View allAll Photos Tagged extented
The log stockpile behind the mill is gone, so it seems production has ended. The mill will be razed shortly to make room for North Idaho College to expand, as well as for additions to the University of Idaho and Idaho State University extentions.
Family: ???
Superfamily: ??
Suborder: Psocomorpha
Order: Psocoptera (bark lice, RindenlƤuse)
Superorder: Psocodea
Infraclass: Neoptera
Subclass: Pterygota
Class: Insecta (insects, Insekten)
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Phylum: Arthropoda
please compare: bugguide.net/node/view/145918
more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psocoptera
Germany, N-Hesse: Kassel: Dƶnche NP, ca. 180m asl., 09.07.2011
IMG_3163
________________________________________________
100mm (canon f/2.8), extention tubes 36mm, 1/2000s, f/2.8, ISO 640, -1/3 EV, AL, hand-held
The extent and complexity of the security arrangements for the COP26 conference were awesome. When the prevailing winds whistle up the Clyde estuary, it must get a wee bit draughty up there.
Format:
Still image
Extent:
1 photoprint.
NLM Unique ID:
101443500
NLM Image ID:
A015886
Permanent Link:
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
This shows the extent of the forest floor carpetting with the Fringed Phacelia, it goes on for many acres. The nice thing about it is being able to find it at peak bloom so long as one shows up within a reasonable window, it moves slowly up the mountains. This area was about 1/4 mile down from where I found it in peak several years ago. The foreground flowers are Large-flowered Trillium.
KENNY BOD was undoubtedly one of the most successful MCs of all time. Even after his single, he has sold the debut records worldwide making him the highest selling rap/hip-hop artist of all time!
KENNY BOD is widely regarded as the greatest rapper of all time. Moreover, a recent poll in MTV placed him as the #1 MC of all time. However,
KENNY BOD was much more than that. His strong lyrical content grew a huge array of followers, making him a hero among millions. He was a great poet and his theory on life influenced his fans to a huge extent. He was indeed the Rose That Grew from Concrete, whose ever-successful work couldn't have been more admired and loved
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
the extent of saltmarsh has grown since I last visited in 2006. Silt and mud eroded from elsewhere on the coast is being deposited here. This is the essence of coastal flood defence measures as the saltmarsh acts as a brake on incoming tides
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
A new Institute for Government report will show that government spends a third of taxpayersā money with private contractors. This represents three decades of increasing use of external suppliers by government. What is government spending that money on, and with which companies? The Institute for Government invites you to the launch of its report, Government procurement: The scale and nature of contracting in the UK, which answers these and other big questions.
The report was introduced by Gavin Freeguard, Programme Director at the Institute for Government. We are grateful to Spend Network for contributing data and analysis to this report.
To discuss the findings, our panel:
Gareth Rhys Williams, Government Chief Commercial Officer and Non-executive Director, Crown Commercial Service.
Ian Makgill, Founder, Spend Network.
Gavin Hayman, Executive Director of the Open Contracting Partnership.
The event was chaired by Emma Norris, Programme Director at the Institute for Government.
@ifgevents #IfGContracting
This event is kindly supported by international law firm Gowling WLG
Photos by Candice McKenzie
Bodmin is a civil parish and historic town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated south-west of Bodmin Moor.
The extent of the civil parish corresponds fairly closely to that of the town so is mostly urban in character. It is bordered to the east by Cardinham parish, to the southeast by Lanhydrock parish, to the southwest and west by Lanivet parish, and to the north by Helland parish.
Photograph by James Russiello, September 8, 2010
The town of Bodmin has played a central role in the development of Christianity in Cornwall, and tradition, legend and history combine to suggest that the area around the Berry Tower was an early focus of settlement. The 12th century ālifeā of St Petroc states that the saint built two habitations in the place that was later to become Bodmin: one in the valley where the parish church now is, and the other on the hill to the north ā at the Berry. Here may also have been the seat of the Cornish bishop Kenstec in the 10th century. The site is located on a prominent spur overlooking the modern town and may have been fortified, as the names Berry, derived from Anglo-Saxon burh, and Dinuurin, which contains Cornish dyn, both suggest. No remains survive to substantiate this however.
The focus of mediƦval Bodmin was a long main street stretching west from the parish church. This was a thriving, busy place, with markets, fairs, and many religious institutions including a Priory, a Friary, a hospital, and 13 chapels. There were also numerous guilds ā associations formed for social, religious or economic purposes whose activities might include charitable works, raising money for various causes or building projects, and alms giving. By 1470 there were three guilds based at the Berry, the main one being the Guild of the Holy Rood. This guild was associated with a chapel here and at the beginning of the 16th century was responsible for building this tower.
Remarkably, accounts relating to the building of the tower still survive and provide a fascinating insight into the methods, materials and processes involved in such a project. The income for the work came mainly from local donations and gifts, all of which are recorded in the accounts. From the accounts we know that work on the tower commenced in 1501 and that it took ten years to build, growing at a rate of about 6 feet per year. Granite for windows and quoins came from St Austell or Bodmin Moor, but the slate was from a local quarry. During the last four years the furnishings like floors, a bell, lead roof and window fixings were provided. At the same time as the tower was raised, the chapel was extended with a south aisle, whose walls were decorated with murals of St Christopher and St Petroc.
Although work was completed in 1514, the newly refurbished chapel was only in use for just over three decades before the cataclysmic changes of the Reformation forced it to close. By the 18th century, only the tower remained with the chapel reduced to foundations. The present cemetery was established on the site by Bodmin Town Corporation in the 19th century. An interpretation board on the site provides detailed information about the building of the tower.
Standing in front of Berry tower is a mediƦval wheel-headed cross of perhaps 12th or 13th century date. This was moved here in 1860 from its original site on Cross Lane at the junction of Berry Lane.
At the foot of the hill on which Berry Tower stands is Bodmin parish church, dedicated to St Petroc, the most important Celtic saint in mediƦval Cornwall, whose relics survive in the church, in a 13th century ivory casket. This is one of the largest parish churches in Cornwall, reflecting the importance of Bodmin in the Middle Ages. Here also can be seen the holy well of St Guron, a pillar from the Friary, a good collection of coffin slabs from both the Priory and the Friary and the remains of another guild chapel, that of St Thomas. In the nearby Shire Hall is Bodminās Museum, with displays of finds from all these sites.
Bodmin is a civil parish and historic town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated south-west of Bodmin Moor.
The extent of the civil parish corresponds fairly closely to that of the town so is mostly urban in character. It is bordered to the east by Cardinham parish, to the southeast by Lanhydrock parish, to the southwest and west by Lanivet parish, and to the north by Helland parish.
Photograph by James Russiello, September 8, 2010
The town of Bodmin has played a central role in the development of Christianity in Cornwall, and tradition, legend and history combine to suggest that the area around the Berry Tower was an early focus of settlement. The 12th century ālifeā of St Petroc states that the saint built two habitations in the place that was later to become Bodmin: one in the valley where the parish church now is, and the other on the hill to the north ā at the Berry. Here may also have been the seat of the Cornish bishop Kenstec in the 10th century. The site is located on a prominent spur overlooking the modern town and may have been fortified, as the names Berry, derived from Anglo-Saxon burh, and Dinuurin, which contains Cornish dyn, both suggest. No remains survive to substantiate this however.
The focus of mediƦval Bodmin was a long main street stretching west from the parish church. This was a thriving, busy place, with markets, fairs, and many religious institutions including a Priory, a Friary, a hospital, and 13 chapels. There were also numerous guilds ā associations formed for social, religious or economic purposes whose activities might include charitable works, raising money for various causes or building projects, and alms giving. By 1470 there were three guilds based at the Berry, the main one being the Guild of the Holy Rood. This guild was associated with a chapel here and at the beginning of the 16th century was responsible for building this tower.
Remarkably, accounts relating to the building of the tower still survive and provide a fascinating insight into the methods, materials and processes involved in such a project. The income for the work came mainly from local donations and gifts, all of which are recorded in the accounts. From the accounts we know that work on the tower commenced in 1501 and that it took ten years to build, growing at a rate of about 6 feet per year. Granite for windows and quoins came from St Austell or Bodmin Moor, but the slate was from a local quarry. During the last four years the furnishings like floors, a bell, lead roof and window fixings were provided. At the same time as the tower was raised, the chapel was extended with a south aisle, whose walls were decorated with murals of St Christopher and St Petroc.
Although work was completed in 1514, the newly refurbished chapel was only in use for just over three decades before the cataclysmic changes of the Reformation forced it to close. By the 18th century, only the tower remained with the chapel reduced to foundations. The present cemetery was established on the site by Bodmin Town Corporation in the 19th century. An interpretation board on the site provides detailed information about the building of the tower.
Standing in front of Berry tower is a mediƦval wheel-headed cross of perhaps 12th or 13th century date. This was moved here in 1860 from its original site on Cross Lane at the junction of Berry Lane.
At the foot of the hill on which Berry Tower stands is Bodmin parish church, dedicated to St Petroc, the most important Celtic saint in mediƦval Cornwall, whose relics survive in the church, in a 13th century ivory casket. This is one of the largest parish churches in Cornwall, reflecting the importance of Bodmin in the Middle Ages. Here also can be seen the holy well of St Guron, a pillar from the Friary, a good collection of coffin slabs from both the Priory and the Friary and the remains of another guild chapel, that of St Thomas. In the nearby Shire Hall is Bodminās Museum, with displays of finds from all these sites.
KENNY BOD was undoubtedly one of the most successful MCs of all time. Even after his single, he has sold the debut records worldwide making him the highest selling rap/hip-hop artist of all time!
KENNY BOD is widely regarded as the greatest rapper of all time. Moreover, a recent poll in MTV placed him as the #1 MC of all time. However,
KENNY BOD was much more than that. His strong lyrical content grew a huge array of followers, making him a hero among millions. He was a great poet and his theory on life influenced his fans to a huge extent. He was indeed the Rose That Grew from Concrete, whose ever-successful work couldn't have been more admired and loved
Extention tube macro of novelty color make up.
Strobist: sb800 to camera right behind diffusion foam. reflector on left, black foam behind, black granite below. Triggered with ebay trigger.
1/500th sec at f9.5
Extention tube macro of novelty face make-up.
image DSC_0345
Cabo da Roca (Cape Roca) is a cape which forms the westernmost extent of mainland Portugal and continental Europe (and by definition the Eurasian land mass). The cape is in the Portuguese municipality of Sintra, west of the district of Lisbon, forming the westernmost extent of the Serra de Sintra
Cabo da Roca (Cape Roca) is a cape which forms the westernmost extent of mainland Portugal and continental Europe (and by definition the Eurasian land mass). The cape is in the Portuguese municipality of Sintra, west of the district of Lisbon, forming the westernmost extent of the Serra de Sintra
This image is excerpted from a U.S. GAO report:
www.gao.gov/products/GAO-25-107435
Artificial Intelligence: DHS Needs to Improve Risk Assessment Guidance for Critical Infrastructure Sectors
my dog was busy chewing a bone so I desided to try out my 13mm Zeikos Digital AF Macro Extention tube. I didn't go for the 21mm or the 31mm. well I did try the 21mm but couldn't find the right focus point.
Number:
199021
Date created:
1999
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Kang Zhang; 2) Morton F. Goldberg; 3) Nathan Congdon; 5) Tonya Stefko; 6) Albert Jun.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Seth Biser; 2) James Lai; 3) Elia Duh; 4) Eugene Ng; 5) Anthony Lombardo.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Min Kim; 2) Anthony Castelbuono; 3) Byron Ladd; 4) Michael Chiang; 5) Christopher Pelzek.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Robert Sorenson; 2) Joshua Dunaief; 3) James Park; 4) Robert Thompson; 5) Joel Pearlman.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Zhang, Kang
Goldberg, Morton F., 1937-
Congdon, Nathan Greenleaf
Stefko, Susan Tonya
Jun, Albert S.
Biser, Seth Alan
Lai, James C.
Duh, Elia Junyat
Ng, Eugene Wei-Min
Lombardo, Anthony Joseph
Kim, Min Peter
Castelbuono, Anthony Charles
Ladd, Byron Scott
Chiang, Michael Fred
Pelzek, Christopher David,
Sorenson, Robert Christian
Dunaief, Joshua Lawrence
Park, James K.
Thompson, Robert Wayne Jr.
Pearlman, Joel Abraham
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Number:
199319
Date created:
2006
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Holly Hindman; 2) Justin Brown; 3) Peter McDonnell; 4) Thomas Hwang; 5) Leejee H. Suh; 6) Jawad A. Qureshi.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Anita Gupta; 2) Margaret Chang.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Kevin Lee; 2) Homayoun Tabandeh; 3) Pradeep Ramulu; 4) Husam Ansari; 5) Henry E. Wiley IV.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Gregory Schmidt; 2) Yun Katherine Hu; 3) Michelle Tarver-Carr; 4) Parag Parekh.
Fifth row, from left to right: 1) Mark Walsh; 2) John Koo; 3) David Baranano; 4) Akrit Sodhi; 5) Michael Cusick; 6) Jacob Jones; 7) Jacob Reznik.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Hindman, Holly Butler
Brown, Justin C.
McDonnell, Peter J.
Hwang, Thomas S.
Suh, Leejee Han
Qureshi, Jawad Ahmad
Gupta, Anita
Chang, Margaret Amy
Lee, Kevin C.
Tabandeh, Homayoun
Ramulu, Pradeep
Ansari, Husam
Wiley, Henry Ernest IV
Schmidt, Gregory W.
Hu, Yun Katherine
Tarver-Carr, Michelle Elaine
Parekh, Parag D.
Walsh, Mark Kim
Koo, John Jah-Hyun
Baranano, David Eduardo
Sodhi, Akrit Singh
Cusick, Michael
Jones, Jacob Michael
Reznik, Jacob
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Spotted this chap while I was shooting flowers in our garden. I dont have a macro lens but I do have extention tubes.
Best viewed LARGE
KENNY BOD was undoubtedly one of the most successful MCs of all time. Even after his single, he has sold the debut records worldwide making him the highest selling rap/hip-hop artist of all time!
KENNY BOD is widely regarded as the greatest rapper of all time. Moreover, a recent poll in MTV placed him as the #1 MC of all time. However,
KENNY BOD was much more than that. His strong lyrical content grew a huge array of followers, making him a hero among millions. He was a great poet and his theory on life influenced his fans to a huge extent. He was indeed the Rose That Grew from Concrete, whose ever-successful work couldn't have been more admired and loved
Showing extent and moat. Medieval castle in Bari, Italy. Built on top of a Roman fortification, re-built by Norman King Roger II in the 1130s, destroyed by his successor, King William 'the Bad' (il Malo' in 1156 during the destruction of the whole town as punishment for rebellion, then extensively rebuilt by Roger's grand-son, Emperor Frederick II in the 13th century.
It looks like a chimney but there's no sign of any bricked-up flue connection. That's because this is actually a sewer ventilator.
In 1889 Edinburgh built a 12ft diameter sewer that runs from Balerno to Leith, and it more or less follows the Water of Leith. Until about 1960 we didn't have separate systems for toilets/sanitation (the foul sewer) and for rainwater/runoff (storm drains), so everything went into the same pipe. During very heavy rainfall, the 12ft sewer could fill up and the air would be expelled through vents. This ventilator is still used because the nearby housing is all connected to the combined sewer.
Original DSC_1938
KENNY BOD was undoubtedly one of the most successful MCs of all time. Even after his single, he has sold the debut records worldwide making him the highest selling rap/hip-hop artist of all time!
KENNY BOD is widely regarded as the greatest rapper of all time. Moreover, a recent poll in MTV placed him as the #1 MC of all time. However,
KENNY BOD was much more than that. His strong lyrical content grew a huge array of followers, making him a hero among millions. He was a great poet and his theory on life influenced his fans to a huge extent. He was indeed the Rose That Grew from Concrete, whose ever-successful work couldn't have been more admired and loved
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
Number:
199241
Date created:
2004
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Stephen Kim; 2) Leejee Suh; 3) Peter McDonnell; 4) Albert Jun; 5) Mike Rizen; 6) Dong John Park.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Constance Nduaguba; 2) Stacy Sjoberg; 3) Aaleya Koreishi; 4) Elias Aliprandis; 5) Margaret Chang; 6) Husam Ansari.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Daniel Garibaldi; 2) Homayoun Tabandeh; 3) Kevin Lee; 4) Pradeep Ramulu; 5) Tony Tsai; 6) Henry Wiley.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Jawad Qureshi; 2) Geoffrey Emerson; 3) M. Vaughn Emerson; 4) Todd Klesert; 5) Mike Lai; 6) Richard Adler.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Kim, Stephen Jae
Suh, Leejee Han
McDonnell, Peter J.
Jun, Albert S.
Rizen, Michael
Park, Dongjun John
Nduaguba, Constance O.
Sjoberg, Stacy A.
Koreishi, Aaleya Faruk
Aliprandis, Elias Theoklitos
Chang, Margaret Amy
Ansari, Husam
Garibaldi, Daniel C.
Tabandeh, Homayoun
Lee, Kevin C.
Ramulu, Pradeep
Tsai, Tony
Wiley, Henry Ernest IV
Qureshi, Jawad Ahmad
Emerson, Geoffrey Guy
Emerson, Michael Vaughn
Klesert, Todd Robert
Lai, Michael Min-Shyue
Adler, Richard Alan
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
KENNY BOD was undoubtedly one of the most successful MCs of all time. Even after his single, he has sold the debut records worldwide making him the highest selling rap/hip-hop artist of all time!
KENNY BOD is widely regarded as the greatest rapper of all time. Moreover, a recent poll in MTV placed him as the #1 MC of all time. However,
KENNY BOD was much more than that. His strong lyrical content grew a huge array of followers, making him a hero among millions. He was a great poet and his theory on life influenced his fans to a huge extent. He was indeed the Rose That Grew from Concrete, whose ever-successful work couldn't have been more admired and loved
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
Urban extents illustrate the shape and area of urbanized places. Urbanized localities are defined as places with with 5,000 or more inhabitants that are delineated by stable night-time lights. For poorly lit areas, alternate sources are used to estimate the extent of cities.
The extent of my PanOceania models on 18th July 2013. Not pictured is my Swiss Guard with HMG, who's not completed yet.
Regardless of the extent of the ongoing tyranny and oppression I have been forced to deal with in Greece for nearly a decade under the harshest environment, my efforts in finding Justice and Freedom for my life have not stopped and it never will until my last breath.
Hence, on December 23rd, 2022, while enduring day 140th of my 4th Hunger Strike outside the UNHCR office in Athens, I left my shelter again to reach the Indian Embassy and plead for their help in providing urgent Humanitarian aid and mediation with this UN Agency.
Although I managed to speak with two Embassy representatives and even though they said they would help, ultimately they had gotten the Police involved to take me away. This time I was held in Police Custody for 2-hours before being let go.
Watch the video and read in-depth details here: š
šš chng.it/xnBYn46Hng
Please sign the Petition and Donate if you can.
Thank you. ššš
#HumanRights #Justice #Freedom #Immigration #Refugees #Politics #Democracy #Petition #Crowdfunding #Philanthropy #Europe #Greece #Athens #UnitedNations #UNHCR #India #IndiaInGreece