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Reference: APAAME_20160922_RHB-0422.jpg

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Reference: APAAME_20160523_AZ-0012.dng

Photographer: Andrea Zerbini

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

The final days of Plymouth's Central Library in the layout it's had for the past few years.

 

The Lending Library is much as it was when it opened in 1956.

 

The Reference Library has already been transformed into the History Room, but the banks of PCs will move.

 

The Scott Room, former Scott Lecture Theatre, will become the Scott Computer Room with most computers located there.

 

The former Local and Naval Studies Library will complete its transformation into the Quiet Room - a haven of peace in a busy city centre and already much appreciated by users.

 

The Music and Drama Library, in its present location for the past ten years, will move into the main body of the ground floor and its place will be taken by the Fiction collection.

 

Even the Children's Library will see some changes with a new entrance door.

 

At the same time, the library converts to self-service and the obsolete 3M security system is replaced by something that actually works.

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

Reference: APAAME_20040531_DLK-0003

Photographer: David Leslie Kennedy

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

Jaeger-LeCoultre – Master Grande Tradition Grande Complication Pink Gold

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!

 

Name: Reede

Species: English Muntjac

Sex: Male

Location from: England

Other: A young adult that was evidently sourced from roadkill. Has some minor post mortem tooth damage.

 

Species Info: Muntjacs, AKA Barking Deer, are small portly deer with striking red coats. Their most notable feature are their long canines which are used for fighting. They have no seasonal rut- instead mating year-round due to being a tropical animal.

 

These deer are native to Asian regions but have been introduced to England, where they have become one of the most common deer species.

Directly behind the computer workstations is the Reference section. Reference books include books such as encyclopedias, dictionaries, almanacs, directories, and handbooks. These books are arranged in call number order, are generally non-circulating and are denoted in the Minerva online catalog with REF in front of the call number. Reference books may occasionally circulate at the discretion of the Reference Librarian on duty.

How to prepare a plant specimen for your reference collection in the Agrostology course? Here is an example, which was prepared probably sometime during 1979 by the late Dr. Jack Rumely, former Agrostology professor.

Reference: APAAME_20160918_RHB-0021.jpg

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Reference photo found online

This is the local version of what can be seen in any shopping center that has been cleared of snow and piled up.

 

But I will use it as a reference point for the hopfully-soon melting process.

so i remember how it all goes back together :)

Finally - the peak - Telescope Peak. I managed to take a route up the mountain that no one else did. It was more direct, rocky, and very strenuous. I really understood what Frodo must have felt like while carrying The Ring up to Mt. Doom.

 

I thought that being fit from Muay Thai would have helped me but it didn't do much. I even ate a healthy meal that morning. I would take about 10 steps and then be completely, totally winded and exhausted. I was moving so slowly that I wondered if I was ever going to get to the top. In fact, I was convinced that everyone had gotten there before me and that they were wondering where I was.

 

Well, at one point I looked up and realized that I couldn't see any more trees past a certain point. It was really, actually a high ridge near the top! After I went over it, the grade flattened out. I could see the peak a little ways away - Hexodus and MAKSTER were the only ones there!

 

I got to them without stopping and they told me about how they took some route with switchbacks. I remember wishing for switchbacks for the first time in my life while I was going up.

 

We hung out for a while and wrote in the log book at the top. I actually put my Flickr address up there - I wonder if anyone will visit this page because of that.

 

I saw this USGS Reference Marker epoxied to the mountain at the top. I wonder how long it's been there.

What is good reference management software on Linux

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Some of the earliest references to Jews in Sheffield are in the Trade Directory of 1797. Another early reference is in the Jewish Chronicle which refers to a minyan, or prayer house, at the home of Solomon Myer in Union Street in 1817.

 

Sheffield's Jewish community grew from about 60 in the 1840s to about 800 in 1900. The community established itself in the Scotland Street and West Bar area, and was increased by the arrival of more immigrants, sent from London, by the Jewish Dispersal Committee in the 20th century.

 

Since the 19th century there have been several synagogues in Sheffield at Figtree Lane, North Church Street, Campo Lane, Wilson Road and now Psalter Lane. The central synagogue was destroyed by enemy action during the Blitz of December 1940.

 

This image of the Interior of Wilson Road Synagogue in Sheffield looks towards the Ark and shows the Reader's Desk in the centre of the hall, the mens benches and the womens gallery above

 

Sheffield Local Studies Library: Picture Sheffield t03042

 

For more images see: www.picturesheffield.com

 

To find out more about Sheffield’s Jewish Community download our Research Guide: www.sheffield.gov.uk/libraries/archives-and-local-studies...

 

By spending a little time with a reference librarian, you will save a lot of time in the search process.

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