View allAll Photos Tagged monitoring
Firefighters of the Tahoe National Forest monitor fire effects during the Sagehen Field Station Underburn Project. Oct 6, 2023 – Tahoe National Forest – Truckee Ranger District. This photo was selected as the October 2023, employee photo contest winner: Relationships with people, and the land, to include fire.
(USDA Forest Service Photograph by Jonathan Cook-Fisher)
A testing of a series of small monitors by Jason Bruges Studio for a show at the V&A.
Shoreditch, London
Please also look at the rest of my recent collection
www.flickr.com/photos/dcwhite/show/
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In this podcast I expose Splitweet! "Easy management for multiple Twitter accounts and brand monitor. The definitive twitter client for heavy & corporate users. How many twitter accounts do you have?" -splitweet.com.
I really like my new 50mm f/1.8 lens.
I welcome and encourage all comments, suggestions, and criticism.
Please, tell me what you think!
The Pronghorn Antelope and Mule Deer herds are monitored by radio collar for movements every winter in the Pinedale area of Wyoming. I really appreciate your visits and comments!
Golden Eagle Launch: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5496473099/
Rocky Mountain Goats: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5481816781/
Sage Grouse: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5472869586/
Rocky Mountain Goats: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5452454572/
GBH Out on a Limb: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5447110698/
Teton Backdrop: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5438808748/
Mule Deer Mountains: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5425352096/
Napping Moose: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5418277257/
Big Horn series: www.flickr.com/photos/somewhereoutside/5413751532/
Nice when Viewed on Black , © DouglasMcCartney, SomewhereOutside, All Rights Reserved
The Bengal monitor (Varanus bengalensis) or common Indian monitor, is a monitor lizard found widely distributed over South Asia. This large lizard is mainly terrestrial, and grows to about 175 cm from the tip of the snout to the end of the tail. Young monitors may be more arboreal, but adults mainly hunt on the ground, preying mainly on arthropods, but also taking small terrestrial vertebrates, ground birds, eggs and fish. Although large monitors have few predators apart from humans who hunt them for meat, younger individuals are hunted by many predators.
Sandia postdoctoral fellow Alex Downs places a wearable puck with microneedles under a microscope.
Researchers have combined earlier work on minimally invasive microneedles with nanoscale sensors, called aptamers, to create a wearable sensor patch capable of continuously monitoring the levels of vancomycin — considered a "last line of defense" antibiotic — in patients.
Learn more at bit.ly/3tuIr2C
Photo by Craig Fritz
Closeup of a 3ft Monitor Lizard, which we almost (literally) bumped into on the way back to the hotel room.
Not sure what type of Monitor this is, any ideas anyone?
Photo taken in the Samburu National Reserve.
vertical monitor for web reading. horizontal for twhirl and ichat. not to mention iPhoto, iMovie and about 35 tabs open in firefox
This is my old pet Savannah Monitor. He was one of the best pets I ever have had. Most people think he's mean, but to me he was a big baby! all I had to do was scratch the top of his head and he would close his eye's and lean into me. I will say be careful because the few people he did bite, he bit them hard. Before you ask where I got him, I got him from a neighbor who's roommate's did not want him in the house anymore because he bit them. I do not know where they got him.