View allAll Photos Tagged rays
Secret man of the seas and hero of the waves! He's a pretty intense explosives-using environmentalist.
TEEN CHOICE 2013: Paramore performs at TEEN CHOICE 2013, airing LIVE Sunday, Aug. 11 (8:00-10:00 PM ET live/PT tape-delayed) on FOX at Gibson Amphitheater, Universal City, CA. CR: Ray Mickshaw/FOX
Ray Fisher speaking at the 2017 San Diego Comic Con International, for "Justice League", at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Bon, ça faisait longtemps, on reprend les bonnes habitudes, un coucher de soleil ^^.
Trois-Bassins, La Réunion, 2012
Ray Jones playing guitar, Redwood Valley, 1976.
Permission from California Historical Society needed to use this photo.
I love the rays. This was shot with my HTC Incredible which has an 8mp camera. Not that bad for a cell camera. Uploaded straight from the phone to Flickr.
Let the rays of hope and happiness come in...
===========================================================================
© All rights reserved
Please don't copy, edit or use this image on websites, blogs or other media. However if you are interested in using any of my images, please feel free to contact with me.
===========================================================================
Rays of Hope Donor Roundtable held at the Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. 13 June 2022.
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Welcome Remarks:
Lisa Stevens, IAEA Director, Programme of Action for Cancer Therapy (PACT)
Overview of the Ray of Hope Initiative by:
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General
Najat Mokhtar, IAEA Deputy Director-General and Head of the Department of Nuclear Sciences and Applications
Benin’s Story as one of the Rays of Hope country example by:
Dr. A Talon, Health Advisor to the President of Benin
Announcements of support to Rays of Hope:
HE Mr. Takeshi Hikihara, Resident Representative of Japan to the IAEA
HE Mr. Xavier Sticker, Resident Representative of France to the IAEA
HE Mr. Lorenzo Ravano, Charge D’Affaires PM of Monaco
Mr. Sang Wook Kang, Minister Counsellor PM of the Rep. of Korea
HE Ms. Annika Markovic, Resident Representative of Sweden to the IAEA
HE Ms. Laura S. H. Holgate, Resident Representative of the United States of America to the IAEA
Closing Remarks:
Hua Liu, IAEA Deputy Director-General and Head of the Department of Technical Cooperation
The cownose ray (Rhinoptera bonasus) is a species of eagle ray found throughout a large part of the western Atlantic and Caribbean, from New England, USA to southern Brazil. Cownose rays grow rapidly, and male rays often reach about 35 inches (89 cm) in width and weigh 26 pounds (12 kg). Females typically reach 28 inches (71 cm) in width and weigh 36 pounds (16 kg).
The embryo grows within its mother with its wings folded over its body. Initially it is nourished by an egg yolk, although the uterine secretions of the mother nourish it later in its development. There is some dispute about the length of gestation. At full term the offspring is born live, exiting tail first.
The cownose ray is 11 to 18 inches (28 to 46 cm) in width at birth. A mature specimen can grow to 45 inches (1.1 m) in width, and weigh 50 pounds (23 kg) or more. There is some controversy over the size that a mature cownose ray can reach. A ray reaching a span of 84 inches has been recorded.
A cownose ray is typically brown-backed with a whitish or yellowish belly. Although its coloration is not particularly distinctive, its shape is easily recognizable. It has a broad head with wide-set eyes, and a pair of distinctive lobes on its subrostral fin. It also has a set of dental plates designed for crushing clams and oyster shells. There are a series of canine teeth that are hidden behind the dental plates. When threatened the cownose ray can use the barb at the base of its tail to defend itself from the threat.
A cownose ray has a stinger, called a spine, on its tail, close to the ray's body. This spine has teeth lining its lateral edges, and is coated with a weak venom that which causes symptoms similar to that of a bee sting.
The cownose ray feeds upon clams, oysters, hard clams and other invertebrates. It uses two modified fins on its front side to produce suction, which allows it to draw food into its mouth, where it crushes its food with its dental plates. Cownose rays typically swim in groups, which allows them to use their synchronized wing flaps to stir up sediment and expose buried clams and oysters.
New York Aquarium Coney Island NY
Ray Masterson places a belt for the sword to be stuck in to. Now watch out world for girl power!
Ray's motto: Blow Up Balloons Not Bombs!
Please click here to read the plaque!
No HDR on this! It's not like I did not try with the 3-exposure shots I got. Just didn't think the process did much to make this more interesting.
To view my other HDR images, click here.
I bough myself some time by driving around 5 miles to the north and west, and was rewarded with clear skies for a time. The rayed arc is these with a twisted band to the northeast, drifting towards the west. Ideally I would have headed towards the Moray coast, but with an early start the next day, I decided to stay up no later that 1 O clock.
Composed of 3 images taken around 2307 UTC, using my sigma 24mm lens, f2.8 ISO 800, 30 second exposures.
From the Justice League portion of the Warner Brothers Pictures presentation at San Diego Comic-Con in Hall H on Saturday July 22nd 2017
Photos from my Kodak Pony 135, made sometime between 1950 and 1954.
What I really like about this shot is that the camera caught more of the sun's rays than my naked eye did.
Walgreens Photo 200
PictionID:46169854 - Catalog:16_007445 - Title:Dornier Do 172 - Filename:16_007445.TIF - Image from the Ray Wagner Collection. Ray Wagner was Archivist at the San Diego Air and Space Museum for several years and is an author of several books on aviation --- ---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
of My Chemical Romance live @ Palasharp (Milan, Italy) on Mar. 7th.
------
This image is copyright © Francesco Castaldo. All right reserved. This photo must not be used under ANY circumstances without written consent.
Questa immagine è protetta da copyright © Francesco Castaldo. Tutti i diritti sono riservati. L'immagine non deve essere utilizzata in nessun caso senza autorizzazione scritta dell'autore.
Photos of Ray provided by his surviving son Jim.
Background photo taken during the May 28, 1960 Open-House at RAF Bruntingthorpe, England,
3 St. Peter's Street
Salem, Massachusetts
SCPH 17-049
Citation: Nelson Dionne Salem History Collection,
Salem State University Archives and Special Collections, Salem, Massachusetts
Okie so sorry this is uhhh two days late? although like I mentioned I was at a funeral. I got a few shots I thought I would like and ended up hating them, although I do want to go back to my grandmothers 72 acres of land to do some more shooting. I need some new bands to listen to although I'm currently addicted to the scissor sisters due to...welllll...Jake Shears. Anyway I hope you all enjoy this.