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The history of the cartographic science in Greece starts in 1889 with the foundation of Military Geographic Service. The trigonometric network was based on the coordinates of the old Athens' Observatory (37°58'20.132"N and 23°42'58.815"E)
In order to cartograph a big terrain, e.g. a whole country, the whole area must be covered by a network of reference points which must be fixed in position. Such a reference point can be viewed in this image.
In the outer circle it says "Millitary Geographic Service" and in the inner "Trigonometric Network". It is located on the Sympetro mountain in Kos.
I purchased these speakers online from Crutchfield. Excellent price, sales and service. I would recommend them to anyone. They came with speaker adapters and installation documentation for free!
as point of reference, there are mating marks on the platen casting, and the machined gear that fixes the eccentric's position by way of a keyed shaft inside the casting with the set screw backed off.
Reference: APAAME_20221103_FB-0434
Photographer: Firas Bqa'in
Credit: APAAME
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivative Works
Format: 35 mm svart/hvitt negativ
Film: Kodak Tri-X Pan Safety Film
Dato / Date: 1972
Fotograf / Photographer: Byantikvaren
Sted / Place: Prinsens gate 51, Trondheim
Wikipedia: Prinsens gate (Trondheim)
Eier / Owner Institution: Trondheim byarkiv, The Municipal Archives of Trondheim
Arkivreferanse / Archive reference: Tor.H43.P03.F14084, film 195 neg. 9
Bobcat texture/detail
This is meant to be used as reference or as a texture to use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!
John Battelle blogs about the recent spike for Answers.com since Google gave it the nod, compared to Ask.com.
But when you look in the reference category you get this Alexa comparison. Who is refering who?
The main Pollak Library reference desk was moved to this location in August 2014 due to service location rearrangements to accommodate the south wing building closures after the March 2014 earthquake.
www.library.fullerton.edu/visiting/reference-desk.php
Photo by Pollak Library Marketing student assistant Carose Le.
Established in 1909, the Toronto Reference Library initially operated from another building on College Street. In the late-1960s, management of the library was assumed by the Metropolitan Toronto Library Board. Believing the space in the original structure to be inadequate, Raymond Moriyama was tasked to find a new site, and was later commissioned by the board to design a new building for the site. The new building was opened to the public in 1977 as the Metropolitan Toronto Reference Library, and the library continued to operate under that name until 1998, when it reverted to its original name. The building underwent renovations and expansion from 2009 to 2014.
Nikon F5 - AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm 1:2.8G - Kodak Tri-X 400 @ ASA-320
Zone Imaging 510-Pyro (1+100) 8:00 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700 + Silverfast 9 SE
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC
The main Pollak Library reference desk was moved to this location in August 2014 due to service location rearrangements to accommodate the south wing building closures after the March 2014 earthquake.
www.library.fullerton.edu/visiting/reference-desk.php
Photo by Pollak Library Marketing student assistant Carose Le.