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those tiny specs of yellow are mammooth coal shovels that dwarf the monster trucks, the scale is unimaginable here, so is the impact...
via www.pembina.org/
The Alyeska Pipeline wanders through the tundra of the eastern Alaska Range. The fall colors are gorgeous!
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Pump Station No. 4, about 145 miles south of Prudhoe Bay, is a launching and receiving station for devices known as pigs. These "dumb" and "smart" monitors, matching the shape of the interior pipe wall, are pushed through the pipeline by the oil, cleaning accumulated deposits and enhancing pipeline flow as they travel (dumb pigs), and measuring pipeline curvature and inspecting for corrosion, changes in pipe diameter and other problems requiring maintenance or repair (smart pigs).
GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN--What's that? Need to get some metal in your life? No room for a big cabinet? PROBLEM SOLVED.
On Sunday March 2nd, over 1,000 students and young people marched from Georgetown University to the White House for a massive youth sit-in against the Keystone XL pipeline.
Find out more at xldissent.org
Photo by Zakee Kuduro, EAC
A pipeline on the ground next to the walkway at Nederstaleden in Västerhaninge. Un update from this photo.
The Alaska pipeline has transported over 16 billion barrels of oil from Prudhoe Bay in the north to the port of Valdez since it was completed in 1977 . It crosses several mountain ranges and is 800 miles long.
The pipe is 4 ft. in diameter. The vertical structures alongside of the pipeline are designed to cool the line down from the 145 degree fahrenheit rise in temperature caused by the friction of the flowing oil. I'm keeping my hand warm by touching the pipe.
Alaskan Pipeline running across tundra near Alaska Range and Richardson Highway... above ground because of tundra/perma-frost ... heatsinks to reduce heaving/sinking
GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN--Sometimes, a functional furniture becomes an art piece. Combine distressed wood planks, iron pipelines, small castors and you have yourself an urbanite's must-have. Maximum industrial impact, minimal space consumption: 95 x 36 x 122cm.
Osh Johnson, seen here making traditional Diné (Navajo) fry bread, is a good example of how this Indigenous peoples' movement grew: through banding together in support of the Lakota/Dakota/Nakota people whose land the Oceti Sakowin Camp sits atop and who's youth and water everyone is focused on protecting.