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Brighton Level reopened last night. I bundled down hoping to get photos of the cool kids grinding and jumping - and didn't.
Heres a picture of people playing in water instead.
Foto tomada con la ayuda de una luz negra
Larga vida a la música electronica y al vodka ^_^
Long live to the electronic music !
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
About 3 hours in now, we had heard rumors that this mine had multiple levels but untill now it was all on one. Through the curtains lay another level as promised!
We dicided decending further was best left for another trip, another day.
Macy's at the Galleria at Sunset in Henderson, NV was originally a Robinson's-May and still somewhat looks like one too, also notices if possible the Foley's delivery truck on the loading dock!
Walked outside this morning and noticed this mushroom growing in the front yard. Photo was taken at the apartment complex where my wife and I reside.
A levelling plate is used to bring the sonar tripod into vertical position, 10 May 2014. A hockey puck affixed to the level can be gripped by the remotely operated vehicle's manipulator, facilitating placement and recovery of the plate.
Credit: Ocean Networks Canada
This series of photos was made for the Level magazine of Paraguay. For the winter edition 2007.
By gihamandelik photographic studio
Early works during April 2019 to remove the level crossing at Reservoir in Melbourne's northern suburbs where the rail line passes through the middle of a major intersection of High Street, Cheddar Road East and West, Broadway and Edwardes Street in the centre of the Reservoir shopping area.
The proposal at this site is to raise the line above the intersection using the 'Skyrail' design used by the Andrews Government in other locations around Melbourne - notably between Caulfield and Dandenong and for the South Morang to Mernda extension. A new station will be built on the viaduct but the tangled intersection of roads will remain beneath, albeit with an additional direct east-west connection between Broadway and Edwardes Street.
The line opened in 1889 as part of a longer line to Whittlesea with initial access to the city via the former Inner Circle line prior to a direct connection via Jolimont opening in 1901 and a direct link past the Inner Circle junction in 1904 which remains today as a sharp curve in the line near Rushall.
Electrification reached Reservoir in 1921 which was extended to Thomastown with the latter extension originally using wooden poles. Post War urban growth led to short extensions of the electric service to Lalor in 1959 and Epping in 1964. By then the railmotor service to Whittlesea had ceased with the line closed in November 1959 although the corridor remained intact. This has been used in more recent years to rebuilt the line as an electric service to South Morang in 2011 and Mernda in 2018 as urban sprawl heads north. Today the line is within 9km of the original Whittlesea terminus.
Pett Level with its strong magnetic pull and Petrified Forest that was once connected to Bexhill.
SUBMERGED ANCIENT FOREST at PETT LEVEL
After the last Ice Age about 6000 years ago, the sea level was about 150ft lower than today’s level, due to the Polar Regions having significantly more ice than at present. A forest grew under the sea at Cliff End near the village of Pett, at a time when England was joined by a land bridge to the continent. The whole of the landscape would have been covered in oaks and elms, willows, birches, and there would even have been hazels growing.
As the climate warmed so the ice at the Polar Regions melted, and the Sea Level rose above the level of the forest, we believe about 3 metres higher than the current level. The forest was drowned, and the wood preserved in the salt water and mud. Since the 16th century, the sea levels have dropped, and at low tide, the bases of the trees are now visible.
Cambios Level Crossing on the single track freight only line between North Blyth and Freemans Crossing, which is to the right.
To the left leads to the Alcan terminal and the Port of Blyth's Battleship Wharf at North Blyth. Just on the other side of the level crossing was the entrance to Blyth Cambois TMD, with the bridge in distance that once spanned Cambois yard.
20th June 2020
Caption: Looking at things spatially, areas that were high priority for both SE blueprint and SFLA in Fireshed 5, have high (though not perfect) correlation with focal treatment areas as determined by specialists on the Ocala. Byline: Created by Amy Nathanson
Landscape Level Integration and Shared Stewardship (LLISS) Team – Regional Office
Alone, the ingredients of landscape-level, integration and shared stewardship seem like quite the recipe. But in March of 2020, the Southern Region’s Landscape-Level Integration and Shared Stewardship (LLISS) team officially hit the ground running with an innovative approach to work in the country.
Our main objectives as a region remained unchanged: to increase integration, create transparency and increase performance accountability. These efforts remain critically important to aligning national and regional priorities of Shared Stewardship and accelerating the pace and scale of restoration.
Since that inception, more than 80 Forest Service employees from the across the Region and the Southern Research Station have come together to ensure successful implementation of the Forest Service mission. The LLISS initiative works as interdisciplinary teams, sub teams and short teams to test the concepts of data-driven decision making to support landscape level integrated management and shared stewardship internally and with external partners.
In October of 2020, the LLISS work began in earnest, doing research across the region, even nationally with other regions to share ideas and generate feedback on how best to apply the LLISS framework. This framework exists to best aid decision makers at all levels across the region in recognizing opportunities and evaluating work, workforce and budget priorities.
The LLISS framework utilizes data to consider local condition and priority when determining where regional priorities align with work on the landscape. Throughout Fiscal Year 21, the Southern Region focused on building the data infrastructure and prioritization criteria for these decisions.
LLISS team members are building resources and tools to more efficiently leverage or improve existing data sources to understand forest conditions across the region and overlay diverse work priorities and initiatives such as forest resilience, water quality, recreation, prescribed burning, Great American Outdoors Act improvements and land acquisitions.
More than 18 months of work has led to an integrated data-sharing approach that has crossed boundaries internally and externally, leading to more holistic project development that meets more customer needs, while ensuring we are doing the right work, in the right place, at the right time, with the right partners. The LLISS initiative has created a safe space for learning and innovation to occur beyond traditional work assignments has rewarded and energized participants.
The LLISS team has been creating new work models for building sub teams and short teams to work across traditional work unit boundaries to tackle challenging questions and create innovative solutions. After action reviews and exit interviews have provided regular feedback that staff involved in these teams report that the LLISS work is among the most exciting, empowering and innovative of their career. Staff are taking these models and applying them forward to address other challenges in the workplace.
Looking into 2022, the LLISS initiative aims to continue supporting regional and national priorities such as tackling climate change, improving the work environment, enhancing recreation opportunities and bettering our forests and grasslands.
This series of photos was made for the Level magazine of Paraguay. For the winter edition 2007.
By gihamandelik photographic studio
Glendora, California
Listed 10/3/2013
Reference Number: 13000810
The Rubel Castle Historic District is significant under Criterion A at the local level of significance for its association with the local citrus industry, which played a crucial role in the development of the area in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Packing House and other citrus-related buildings remaining on the property are rare, remnant examples of citrus facilities that once dominated the landscape in this area. The period of significance under Criterion A is 1910-1949, representing the construction of the irrigation reservoir on the property, through the closure of the property as a working citrus ranch. The Rubel Castle Historic District is significant under Criterion C at the local level of significance as a unique, rare, and exceptional example of a folk art environment. 1 Typically these environments reflect the ""idiosyncratic visions of singular creators working with obsessive consistency over a period of years, during which time intuition replaces blueprints or formal planning toward the rebuilding process.""2 The architect, builder , engineer, and resident of the castle, Michael Clarke Rubel, had no formal training in architecture, construction, or art, and no formal designs for the castle. Although Rubel held a job as a school bus driver, his primary occupation throughout his life was constructing the castle, which also served as his residence until a few years prior to his death in 2007. The result is a monumental folk art environment created by thousands of tons of alluvial boulders from nearby washes of the San Gabriel Mountains , and thousands of recycled and found objects . The Castle's recycled objects include everything from small, everyday household items to industrial-scale objects and remnants of the early agricultural and industrial development of the San Gabriel Valley. The Castle possesses high artistic value and embodies the drstinctive characteristics of handcrafted stone masonry, as seen in its central walls, buildings, and towers . The period of significance under Criterion C is 1959, when Michael Rubel acquired the property, through 1986, when the construction of the last component of the Castle was complete. Although it was completed fewer than 50 years ago , the Rubel Castle Historic District meets Criterion Consideration G for exceptional importance. It is a rare, monumental example of a folk art environment that has been celebrated nationally since the 1970s . It is one of Glendora's most important and visited landmarks. As Michael Rubel began work on the Castle, it quickly became a community project, in which Rubel's network of friends and associates, as well as Glendoran residents, contributed materials, equipment, labor, or leads on available objects and materials. The Rubel Castle Historic District reflects the characteristics identified for significant folk art environments in the 1978 Thematic Nomination for Twentieth-Century Folk Art Environments in California.
National Register of Historic Places Homepage
Image architecturaldesigns.com By media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com
Resolution of Design home : 550 x 322 · 26 kB · jpeg
Metal Gear Solid 3: Subsistence LE - PlayStation 2 (Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Saga Vol. 1 - DVD (Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops -- PSP (Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Solid Portable Ops Plus -- PSP (Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Ac!d – PSP(Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Ac!d 2 – PSP(Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Solid: Digital Graphic Novel – PSP(Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker -- PSP (Factory Sealed)
Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker LE -- PSP (Factory Sealed)
West Coast Upgrade.
One of the problems of rebuilding a railway today is having to cope with all the trains that still have to run, with little in the way of diversionary routes to help.
A down Virgin Pendolino is seen crossing to the down slow line on the approach to Tamworth Low Level.
2nd October 2008