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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
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
Number:
198684
Date created:
1983
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Scheffer C.G. Tseng; 2) Michael A. Novak; 3) Arnall Patz; 4) Rhoads E. Stevens.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Serge deBustros; 2) Julia A. Haller-Yeo; 3) Patricia M. Walsh; 4) Mary L. Hotchkiss; 5) William P. Blase.
Third row, from left to right: 1) C. Mitchell Gilbert; 2) Marc F. Schwartz; 3) John T. Thompson; 4) Eugene deJuan.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) James B. Aguayo; 2) Michael J. Harris; 3) Harry R. Pappas.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Tseng, Scheffer C.G.
Novak, Michael
Patz, Arnall, 1920-2010
Stevens, Rhoads Elliott
DeBustros, Serge
Yeo, Julia A.H.
Walsh, Patricia M.
Hotchkiss, Mary L.
Blaso, William P.
Gilbert, C. Mitchell
Schwartz, Marc Franklin
Thompson, John T.
DeJuan, Eugene, Jr.
Aguayo, James B.
Harris, Michael
Pappas, Harry R.
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Number:
198833
Date created:
1993
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Lisa Abrams; 2) Robert Avery; 3) Morton F. Goldberg; 4) Rohit Varma.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Mathew MacCumber; 2) Anisa Threlkeld; 3) Katrinka Heher; 4) Deborah Keenum.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Fernando Murillo-Lopez; 2) Dante Pieramici; 3) Sharon Fekrat; 4) Martin Edwards.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Paul Cutarelli; 2) Thomas Lietman; 3) Richard Hairston; 4) Timothy Schneider.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Abrams, Lisa Shoshana
Avery, Robert Logan
Goldberg, Morton F., 1937-
Varma, Rohit
MacCumber, Mathew Wilmen
Threlkeld, Anisa B.
Heher, Katrinka L.
Keenum, Deborah Gott
Murillo-Lopez, Fernando
Pieramici, Dante Joseph
Fekrat, Sharon
Edwards, Martin Gary
Cutarelli, Paul E.
Lietman, Thomas
Hairston, Richard Joseph
Schneider, Timothy L.
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Number:
198813
Date created:
1989
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Terrence OāBrien; 2) Arnall Patz; 3) William Smiddy; 4) Douglas Scott.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Pedro Lopez; 2) Suber Huang; 3) Mami Iwamoto; 4) Subba Gollamudi.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Wilson Wu; 2) Sumit Nanda; 3) Paul Lee; 4) Robert Maloney.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Robert Avery; 2) Jonathan Talamo; 3) Albert Maguire; 4) Mark Sawusch; 5) David Guyer.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
O'Brien, Terrence
Patz, Arnall, 1920-2010
Smiddy, William Earl
Scott, Douglas R.
Lopez, Pedro F.
Wu, Wilson
Huang, Suber S.
Nanda, Sumit
Iwamoto, Mami
Lee, Paul
Gollamudi, Subba R.
Maloney, Robert K.
Avery, R. L.
Talamo, Jonathan Haskell
Maguire, Albert M.
Sawusch, Mark R.
Guyer, David Robert
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Number:
198682
Date created:
1982
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Serge deBustros; 2) Monte A. Del Monte; 3) Arnall Patz; 4) Ray T. Oyakawa; 5) Hunson Kaz Soong; 6) Rhoads E. Stevens..
Second row, from left to right: 1) Andrew P. Schachat; 2) Michael J. Harris; 3) Scheffer C.G. Tseng; 4) John T. Thompson; 5) Reay H. Brown.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Paul Sternberg, Jr.; 2) John S. Minkowski; 3) Mary L. Hotchkiss; 4) Philip A. Piro; 5) Harry R. Pappas; 6) Eugene deJuan.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
DeBustros, Serge
Del Monte, Monte A.
Patz, Arnall, 1920-2010
Oyakawa, Ray T.
Soong, Hunsun
Stevens, Rhoads Elliott
Schachat, Andrew
Harris, Michael
Tseng, Scheffer C.G.
Thompson, John T.
Brown, Reay H.
Sternberg, Paul
Minkowski, John S.
Hotchkiss, Mary L.
Piro, Philip A.
Pappas, Harry R.
DeJuan, Eugene, Jr.
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Black Tie Hair Importers provides beautiful quality hair at an affordable price. Hair is able to match all colors of hair and any length, sold as clip in extensions, braided in hair of wefted.
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 monument that you see in the image is declaring Cabo da Roca as the westernmost extent of continental Europe.
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.
JIRCAS Photo Archive
www.jircas.go.jp/ja/database/photoarchive
Author: Kaneda Chukichi
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Date: 1978.12
Description: ćć³ćć£ć¢ć®ę®åčØē·“ć»ć³ćæć¼ć®ę«ę¬”å ēćÆć大å¤å°ę¬ććć¦ćććå»ćććå¾ćÆę室ę£é¢ć«åēé”ćę²ćććć¦ćęę„ć®åć«ęØę¶ćåćććććéå“å«å¤«ę°ććććć«ććććć
Project: 稲éŗä¼č³ęŗę¢ē“¢å°å „ć®ććć®äŗåčŖæę»
Country: ć¤ć³ć (India)
Place: Indo-japan(idj Aetc) Agr,ext & Train Center,mandya,karnataka ()
Keywords: 稲éŗä¼č³ęŗę¢ē“¢å°å „ć®ććć®äŗåčŖæę»,ć¤ć³ć,ēę“»,ę å ±,Technical Cooperation,extention,training
Slide no. 01-028-07
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This content is provided under the terms and conditions of the JIRCAS Website Terms of Use or Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
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:
198693
Date created:
1986
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Anne M. Hanneken; 2) Ellen R. Strahlman; 3) Arnall Patz; 4) John T. Thompson; 5) Henry D. Jampel.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Marco A. Zarbin; 2) Neal L. Freeman; 3) Richard D. Semba; 4) William E. Smiddy.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Arun Patel; 2) Daniel M. Schwartz; 3) Lucian DelPriore.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Jay M. Lustbader; 2) Peter J. McDonnell; 3) John R. Wittpenn; 4) Peter A. Rapoza.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Hanneken, Anne Marie
Strahlman, Ellen-Ruth Simons
Patz, Arnall, 1920-2010
Thompson, John T.
Jampel, Henry D.
Zarbin, Marco Attilio Eugenio
Freeman, L. Neal
Semba, Richard
Smiddy, William Earl
Patel, Arun
Schwartz, Daniel Mark
DelPriore, Lucian V.
Lustbader, Jay Mark
McDonnell, Peter J.
Wittpenn, John Ryder Jr.
Rapoza, Peter A.
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
Presentation of the food prepared for a young child by Health Extention Workers(Photo Credit:ILRI/Zelalem Lema)
Echinacea purpurea, the eastern purple coneflower, purple coneflower, hedgehog coneflower, or echinacea, is a North American species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to parts of eastern North America and present to some extent in the wild in much of the eastern, southeastern and midwestern United States as well as in the Canadian Province of Ontario. It is most common in the Ozarks and in the Mississippi/Ohio Valley. Its habitats include dry open woods, prairies and barrens.
Taxonomy
Echinacea is derived from Greek, meaning 'spiny one', in reference to the spiny sea urchins 'εĻίνοι' which the ripe flower heads of species of this genus resemble. The epithet purpurea means 'reddish-purple'. Originally named Rudbeckia purpurea by Linnaeus in 1753 in Species plantarum 6, it was reclassified in 1794 by Conrad Moench, in a new genus named Echinacea purpurea (L.) Moench. In 1818, Thomas Nuttall describes a new variety that he named Rudbeckia purpurea var. serotina. Just two decades later, De Candolle raised him to the rank of species of the other genus Echinacea serotina (Nutt.) DC. (1836). In 2002, Binns et al. discovered a misapplication of the name Echinacea purpurea (L.) Moench for the taxon correctly named Echinacea serotina (Nutt.) DC. in 1836. The authors proposed to retain the names not to cause confusion among gardeners and herbalists. Other names include: Broad-leaved purple coneflower, Eastern Purple Coneflower, Hedgehog Coneflower, Echinacea.
Description
Echinacea purpurea is an herbaceous perennial up to 120 cm (47 in) tall by 25 cm (10 in) wide at maturity. Depending on the climate, it blooms throughout summer into autumn. Its cone-shaped flowering heads are usually, but not always, purple in the wild. Its individual flowers (florets) within the flower head are hermaphroditic, having both male and female organs in each flower. It is pollinated by butterflies and bees. The alternate leaves, borne by a petiole from 0 to 17 cm, are oval to lanceolate, 5-30 x 5-12 cm; the margin is tightened to toothed.
The inflorescence is a capitulum, 7 to 15 cm in diameter, formed by a prominent domed central protuberance consisting of multiple small yellow florets. These are surrounded by a ring of pink or purple ligulate florets. The tubular florets are hermaphrodite while the ligular florets are sterile. The involucral bracts are linear to lanceolate. The plant prefers well-drained soils in full sun. The fruit is an achene, sought after by birds.
Cultivation
Echinacea purpurea is grown as an ornamental plant in temperate regions. It is ideal for curbs, walkways or beds. The flowers can also go into the composition of fresh bouquets. Numerous cultivars have been developed for flower quality and plant form. The plant grows in sun or light shade.[11] It thrives in either dry or moist soil and can tolerate drought once established. The cultivars 'Ruby Giant' and 'Elbrook' have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Propagation
Echinacea purpurea is propagated either vegetatively or from seeds. Useful vegetative techniques include division, root cuttings, and basal cuttings. Clumps can be divided, or broken into smaller bunches, which is normally done in the spring or autumn. Cuttings made from roots that are "pencil-sized" will develop into plants when started in late autumn or early winter. Cuttings of basal shoots in the spring may be rooted when treated with rooting hormones, such as IBA at 1000 ppm.
Seed germination occurs best with daily temperature fluctuations or after stratification, which help to end dormancy. Seeds may be started indoors in advance of the growing season or outdoors after the growing season has started.
Ecology
Many pollinators are attracted to E. purpea. Bees that are attracted to the flowers include bumblebees, sweat bees, honey bees, the sunflower leafcutter bee, and the mining bee Andrena helianthiformis. Butterflies that visit include monarchs, swallowtail butterflies, and sulphur butterflies. Birds, particularly finches, eat the seeds and disperse them through their droppings.
Slugs and rabbits will also eat the foliage when young, or shortly after emerging in the spring. Additionally, roots can be damaged and eaten by gophers.
Chemistry
Echinacea purpurea contains alkamides, caffeic acid derivatives, polysaccharides, and glycoproteins.[20] Nicotiflorin is the dominant flavonoid in E. purpurea, followed by the flavonoid rutin.
Traditional medicine
Further information: Uses of Echinacea
Native Americans used the plant as traditional medicine to treat many ailments.
The full extent of the massive landslip on Undercliff Drive, St Lawrence, taken from the Niton end.
Hard to believe now, but this used to be through road, which was always fairly busy.
Now, following the Valentine's Day storms of 2014, which caused massive ground movements in this area, and following this landslip, homes were evacuated, the stabilisation works by Island Roads suspended and now the road has been closed for good, and given back to Nature.
Only a very small part of the road is left. This landslip is enough to take your breath away, but a bit of a sad end the a very nice part of the Isle of Wight.
19th April 2014.
It is comforting that the colony's extent appears to be well-defined. I blew a kiss to its rhizome and continued on my way without disturbing the colony.
-----------------------
In the Pine Haven Recreation Area in the Au Sable State Forest in Jerome Township in Midland County, Michigan, on May 18th, 2019, along the Grassmere Shoreline trail.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
⢠Au Sable State Forest (2140062)
⢠Midland (county) (2000979)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
⢠Plantae (kingdom) (300132360)
⢠spring (season) (300133097)
⢠temperate deciduous forests (300387649)
Wikidata items:
⢠18 May 2019 (Q57350132)
⢠Central Michigan (Q2945568)
⢠clonal colony (Q611804)
⢠county park (Q5177940)
⢠forest floor (Q2998666)
⢠Huron/Erie Lake Plains (Q56683276)
⢠Jerome Township (Q6182944)
⢠May 18 (Q2576)
⢠May 2019 (Q47087597)
⢠Pine Haven Recreation Area (Q66551123)
⢠Podophyllum peltatum (Q1572090)
⢠Saginaw Lake Plain (Q56683287)
⢠Saginaw, Midland, and Bay City metropolitan area (Q28448661)
⢠secondary forest (Q2140056)
⢠Southern Great Lakes forests (Q16201663)
⢠state forest (Q7603683)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
⢠ParksāMichigan (sh85098169)
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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
One in five of the world's plant species is threatened with extinction.
A global analysis of extinction risk for the world's plants, conducted by Kew together with the Natural History Museum, London and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), has revealed that the worldās plants are as threatened as mammals, with one in five of the worldās plant species threatened with extinction.
The study, entitled Sampled Red List Index for Plants, is a major baseline for plant conservation and is the first time that the true extent of the threat to the worldās estimated 380,000 plant species is known.
Explore the state of the world's plant life with Kew's interactive map and graphs - www.kew.org/plants-at-risk
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.
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The westernmost extent of Sullivan's campaign to destroy the villages of the Native Americans who sided with the British. This was ugly business all around and displaced and killed native americans and british allies culminating in the battle at Newtown. John Burgoyne was stalled coming south from Quebec and St Ledger was scared off by Benedict Arnold's campaign against fort Stanwix. Howe was busy trying to glorify himself with a major victory in Philadelphia and Henry Clinton was holed up in New York City, showing no signs of relieved the beleaguered Burgoyne. Sullivan was tapped to go west and destroy the Native American British allies. Ant-indian sentiment was high after Burgoyne allied and sent out thousands of Mohawks Senecas and other tribes to harass rebels. To be fair, their warrior traditions were not well understood and was taken as simple savagery. Native American war was personal and stealthy and brutal. Additionally ritual canabalism (which has been practiced by most societies the world round at some point) ...was considered particularly vile. However it should be noted that hangings and drawings and quarterings were still public spectacles in London. So barbarism is a matter of perspective. As a result the sullivan;s campaign was particularly brutal.
Boyd and parker were rebel officers captured, tied to a free and tortured to death by the tribe at Beards viliage. This site commemorates them and the men who were captured. As it was created in 1928 it is a bit one sided. Tragedy abounded in the revolution and in the true light of history it is hard to fault the Native Americans who responded with equal brutality. to the campaign. They were in a difficult spot....Europeans were closing in to their territories pushing them ever further west. Thus they decided to choose the British as the better ally. THe British at least promised them their own land (modern day Indiana). Additionally the British looked like the better bet to win. The American army and Militias were pretty rough.
The Battle at Newtown is considered a critical battle to collapsing the British northern campaign. But as with all things history there are many competing truths...often complementary truths that should all be known and honored. In this case the campaign was a critical part of the war for Liberty.....In the case of the rebels it was a win. For the Native Americans of Western NY the revolution was also a battle for liberty but ultimatley a defeat....followed by a sad history. I wish in the light of history all these competing truths and and heroic deeds of all men on all sides could be noted. And I so wish the people of the past (what will they say about us in 200 years) had the chance to create a society that was for all the people of the Americas.
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
Central Florida Zoo Insect Zoo- Experimenting with different close-up possiblilites, I used a simple EF 28-105 USM lens on my 40D, combined with a 25mm extention tube and 1.7X teleconverter, using a wireless remote shutter release. My lens was touching the glass: if you look closely, you will see the numbers on the lens reflected in the bend of the leg on the right-hand side of the image. By the way, this was dropped into Photomatix as RAW files and converted to a pseudo-HDR file, then tonemapped, and fine-tuned in PS.
1959_tonemapped
Adam doing a fs disaster on the extention in the bowl at Brid skatepark. This was shot during the bowl best trick comp.
Number:
199017
Date created:
1997
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Description:
First row, from left to right: 1) Morton F. Goldberg; 2) Dante J. Pieramici.
Second row, from left to right: 1) Joel Pearlman; 2) Elia Duh; 3) Tuong M. Nguyen; 4) James K. Park.
Third row, from left to right: 1) Angelo P. Tanna; 2) Linnea R. Boyev; 3) Srinivas Sadda; 4) Shannath Merbs.
Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Arman Fard; 2) Nathan Congdon; 3) J.B. Harlan, Jr.; 4) Michael P. Grant; 5) Michael Cooney.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute--People
Goldberg, Morton F., 1937-
Pieramici, Dante Joseph
Pearlman, Joel Abraham
Duh, Elia Junyat
Nguyen, Tuong T. Michael
Park, James K.
Tanna, Angelo Peter
Boyev, Linnea Read
Sadda, Srinivas Reddy
Merbs, Shannath Louise
Fard, Arman K.
Congdon, Nathan Greenleaf
Harlan, Joseph Benson Jr.
Grant, Michael P.
Cooney, Michael Jude
Ophthalmologists
Group portraits
Portrait photographs
Notes:
Photographer unknown.
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.
P40 Command bar extention mounted on a P40 switch.
This one use the Gear Rack 1x8 (6630).
I notice that the thin P40 command bar is a little bit bent up. :(
Nevertheless, switching goes perfect.
At the highest extent of our ziplining course with Koloa Zipline, we came to the top of a rise overlooking the Waita Reservoir--the largest in the Hawai'ian Isles and indeed the shore itself of Kauai beyond, further down the mountain. The next launch platform for the zipline awaits just ahead, and little did we know then that the final and longest stretch, returning us to the level of the lake, would have us sailing over the open water of Waita at close to 90 kph (55 mph) at top speed. Stopping at the end was, of course, the scariest part. As they say, it's not the fall that kills you, it's the sudden stop at the end.
Of course, a rooster looks on from the lower right. There is always a rooster in the Hawai'ian islands, particularly, we discovered, in Kauai, where there seem to be more of them than us.