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A final instar Map butterfly larva attaches itself to a Stinging Nettle leaf before pupating. The Map is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is common throughout the lowlands of central and eastern Europe, and is expanding its range in western Europe.
Thanks for your visit… Any comment you make on my photograph is greatly appreciated and encouraging! But please do not use this image without permission.
I never much cared for this unit once it was painted up in this scheme. Just about everything WC did turned to gold in my mind except for this beast. The flag unit was much nicer in my opinion but anyway here is 3026 leading 7510 on the OACTI at Soo Yard on February 22, 2001.
The view of northwest Dorset from UA5 at around 27,000' whilst coasting in towards Heathrow.
As with last week's Sunday Landscape flic.kr/p/2qEYTfv I have added location notes over the photo. The white boxes are not easy to pick out against the snowy landscape. However, you can hover your mouse over the photo in an attempt to see them.
- You may stare at that map for as long as you want, but, here, read my lips: We! Are! Lost! Can't you at least admit it, trooper?
- *sigh*
This is a map butterfly (Araschnia levana) in summer colors.
Taken with Sony A-6000 (Sony ILCE-6000) and SEL FE90M28G Macro as RAW. Converted to JPEG with LR 5.7
The outline of our Galaxy, the Milky Way, and of its neighbouring Magellanic Clouds, in an image based on housekeeping data from ESA’s Gaia satellite, indicating the total number of stars detected every second in each of the satellite's fields of view.
Brighter regions indicate higher concentrations of stars, while darker regions correspond to patches of the sky where fewer stars are observed.
The plane of the Milky Way, where most of the Galaxy’s stars reside, is evidently the brightest portion of this image, running horizontally and especially bright at the centre. Darker regions across this broad strip of stars, known as the Galactic Plane, correspond to dense, interstellar clouds of gas and dust that absorb starlight along the line of sight.
The Galactic Plane is the projection on the sky of the Galactic disc, a flattened structure with a diameter of about 100 000 light-years and a vertical height of only 1000 light-years.
Beyond the plane, only a few objects are visible, most notably the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, two dwarf galaxies orbiting the Milky Way, which stand out in the lower right part of the image. A few globular clusters – large assemblies up to millions of stars held together by their mutual gravity – are also sprinkled around the Galactic Plane.
Acknowledgement: this image was prepared by Edmund Serpell, a Gaia Operations Engineer working in the Mission Operations Centre at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany.
This work is licenced under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO (CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO) licence.
Credit: ESA/Gaia – CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
Petroglyphs near some Native American sleeping circles and remnants of the old trail followed by the natives, in Death Valley National Park. I'm calling it a "map rock" because the older gentleman that tipped me to the location many years ago called it that. I'm very curious if Jim Doss can identify the location; I'm guessing he can.
here is a just-published interview with me: www.capitalfringe.org/blog/transformer-meet-the-artist-ren/
Provence, France. Taken with Fuji X-T2 with XF50-140 +1.4X and Canon 500D close up filter. To see a wider range of images. Please click on the link below.
oh noes tomorrow i have a meeting at the JR railpass corner in Tokyo station. finding the specific place on the map doesn't really make me not worry. halp.
Our Daily Challenge 29 December - 4 January : Map.
The walls are thick with mosses with all the damp, and even as a child I thought they looked like maps.
Now, with images from Google Earth in full colour, They are even more like views from above.
An old map measurer wheel (just looked this up on Mr Google to see if there was a proper name for it, but disappointingly there doesn't seem to be one) that must be over 60 years old so I call that ancient! My Dad used to love using it and it came with us on every holiday in the UK.
For Crazy Tuesday: Old
and I hope it counts for 123 pictures in 2023 scientific instrument (without a nice scientific name)
Come try on the Cloe Tippy Toe Heels @ Tantrum for the Level99L Sale
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- Des mào th nhoe =) kòn nhiu là gốc hếc đó :">
- K.m đi ♥
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(*) Lề :
- K.m + Fav + Note ♥
- NOT CHÙA - CHÙA mét má nèk =)=)
Reminiscing by looking at a Flickr map... What wonderful stories this map of lower Manhattan and its surroundings brings back to me...
I really need the next wider view to really cover my beginnings. I lived, worked, or studied in all the five boroughs of New York City: Staten Island, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and The Bronx. This map shows only small parts of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.