View allAll Photos Tagged referencement
Here's my leaning Saber next to Maid Saber. So is this a normal lean, or should I be worried about her tumbling over? Anyone else have this problem? How'd you fix it, if you did?
This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!
Name: Jack
Species: Virginia Opossum
Sex: Male
Location from: Ohio
Other: An adult male that dropped dead in my barn when I lived in a rural area in Ohio. He was found in the morning, already beginning to decay, likely died early in the night before. He has evidence of a severe infection in his lower left jaw, and a broken right top canine with sign of beginning infection in the bone of the root canal of the same tooth. His incisors are missing post mortem.
Species Info: Opossums are known for their playing-dead characteristic, which helps preserve them when faced with a threat. They have an unusually short lifespan of up to 2 years (4 in captivity) and are omnivorous, preferring fruit, grain, insects, worms, and small animals like birds and snakes.
Opossum are native to Central and East North America and most of Mexico. They are not native to West US, but a small percentage have been introduced. Opossums do not do well in cold environments and thus are not found in the majority of Canada or North-West states.
Pugley is the result of an accidental breeding of a top showing French Bulldog and a top showing Pug.
He's called Pugley because his owners describe him affectionately as being 'pig ugly'.
This was one of a collection of reference photos for a commissioned portrait.
SoHoMaven recommends Ultimate Office's Arm Reference Organizer. This organizer not only alleviates paper clutter, it alleviates itself as clutter - arm extends and retracts providing a mobility and organization.
Athens, Georgia
Listed 7/23/2013
Reference Number: 13000530
The T.R.R. Cobb House is a two-story Greek Revival-style house located in downtown Athens, Georgia. Built in 1834 as an 1-house house, the Cobb house featured two principal rooms divided by a center hall on both floors and a full-width shed-roofed front porch and a rear range of rooms covered with a shed roof. In 1844, the Cobbs received the house as a wedding gift and began renovations, which increased the size of the house. In 1852 the Cobbs added a recessed portico with colossal Doric columns flanked by octagonal end bays. The Cobb house was listed in the National Register in 1975, but was delisted from the National Register in 1985 because the second location at Stone Mountain Park in DeKalb County did not receive the approval of the National Park Service. The T.R.R. Cobb House is significant at the state level under National Register Criterion C in the area of architecture because it is an exceptional and unique interpretation of the Greek Revival style in Georgia with its octagonal bays, recessed portico, and Greek Revival-style entablature. The Cobb house meets Criterion Consideration B as a moved building because the house was moved as a measure to save it and because it has been moved to a new location very close to its original location in Athens and on a site that is compatible with its original site on Prince Avenue.
National Register of Historic Places Homepage
This is a great place to start your research. The Reference area includes Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, Atlases and more. The books found in the Reference section on the 2nd Floor cannot be taken out of the library, but you can photocopy anything you find there.
Need to find Reference materials online? Try our Britannica Online moe.ic.highline.edu:2048/login?url=http://search.eb.com
or ask a Reference Librarian for help flightline.highline.edu/reference/offcampus.html
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.
Twin City, Georgia
Listed 2/8/2014
Reference Number: 13001168
The Twin City Historic District is significant on the area of architecture for its excellent examples of historic residential, commercial, and community landmark buildings. The majority of the buildings in the district were built from the 1880s to the 1950s and reflect the style and type of commercial and residential architecture which was so prominent in Georgia's towns and cities during this period.
National Register of Historic Places Homepage
Life at Luton Sixth Form at the moment! Student end of year reference writing. Colin Souster doing the business.
Allison Leigh during the discussion period. Each of the presentations were intersectional, ranging from gender representation, visual culture to race. Paying close attention is Daniel Hanglberger (Johannes-Kepler-Universität Linz, Austria) who later presented on "The Russian Revolution, (Black) Communism/Socialism, and the Formulation of a Black Nation in the Garvey Era."
Seola7 head on a minifee ,, cutie legs, small bust
It's not ideal, but it is for posing and my bank account!
Some skull reference gathered during the sculpting of the skull. Taken in the 'Dentists' at 'Beamish'!
Taken from Wikipedia:
Dun an Sticir (grid reference NF89717767) is located on a small island in Loch an Sticir on the east side of the B893 road, 0.8 kilometers south of Newtonferry. The name is also misspelled Dun an Sticer and Dun an Sticar. The island, on which the broch stands, is connected by a causeway to another larger island called Eilean na Mi-Chomhairle (Island of Bad Council). This larger island is connected via two causeways to the mainland. Dun an Sticir is freely accessible. At high tide, the causeways may be partially submerged.
The name Dun an Sticir is derived from "dun", which means "fortress", and "sticir" which means "skulker". Thus Dun an Sticir means Fort Skulker. Only in the second half of the twentieth century did it become clear that the structure was a broch.
History
Dun an Sticir was probably built in the Iron Age in the period between 100 BC and 100 AD, like most brochs. Limited excavations resulted in finds of pottery.
The broch was probably inhabited during the Viking period. In the Middle Ages the broch was converted into a rectangular hall, or small tower. The entrance was enlarged and a window was constructed. Outbuildings were added and there was a larger building on Eilean na Mi-Chomhairle. The causeway from the north side of the loch to Eilean na Mi-Chomhairle was widened to 3 meters, so that carts could get to the island.
Hugh MacDonald of Sleat (Scottish Gaelic: Ùisdean MacGilleEasbuig Chlèirich), son of Hugh the Clerk, inhabited Dun Sticir in 1602. He was the Factor to North Uist in the 1580s. In 1586 he hatched a plan to murder his cousin, Donald Gorm, 8th Chief of the Macdonalds of Sleat. After his plan was discovered, he fled to Dun an Sticir. He was eventually captured when he tried to escape a siege of his castle, Caisteal Uisdean, on Skye. As punishment, he was starved to death in the dungeon of Duntulm Castle on Skye.
Construction
Dun an Sticir is located on an island in a loch. A wide stone causeway leads from the north to the island of Eilean na Mi-Chomhairle. A second, smaller causeway leads from the south side of the lake to the same island. A third causeway curves from that island to the east to the small island on which the broch lies. The causeways are partially submerged at high tide.
The broch has a total diameter of 18 metres. The walls of the broch are 3.5 metres thick and in some places a little more than three metres high.
The circular interior of the broch was in the Middle Ages transformed into a rectangular area 10 metres by 4.6 metres. The axis is northeast–southwest. The entrances are 1.1 metres wide, located in the northwest and southwest of the rectangular space. The wall at the southwestern entrance is 2.5 metres thick.
Photo - (c) C.H.Stocker
Literature (c) Wikipedia
This is meant to be used as anatomy reference or use in art. Please see my profile for usage rules!
Name: Jack
Species: Virginia Opossum
Sex: Male
Location from: Ohio
Other: An adult male that dropped dead in my barn when I lived in a rural area in Ohio. He was found in the morning, already beginning to decay, likely died early in the night before. He has evidence of a severe infection in his lower left jaw, and a broken right top canine with sign of beginning infection in the bone of the root canal of the same tooth. His incisors are missing post mortem.
Species Info: Opossums are known for their playing-dead characteristic, which helps preserve them when faced with a threat. They have an unusually short lifespan of up to 2 years (4 in captivity) and are omnivorous, preferring fruit, grain, insects, worms, and small animals like birds and snakes.
Opossum are native to Central and East North America and most of Mexico. They are not native to West US, but a small percentage have been introduced. Opossums do not do well in cold environments and thus are not found in the majority of Canada or North-West states.
>.< sorry it's a bit rushed but here you go! I'll let you decide on colours.....although I do love pink hair :P
Paintings in various stages of completion, the one on the upper right is just about finished. It's based on a photo my uncle Brian LeBourgeois took when the two of us drove to St. James Parish, LA together in May 2006.
(Book: "Paintings from The Frick Collection", opened to Jean-Honoré Fragonard's series "The Progress of Love." I like Fragonard's clouds and trees.)
This flickr site would not have been possible without the contributions of Christine Gant-Thompson and Damian De Marco.
Dave Barnes the Image Librarian from the NSW Department of Industry and Investment is also to be thanked for finding this flickr site and subsequently supplying the images from E.C Andrews and E.F Pittman's visit in 1901.
Special thanks also goes to the following contributors -
David Kennedy from Adaminaby.
Bill Crain from Tumut.
Phyllis Dowling from Tumut.
Barbara Kennedy, NPWS.
Jo Caldwell, NPWS.
Stuart Cohen, NPWS.
References:
1. Andrews, E.C (1901) Report on the Kiandra Lead, NSW Department of Mines and Agriculture.
2. Gant -Thompson. C (2009) Mining Landscape of Kiandra, NSW NPWS.
3. Kaufman, R (2002) Australian Alps Mining Heritage Conservation and Presentation Strategy, Australian Alps Liaison Committee.
4. Moye, D.G (1959) Historic Kiandra - A Guide to the History of the District, The Cooma-Monaro Historical Society.
5. Pearson, M (1979) A Report on the Mining History and Remains in the Northern Half of Kosciuszko National Park, NSW NPWS.
Image from the Department of Industry and Investment. HG1640 Kiandra - open cuts on Newchum Hill (Yarrangobilly 2304)
Thumper quietly sitting in the shade listening to my references and carefully considering whether to allow me to adopt her. She still has her winter coat in this photo. It would be nearly a week before I was prepared and able to catch both her and Bugsy. When the time came Thumper walked right up to me. Bugsy, by comparison, took two days to humanely trap. We incorrectly thought Thumper was a boy. By the time the vet told us she was in fact a girl, and a pregnant one at that, the name just stuck.