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Flood waters continue to rise in Conway, S.C., impacting surrounding cities and neighborhoods to include Myrtle Beach, S.C., Sept. 25, 2018. South Carolina National Guard Engineers and Transportation Corps placed sandbags along Highway 501 to ensure roadways remain passable and communities are not cut-off on the main route to highly populated Myrtle Beach, S.C. They have laid nearly three miles of barrier protecting a mile and a half of road with sandbags and flood barriers to keep the road open from flooding. There are approximately 2,000 South Carolina Guards Soldiers and Airmen are currently on duty to support local authorities in response and recovery operations to the ongoing flooding in that followed Hurricane Florence's landfall. U.S. National Guard Soldiers and Airmen from Pennsylvania, Alaska, New York, Tennessee, Arkansas, Maryland, Virginia, Mississippi and Georgia are also supporting the S.C. National Guard recovery efforts. (U.S. National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Edward Snyder, 169th Fighter Wing, Public Affairs)
Students participating in the Teens Engineer BHM program at the Woodlawn Branch Library learned how to design houses.
- Minčeta Tower -
was build by a local builder named Nicifor Ranjina and Italian engineers sent by Pope Pius II in 1463, at the height of the Turkish threat. Originally as a strong four-sided fort, it is the most prominent point in the defensive system towards the land. The tower's name derives from the name of the Menčetić family, who owned the ground upon which the tower was built. By its height and impressive volume, the tower dominates the northwestern high part of the city and its walls. In the middle of the 15th century, around the earlier quadrilateral fort, Michelozzo built a new round tower using new warfare technique and joined it to the new system of low scarp walls. The full six-meter (20 feet) thick walls of the new tower had a series of protected gun ports. The architect and sculptor Giorgio da Sebenico of Zadar, continued the work on the Minčeta tower. He designed and built the high narrow round tower, while the battlements are a later addition. The tower was completed in 1464, and became the symbol of the unconquerable city of Dubrovnik. Since it is the highest point of the wall, it is considered to offer a seemingly "unforgettable" view on the city.
Pvt. Christopher Bidwell, 42nd Clearance Company, 54th Eng. Bn. and a native of Port Orange, Fla., and Sgt. Terrance Barton, 370th Sapper Company, 54th Engineer Battalion, and a native of Houston, pose for a photo after being awarded Army Commendation medals. Bidwell and Barton are the Fiscal Year 2011 18th Engineer Brigade Warrior and Warrior Leader of the Year winners and will represent their brigade at the 21st Theater Sustainment Command’s competition. (Photo by Spc. Aislinn Amig, 18th Eng. Bde. Public Affairs)
Slideshow Here: flickr.com/photos/whitebeard/sets/72157613402503136/show/
Another important individual to the colony was the King's Engineer. He acted as a surveyor and construction supervisor and enforced the rules that governed the physical development of the settlement.
This well equipped kitchen bespeaks his rank.
I recommend viewing the large size to view all the details:
www.flickr.com/photos/whitebeard/3347468312/sizes/o/in/ph...
University of Alabama at Birmingham mentors visit the East Lake Branch Library for the Teens Engineer BHM Arduino class.
Approximately 160 Soldiers from the Powhatan-based 180th Engineer Company returned to Virginia Oct. 6 after serving in Iraq since December 2008. Approximately 30 Soldiers from the Southwest Virginia area arrived at Tri-Cities Regional Airport for a reunion with their families, and the remaining Soldiers returned to the Powhatan Readiness Center where they were formally welcomed home by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine and Maj. Gen. Robert B. Newman, Jr., the Adjutant General of Virginia. (Photo by Capt. Matthew Nowak, Virginia National Guard)
Mr. Engineer 2013
STAMPS Auditorium, North Campus
Ann Arbor, MI
December 6, 2012
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
During an "Engineer's Challenge" class in the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab, makers were able to construct simple audio speakers from foam plates, permanent magnets, and DIY voice coils wound with the help of a drill motor. The speakers may not have met the fidelity standards of audiophiles, but we were able to dance to the music.
Photo Credit: James Mahon
Mar. 14, 2020 in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photos by
Spc. Kat Del Rio, 196th Transportation Company)
Virginia National Guard Soldiers assigned to the Cedar Bluff-based 1033rd Engineer Company, 276th Engineer Battalion, 329th Regional Support Group train on mobility and survivability mission essential tasks March 9, 2018, at Fort Pickett, Virginia. The Soldiers used engineer heavy equipment to dig individual and vehicle fighting positions, a tank ditch and defense berm to help them prepare for a scheduled rotation at the National Guard Training Center in late July. (U.S. National Guard photo by Cotton Puryear)