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Delaware Shaft No. 1 Boiler & Compressor House

These offset patio umbrellas provided weather protection for this restaurant's outdoor seating area.

Please give credit to my Facebook page if re-posting any image. www.facebook.com/CStarendaPhotography

Photo By Fabrice Robin

Offset Disc Harrow when mounted on a tractor, becomes a compact unit that can easily be maneuvered into corners or on short head lands. The spring loaded head stock brace of the mounted harrow allows flexibility of the unit over uneven terrain or where obstructions are likely to be met. It is used in open field workings for the superficial ploughing, for the shattering of clods, preparation of soil for sowing, burial of organic substances & remains. It can be used in light and medium soil. - www.atcomaart.com/pd/57516766495148554969/offset-disc-har...

Postdoctoral researcher Stacy Zhang holds a collected sediment sample in a lab at the Institute of Marine Sciences on March 30, 2021, in Morehead City. Zhang, a Covenant Scholar who obtained her undergraduate biology degree from UNC, is working on a shoreline restoration project with professors Antonio Rodriguez and Michael Piehler and associate professor Joel Fodre. According to the project team leaders, their goal is to create a new carbon offset for UNC through the creation of a saltmarsh and oyster-reef habitat near the IMS shorefront. They indicate that saltmarshes are “blue carbon” habitats which fix carbon dioxide in excess of respiration and bury carbon in sediments. The oyster-reef acts as a barrier, protecting the saltmarsh from waves and currents. Team leaders said their hope is for the project to serve as an enduring educational tool and demonstration of UNC’s broad vision in the ongoing efforts to achieve carbon neutrality. The IMS is an off-campus research laboratory, teaching, outreach, and service unit of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

(Johnny Andrews/UNC-Chapel Hill)

Digital offset printed business card for an arborist in southern california. Designed by Paper Monkey Press

Boring the offset holes that will cause the tenons to draw up tight when the oak pegs are driven home. That won't be until after the frame is assembled and the benchtop fully seated on the leg tenons, though.

Offset 2012 Day 3

Gran Canal Theatre, Dublin, 11 March 2012

iloveoffset.com

 

60 more pics at

nerosunero/offset/Day 3

 

Pics by nerosunero

Offset 2012 Day 3

Gran Canal Theatre, Dublin, 11 March 2012

iloveoffset.com

 

60 more pics at

nerosunero/offset/Day 3

 

Pics by nerosunero

The San Andreas Fault, here exposed on the floor of the Carrizo Plain in one of the most desolate and least-visited regions of California. Note the offset stream cutting across the fault. On the far side is the Pacific plate and on the near side the North American. It's a right-lateral fault, meaning the other side of it is moving to the right, on whichever side you stand. The Pacific side is moving to the northwest in a motion geologists call "right step." Streams that once flowed straight across the fault now step to the right before they continue. These steps are recent. The plate below has moved hundreds of miles in the last two dozen million years. One study says stream channels were offset up to 50 feet in the 1857 Fort Tejon quake, one of the largest in historic time.

The Yukon Anti-Slice Driver is a much-anticipated tool to help correct the #1 problem for golfers everywhere. With an optimal offset of 5mm this club is the perfect way to embrace the comfort of your own swing while allowing the club to do the adjusting.

 

Get the full details here:

 

pinemeadowgolf.com/golf-clubs/yukon/?pgpid=lagolf

Angkor (Khmer: អង្គរ or នគរ, "Capital City")[1][2] is a region of Cambodia that served as the seat of the Khmer Empire, which flourished from approximately the 9th to 15th centuries. The word Angkor is derived from the Sanskrit nagara (नगर), meaning "city".[3] The Angkorian period began in AD 802, when the Khmer Hindu monarch Jayavarman II declared himself a "universal monarch" and "god-king", and lasted until the late 14th century, first falling under Ayutthayan suzerainty in 1351. A Khmer rebellion resulted in the 1431 sacking of Angkor by Ayutthaya, causing its population to migrate south to Longvek.

 

The ruins of Angkor are located amid forests and farmland to the north of the Great Lake (Tonlé Sap) and south of the Kulen Hills, near modern-day Siem Reap city (13°24′N, 103°51′E), in Siem Reap Province. The temples of the Angkor area number over one thousand, ranging in scale from nondescript piles of brick rubble scattered through rice fields to the magnificent Angkor Wat, said to be the world's largest single religious monument. Many of the temples at Angkor have been restored, and together, they comprise the most significant site of Khmer architecture. Visitors approach two million annually, and the entire expanse, including Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom is collectively protected as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The popularity of the site among tourists presents multiple challenges to the preservation of the ruins.

 

In 2007, an international team of researchers using satellite photographs and other modern techniques concluded that Angkor had been the largest preindustrial city in the world, with an elaborate infrastructure system connecting an urban sprawl of at least 1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi) to the well-known temples at its core.[4] Angkor is considered to be a "hydraulic city" because it had a complicated water management network, which was used for systematically stabilizing, storing, and dispersing water throughout the area.[5] This network is believed to have been used for irrigation in order to offset the unpredictable monsoon season and to also support the increasing population.[4] The closest rival to Angkor, the Mayan city of Tikal in Guatemala, was between 100 and 150 square kilometres (39 and 58 sq mi) in total size.[6] Although the size of its population remains a topic of research and debate, newly identified agricultural systems in the Angkor area may have supported up to one million people

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angkor

Use the offset too to draw two new lines near the middle of the domino, one on each side of the one you've just drawn.

 

Click the Offset tool button (or press 'O' on your keyboard) then click the middle line, move your mouse away a little then click again. Do this again to draw another line on the other side of the middle line.

 

Now use the general dimension tool to re-position the two new lines. Make the distance between each line 0.5mm. The original middle line will not move - as long as it is in the middle of the domino, if you didn't use the snap then it might move!

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