in 1565, were magnificent. His work is also seen at Chenonceau and other famous châteaux; and his tomb of Francis I at Saint Denis Basilica remains a perfect specimen of his art.

 

The most easily viewed work of de l'Orme in Paris is the court facade of the Chateau d'Anet, which was moved to Paris after a major portion of the chateau was demolished, to illustrate for students the major works of the French Renaissance. It is attached to the front wall of the chapel of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and is visible from Rue Bonaparte.

 

Partial list of works

Château de Saint-Maur (1541), demolished in 1796

Tomb of François Ie in the Basilica of Saint-Denis, Paris (1547)

Château d'Anet (1547-1555), built for Diane de Poitiers. Only one wing remains.

Plans of the Chapel of Saint-Éloi, Paris (1550-1566), (Long attributed, but not documented. Only a portion of the facade remains)

Attribution du château d'Acquigny

Facade of the residence of the Vicomte of the Duchy of Uzès (attributed)

Completion of Sainte-Chapelle at the Château de Vincennes (1552)

Château de Villers-Cotterêts, southern portion( 1547-1559)

Chapel of the Château of Villers-Cotterêts (1552-1553)

Royal Château of Saint-Léger-en-Yvelines (demolished)

Château de Meudon (attributed)

Château de Montceaux

Château de Thoiry (1560s)

The bridge upon which the Château de Chenonceau is constructed

Portions of the Louvre

Portions of the new Chateau of Saint-Germain-en-Laye

Portal of Château d'Écouen, now the National Museum of the French Renaissance (mid 16th century). The wing he designed was destroyed in 1787, but vestiges are displayed inside the Chateau.

Roofs of the towers of the Château de Bonnemare.

A row of nice big colourful textbooks on my husband's shelf. It is right next to a window and well-lit for photographic purposes. He has a shelf full of books with deep and meaningful content, but this is not it :) The depth will have to rely on the physcial shape of the books and their shadows.

 

Taken with iPhone 3GS.

 

Entry for Daily Shoot 446: "Create a photo today that gives a sense of depth or dimension."

www.dailyshoot.com

  

If there was a textbook of how to take a camera photo, this would probably be the photo, and I'd be a millionaire of the royalties...

 

Regretfully, it isn't...

groovy 60s textbook with the best title ever.

A find of a number of nursing textbooks dated to the 1950s

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