View allAll Photos Tagged bones
I just created a group for Midjourney Niji images here: www.flickr.com/groups/niji/ If you are working in Niji please consider joining the group,
Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Many of the skeletons in the Bone Hall have been on view since 1881—first in what is now known as the Arts and Industries Building, and since the 1960s in their current form. The skeletons represent an unparalleled study collection of every major group of vertebrate animals. (3/27/2022)
We are happy to be part of this MOM round, starting on the 20th of August.
Introducing the new Bones Bracelets, featuring 10 Leathers (2 zones), 10 Metals and 10 text colors.
Engravable - 10 letters per bracelet.
They come in 3 versions: Single, Couple and Gay Couple (exchangeable for females).
I knew that Bald Eagles will sort to scavenge given an opportunity, but never witnessed before. This is my first time seeing a bald eagle feeding from close range as well.
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23. - Frontal Bone. Outer Surface.
Original photograph taken with a Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE using Impossible Project B&W SX70 instant film.
Emulsion transfer onto heavyweight matt laser print of a scan from Gray's Anatomy 1st edition reprint.
Polaroid Week | Spring 2016 | Day 6 | 2/2
Happy April Fool's everyone!!!
This shot was taken for fun and I never knew when it was the right moment to post it (if there was ever one LOL).
So I choose today, this weird holiday that I don't really understand xD to finally share it here!
Hope it makes one of you smile ^__^
3rd August 2019 - Manchester based 'Bones Shake' brought "A scuzzed fuzzed blues" vibe to Jimmy's in Liverpool. These lads were first on by virtue of the least social media 'Likes' (a strange stipulation in my eyes, but then, i'm 48..) but they manged to captivate an early audience. Starting your set by casually wandering through the crowd with a megaphone blarring an American Police siren generally tends to grab peoples attention!!
Out of curiosity, (and to see if anyone actually reads this shit..) has anyone ever seen the movie 'Midnight Express'?
The elusive Mosaic Railroad takes a loaded train of wet rock phosphate from the Four Corners Mine to Agrock Yard, where CSX will take it to one of several processing facilities located around the Bone Valley.
Mrs. Bones (Fashion Royalty Monogram) stands atop our demitasse tree, ready to serve. She's a kitbash of all kinds of little mess.
Hot Wheels Boulevard Collection
Here's that great looking Bone Shaker with more detail, notice the rubber wheels and cleaner details.
Cheers,
Wade
This artificial bone sample is an early step towards making 3D bioprinting a practical tool for emergency medicine in space. An ESA R&D effort aims to develop bioprinting techniques capable of giving astronauts on an extended mission ready access to the ‘spare parts’ needed for bone or skin grafts, and even complete internal organs.
3D bioprinting may soon be practical on Earth, and could help meet the challenging conditions of spaceflight. Astronauts in zero or low gravity lose bone density, for example, so fractures may be more likely in orbit or on Mars.
Or, treating a burn often involves a graft of skin taken from a patient’s body – manageable on Earth with full hospital care but more risky in space, as the secondary damage may not heal easily.
Skin or bone can be bioprinted using a nutrient-rich ’bio-ink’ of human blood plasma, available from the astronauts themselves. By working upside down – in ‘minus 1g’ gravity – the team has shown they can probably do it in space.
This bone sample is part of the first selection of items on the 99 Objects of ESA ESTEC website, a set of intriguing, often surprising artefacts helping tell the story of more than half a century of activity at ESA’s technical heart.
Credits: ESA-Remedia
"Everyone's right and no one is sorry - that's the start and the end of this story.
You were too tired to eat, too hungry to sleep." - Nada Surf, Bones.
Bone dry this visit, but there can be some running water here occasionally. No matter what the conditions are, I stop for a few minutes at this spot whenever I'm hiking through to take in a nice Sonoran Desert view. Carrillo Trail, Saguaro National Park.
Well there ya go, number 52 of my 52 weeks project that I started on January 1 2015. Yup, I'm a little late finishing, should have been done last January, but life has a way of mixing things up. Priorities change and what was important one day isn't that important the next.
I've been wanting to do a photo for the song Off The Bone by The Holy Broke since I first heard it a few years ago. Just needed to come up with an image that I thought would do justice to such an awesome song.
The Holy Broke - Off The Bone
theholybroke.bandcamp.com/track/off-the-bone
(52-2015)
One of my favorite Flickr artists, MicRitz
(www.flickr.com/photos/mic-pics)
suggested poor Billy Bones needed a companion. And in fact he found him one. Here he is....thanks Mic.... :-)
This is the plane with the most swan-like elegance and grace, and yet at the same time, the most bone jarring, earth shattering thunderous sound, and presence, in the entire US inventory. Meet the Rockwell B-1B Bomber... You never forget the first time you met her!
(85-0088)
'Dog with Bones' is the latest work in British artist SHOK-1’s X-Pop series that takes a look inside popular icons and symbols.
A examination of one of Keith Haring’s iconic dog paintings, the piece was spray painted in the heart of London in the artist's unique X-ray style using a classic neon 80’s colour scheme. The piece is an unexpected and witty twist on an animal X-ray. www.shok1.com
The only road to one of the remotest and coldest inhabited place on earth, Oymyakon.
This Kolyma highway is famously known as Road of Bones, the biggest cemetery in the world. This road was built with the hard labor of Gulag prisoners. Millions of prisoners were starved, frozen and worked to death in the world’s coldest inhabited region, where summer temperatures can reach to 40°C but in winter temperature will drop to minus 60°C.
Each time a person died they would leave them on the road, skeletons of prisoners who died during its construction were used in many of its foundations, the prospectors were slaves, prisoners worked to death on what became known as the "Road of Bones".
The Chapel of Bones in Évora, Portugal, is part of the larger Royal Church of St. Francis, and was constructed by Franciscan monks in the late 16th century.
The Chapel's story is a familiar one. By the 16th century, there were as many as 43 cemeteries in and around Évora that were taking up valuable land. Not wanting to condemn the souls of the people buried there, the monks decided to build the Chapel and relocate the bones.
However, rather than interring the bones behind closed doors, the monks, who were concerned about society's values at the time, thought it best to put them on display. They thought this would provide Évora, a town noted for its wealth in the early 1600s, with a helpful place to meditate on the transience of material things in the undeniable presence of death. This is made clear by the thought-provoking message above the chapel door: "Nós ossos que aqui estamos, pelos vossos esperamos," or: "We bones, are here, waiting for yours."