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This was seen en route to Tom Price from the south. If anyone can tell me what type of goanna it is, I would be grateful. Its marking were unlike others I've seen. (see comment)
This is scanned from the original slide.
Wildlife seen in Sri Lanka
Water Monitors seen in and around the Lighthouse Hotel near Galle
Sri Lanka
march 2011
TO VIEW sit back from your monitor 2 feet and place your index finger about 10 inches in front of your eyes and focus on your finger. This will cause your eyes to go comfortably cross eyed. Keep that same cross eyed focus and notice there are now 3 photos in the back ground. Do not let your eyes leave the cross eye as you look at the middle picture which has appeared. Now increase or decrease how much your eyes are cross eyed until the image pops into 3D. Your eyes will want to leave the cross eye, but fight that urge. This is an acquired skill and takes practice. Stop if it's uncomfortable.
Following the success of the USS Monitor, many other ships of a similar design were created for the North. The monitor USS Catskill was one of many. She first reported for duty in February of 1863, as part of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Arriving in Port Royal, South Carolina in March of 1865, she spent the rest of the war participating in the blockade of Charleston. During one of these missions the Commanding Officer (Commander Rodgers) was killed when the ship was shelled by Confederate guns on shore.
Following the war, she returned to the Philadelphia Naval Yard and was decommissioned in July of 1865. During this time many of the Civil War era ships were placed in reserve for the possibility of future service.
In 1873, she was called back to service and was commissioned in 1875 but was again put in storage in 1877. With the outbreak of the Spanish-American war in 1898, she was once again brought back for service. This last commission lasted only from April to September of 1898 when she was once again put in storage. Finally in December of 1901 she was sold for scrap and stricken from the Navy records.
The artist wears a helmet-like devise with visor, and via a live stream transmitted onto a screen, the “travelers” can explore the city and speak with passers-by. Reversely, the citizens can learn about the virtual travelers culture through conversation. With his unusual tours through the cities of the Western world, Monitor Man raises awareness of the realities faced by those who live in different worlds. Through telepresence, an artificial closeness is created between places and people.
The photo is showing Yassine Khaled.
Credit: tom mesic
Best viewed BIG.Even the security monitor is colour coordinated in green in Jean Nouvel's Serpentine Pavillion 2010.
Nová generácia hodiniek, ktoré kombinujú čas a monitorovanie aktivity. www.synetics.sk/withings-activite.html
Having seen one lizard in the undergrowth earlier on our walk, when we got to the lake we couldn't believe that there were two more swimming in the water, and they came very close to the viewing platform.
Ben caught this angry little monitor lizard on the island... as he's always wanted to, and I thought it looked like such a little velociraptor!
This is the schematic for a small PV solar panel battery monitor using
a pair of Xbee devices. The ADCs report can be interpreted to send
voltage and current data of the panels performance.
Monitors piping water. Boston Hydraulic mine. 1911.
Name of Expedition: Panama Canal Zone
Participants: Seth E. Meek, Samuel F. Hildebrand
Expedition Start Date: 1911
Expedition End Date: 1912
Purpose or Aims: Zoology (Fishes)
Location: Central America, Panama, Canal Zone
Original material: album print
Digital Identifier: CSZ24248
Learn more about The Field Museum's Library Photo Archives.
The Papua monitor (also known as Crocodile monitor) is a lizard from New Guinea. There is some speculation that it could grow up to nearly 5 meters long, which would make it the longest of all lizards, but this one, like all other known specimens, is less than half that.
This particular lizard was fond of climbing a small tree, looking quite silly dangling from it with its limbs and tail waving around like crazy, but unfortunately I didn't manage to get a good shot of that in the dim light.
Feel free to use this video but give credit to: www.traveling-shapy.de/
Das Video steht zur freien Verfügung jedoch gebt: www.traveling-shapy.de/ als Urheber an.