View allAll Photos Tagged monitoring
Here's the propeller. Since the shaft is just glued at one end, I set the model on end for the glue to dry
125 Monitor St., Jersey City, (f/k/a 130 Pine St. in Jersey City, N.J. on Monday, Aug. 10, 2020. The Property was developed in the early 1900’s and was the former site of an engine refurbishing business as well as multiple industrial tenants through the years, which resulted in soil and groundwater contamination. Currently, the Property is the location of an abandoned 6-story warehouse. (Office of the Attorney General / Tim Larsen)
Lace Monitor Lizard/Goanna in the Springbrook National Park, Gold Coast Hinterland. This is the biggest one I've seen, about 5 feet long head to tail. It started hissing at me after about 5 minutes, I think it'd had enough. I'm not sure whether the hissing was a warning to me or not, but I decided to move away! These massive lizards flick their tongues in & out like a snake. Just after I saw this one I nearly trod on a smaller one (about 1.5 ft long) & it wasn't bothered, it just sat there enjoying the sun!
Remote Access, Peru: Field visits & workshops with the community-based environmental monitors of FEDIQUEP.
Veröffentlichung des eGovernment MONITOR 2015 am 30.07.2015 im Bundesinnenministerum mit Pressekonferenz und Fachgespräch in Anwesenheit von Staatssekretärin Cornelia Rogall-Grothe (BMI) und Staatssekretär Andreas Statzkowski (Berlin).
Eine Studie der Initiative D21 und ipima.
Alle Fotos veröffentlicht unter der Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0 DE – Jana Kausch
In July, community volunteers joined Harris Center naturalists Karen Seaver, Susie Spikol, and Brett Amy Thelen to survey for monarch eggs and caterpillars in a Harris Center-conserved milkweed patch in Peterborough.
Our data were collected and submitted to the Monarch Larva Monitoring Project during the International Monarch Monitoring Blitz, an annual research effort aimed at understanding and protecting monarch butterflies throughout North America.
photo: Brett Amy Thelen
This is a neighbour of ours that comes to visit sometimes. It is about 3 ft long and is called a go in the Urdu language. It lives on the hospital grounds with us. There are a couple of others, both bigger than this one.
An INNATE observer/monitor at work (John Watson, with white armband), Garvaghy Road, Portadown, 1992, around the time of the parade through the area on the Sunday before 12th July. The monitor is watching interaction between police and Brian Lennon (second from left, back to camera) as a representative of the Drumcree Faith and Justice Group (DFJ, other members of that group are in the foreground). INNATE monitors were present at the invitation of DFJ.
DFJ did interact with the police in a direct but friendly manner in this situation. On one occasion they succeeded in getting the police to withdraw police dogs out of sight for fear that it would antagonise residents - who might think "So this is how they mean to treat us...."
This photo is part of an album on monitoring and accompaniment. Please click on the album (below right) to see further information and references. It also appears in an album on the Drumcree Faith and Justice Group.
An article which includes coverage of some of DFJ's work is at innatenonviolence.org/wp/2023/12/01/drumcree-before-drumc...
22" TFT Active Matrix LED Monitor with Screen+ for work productivity , Kensington Security Slot,VGA and DVI-D connectivity.
[Modelo E2260SD]
Pitfall-style insect interceptors can be used to monitor for bed bugs. However, monitors can pick up other arthropods as well. For more information on bed bug management, visit: nysipm.cornell.edu/whats-bugging-you/bed-bugs
My old trusty Nec multisync 2010x lcd monitor, 1280x1024 native resolution, can display much every resolution you can throw at it, upscaling or downscaling as appropiate, support sync on green and composite sync, can be used with sgi, sun, ibm, dec system and others.
Showing CDE login from an HP Visualize C3000 workstation.