View allAll Photos Tagged extraction
Nederland, Gelderland, Gemeente Nijmegen, 26-06-2013; Lent, Vinex-locatie Waalsprong. Zandwinplas.
New housing estate in east of the Netherlands, near Nijmegen, Extraction of sand.
luchtfoto (toeslag op standaard tarieven);
aerial photo (additional fee required);
copyright foto/photo Siebe Swart.
Ombre formée par un flash placé de 3/4 sous la fleur ( la photo étant pivotée de 90° horaire)
et puis sinon....
1+1=2 mais aussi
2+2=4...
Researchers extract juice from sugarcane that has been engineered to produce oil for biodiesel in addition to the plant's sugar that is used for ethanol production.
Plants Engineered to Replace Oil in Sugarcane and Sorghum (PETROSS) is a research project transforming sugarcane and sweet sorghum into dual-purpose bioenergy crops to ensure a sustainable source of biofuel.
Photo credit: Kathryn Faith/University of Illinois
Researchers extract juice from sugarcane that has been engineered to produce oil for biodiesel in addition to the plant's sugar that is used for ethanol production.
Plants Engineered to Replace Oil in Sugarcane and Sorghum (PETROSS) is a research project transforming sugarcane and sweet sorghum into dual-purpose bioenergy crops to ensure a sustainable source of biofuel.
Photo credit: Kathryn Faith/University of Illinois
Should be out today! At all good comic stores. By Antony Johnston and I. More story and stuff to enhance the game ( which I hope by now you guys have played ).
Will probably be my last full comic out until CHOKER, early next year.
Researchers extract juice from sugarcane that has been engineered to produce oil for biodiesel in addition to the plant's sugar that is used for ethanol production.
Plants Engineered to Replace Oil in Sugarcane and Sorghum (PETROSS) is a research project transforming sugarcane and sweet sorghum into dual-purpose bioenergy crops to ensure a sustainable source of biofuel.
Photo credit: Kathryn Faith/University of Illinois
Vladimir Romanov, 55, inhabitant of Gridino village in Northern Karelia, shows the process of lumpsucker roe extraction. Lumpsucker, an ugly looking seabed fish, produces very tasty and useful roe, which resembles Caspian black caviar, but much cheaper. If White Sea villagers like you, they might give you pound or another for free
Honey extraction demonstration at Bushel and Peck's in downtown Beloit.
By Double D's Bees of Beloit, Wisconsin.
Researchers extract juice from sugarcane that has been engineered to produce oil for biodiesel in addition to the plant's sugar that is used for ethanol production.
Plants Engineered to Replace Oil in Sugarcane and Sorghum (PETROSS) is a research project transforming sugarcane and sweet sorghum into dual-purpose bioenergy crops to ensure a sustainable source of biofuel.
Photo credit: Kathryn Faith/University of Illinois
A simple tooth extraction is a procedure carried out by dentists or oral surgeons. During this procedure, local anesthesia will be used to numb the affected area to ensure the patient does experience pain during the extraction. Read more: www.cityscapedentalgroup.com/tooth-extractions/
Researchers extract juice from sugarcane that has been engineered to produce oil for biodiesel in addition to the plant's sugar that is used for ethanol production.
Plants Engineered to Replace Oil in Sugarcane and Sorghum (PETROSS) is a research project transforming sugarcane and sweet sorghum into dual-purpose bioenergy crops to ensure a sustainable source of biofuel.
Photo credit: Kathryn Faith/University of Illinois
Airmen from the 108th Maintenance Squadron, 108th Wing, New Jersey Air National Guard, perform a fuel tank extraction to test the procedures to extract an unconscious victim from a KC-135R Stratotanker fuel tank at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J., Aug. 22, 2014. The exercise involved multiple Joint Base organizations including the 108th Wing and the 87th Bio-Environmental shops, the 87th Fire Department and both the 108th and the 87th Safety Offices. (U.S. Air National Guard Photo by Tech. Sgt. Carl Clegg/Released)
I'm not sure where this photo was taken. Wherever it was, I'm sure that this area is very built up today. The next time I'm in Dallas, I'm going to do some Then and Now photography and will try to find this.
In 1985-86, I worked at Collins Color Lab on McKinney Avenue in Dallas. When I worked there, the lab mostly did prints of huge architectural renderings for firms all over the city.
Located in a turn-of-the-century house that hadn't been updated since Mr. Collins set up shop there in the 50's, the lab contained file cabinet after file cabinet of 4x5 negatives.
One day, Mr. Collins daughter, Beth, who ran the business end of the lab, asked me to help her go through the file cabinets; they were going to purge old negatives to have the silver extracted from them to make way for more room in the lab.
Well, when I opened the first package of negatives, I was shocked. I had expected to see architectural renderings, but instead, I found negatives of Dallas from the 1950's and 60's. Apparently, Mr. Collins spent his early years as a photographer taking photos for businesses, advertising firms, architects, and newspapers.
There were tens of thousands of negatives of this great stuff, and I wanted to keep every single one. However, that wasn't the goal of the project, so I got to work going through every negative in one file cabinet, tossing 98% of them in a trash bag to be taken for extraction. It was a painful job to do.
While we were going through the negatives, I did ask Beth if I could keep some that I really liked, and she agreed, which is how I ended up with these.
I have about 40 negatives and, at one time, made contact sheets of all of them. Today, I found two of the contact sheets, which I've cropped and posted here. They aren't in the best shape, but I've never been able to find an enlarger that takes 4x5 negatives, so I've been out of luck making actual prints of any of these. So, for now, the contact sheets will have to suffice.
The Collins Color Lab stayed in business for several years after I left, but it finally closed when Mr. Collins died. Now, the building has been lovingly restored and is an art gallery.
I'm happy to say that a large part of Mr. Collins' photos/negatives were donated to the Dallas Historical Society, and you can view some of his great work here:
www.dallashistory.org/history/dallas/freezette.htm
His photos are scattered throughout the site, so you'll have to look around.