View allAll Photos Tagged highangle
White ceramic bowl containing rice and a wooden cup. The bowl is on top of a wood surface, and a palm frond is in the background. Square format.
Edinburgh, Scotland / UK - June 13, 2019: The dog cemetery of Edinburgh Castle and cityscape are shown on a rainy day. The small garden area of the castle has been used since the mid-1800s as a burial space for officers' dogs and regimental mascots.
video licensing (for editorial uses only):
www.shutterstock.com/video/clip-1046356675-edinburgh-scot...
Church photo club assignment: High-angle shot.
I'm not certain whether I am leaning toward Coffee 1 or Coffee 2, but have a few days to consider. Or, I might come up with something better.
SHERMAN OAKS - In March 2023, a California State Fire Training Rope Rescue Technician course was held at the the Los Angeles Fire Department's John Ruedy Memorial Training Center (JRMTC) at LAFD Station 88 in Sherman Oaks.
This course is required for specialized positions like the Search and Rescue Task Forces, Swift Water team and certain positions at Air Operations.
Students learn multi-point anchor systems, compound rope mechanical advantage systems, ascending and descending a fixed rope, fixed rope systems, patient pickoffs and highline systems.
Photo Use Permitted via Creative Commons - Credit: LAFD Photo | Ryan Primosch
LAFD Event: 032023
Connect with us: LAFD.ORG | News | Facebook | Instagram | Reddit | Twitter: @LAFD @LAFDtalk​
Special Operations truck for High Angle, Swiftwater, Helicopter, and Mountain Rescue. I'll bet this one has a few stories to tell.
A student examines a special urine-diverting toilet and urinal that is part of a research project to turn urine into fertilizer in the G.G. Brown Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on January 24, 2017.
The toilet has a split bowl and is designed to send solid waste to a wastewater treatment plant, but route urine to a holding tank. Urine diverted from this toilet and the urinal will be treated and eventually used to create fertilizers for agricultural use, possibly at U-M's Nichols Arboretum.
These facilities are part of a $3 million National Science Foundation project that is the nation's largest exploring the technology, systems requirements and social attitudes associated with urine-derived fertilizers.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering