View allAll Photos Tagged bones
Junior Dan Woldtvedt, a biomedical sciences major, uses a diamond-tipped band saw to slice through a cow bone in a lab on the Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences campus on Saturday, September 22, 2007. Woldtvedt, along with graduate student Wes Womack, not pictured, created a three-dimensional model of the cartlidge in the human spinal cord. It is used to predict the reactions to stress placed on that cartlidge.
Bone Portraits at Live Girls! Theater
Oct 16- Nov 14
photo by Meghan Arnette
Pictured- Adam Davis, Roy Stanton
We're kissing the lips of strangers
We're hugging whoever next we meet
Oh life I love you to my bones
When everything's short for listeners
Take 'em home and cook them dinners
and sing
Oh life I love you to my bones
Read more about Cross Bones Graveyard here:
A shrine has been created at the gates to the site of a post-medieval burial ground in Redcross Way, Southwark. This outcasts’ graveyard was already regarded as ‘ancient’ in the 16th century, when it was known as ‘the Single Woman’s churchyard’ – a reference to the ‘Winchester Geese’, prostitutes licensed by the Bishop of Winchester to work in south London’s Liberty of the Clink.
By Victorian times it had become known as ‘Cross Bones’, the pauper’s burial ground. It was closed in 1853, described as being ‘completely overcharged with dead’.
In the early 1990s it was partly dug up during work on the Jubilee Line Extension. Museum of London archaeologists removed 148 skeletons, an estimated 1% of 15,000 burials.
sign the crossbones petition here:
i was sitting in the sunshine when i noticed a dried hairball on the table, inside there were very small bones, a baby bird or mouse, i assume. Anyway they made a great photo, one of the series is taken with a penny coin to show the size. Shot with hand held reverse macro.
L'imageur holographique, série "Bones", créé par Hart Hanson, 20th Century Fox, 2008 (photogramme).
ARHV, 16/04/2008, lire l'article:
Carved bone flowers dance around an ivory seed bead spiral rope necklace. 16" in length, plus 2-1/2" extender chain. Finished with sterling silver lobster clasp and extender chain.
leather and snakeskin cuffs with fringe & bone. I used snakeskin that I had purchased years ago at a yard sale & edge pieces from leather sides to give them a primitive, tribal look.
Most of the current TV series "Bones" (top) is filmed in the Los Angeles area, despite the fact that the show is mainly set in Washington, D.C. The Wallis Annenberg Building, which is part of the Science Center in Exposition Park, is the exterior shot used for the fictional Jeffersonian Institute.
This building is located at 700 State Drive, L.A.
Day 40! After a day at work, went for a quick couple of hour skate did a few lines in the bowl I've never done before feel like I could have done more if I skated longer hence "Almost Shredding".
Still loving this project, am trying not to make all my photos skateboarding related but its such a big part of my life. Will try and do some art this week as I was aiming to be a bit more creative this year.
My current set-up; Almost team board (8.5") Theeve TiAx (5.5) Bones STF (54mm)
Sometimes, you should just not take pictures at lunch time.
For Macromondays 2013-01-04; Theme: Starts With the Letter “B”
My co-workers expressed some concerns about my sanity - go figure.
The upper floor of the former bone mill in Aylsham, built in the 1860s on the Aylsham Navigation.
Blogged - uealandscape.wordpress.com/2012/01/28/dunkirk-aylsham/
Encomenda para a Rita,que é jogadora de Basquet feminino na equipa do Grupo Desportivo da ESSA ( Escola Secundária de Santo André), na Quinta da Lomba, Barreiro.
A broken feeder perch (pictured above) is not a broken bone or a scar, to be sure, though the bird feeder might argue if it could. But it brings to mind a poem (just a wee stretch on my part) by a young lady named Claire Lee. At the age of 16, she won a gold medal in the 2012 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards and was declared National Student Poet. Her poem "Living in Numbers" shows statistics in the same categories on two different, but consecutive, days. Reading it will show you how addition and subtraction can make a telling result.
Number of broken bones: 3
Number of scars, physical: 4; emotional: 947
—from "Living in Numbers," by Claire Lee
(for Poetography, Theme 178—Choose Your Own, Broken, a theme I missed from a few weeks ago; Literary Reference in Pictures)