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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.

I upped the contrast on this photo so I could compare it to another wig. :B

Reference: APAAME_20181022_AZ-0029

Photographer: Andrea Zerbini

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

Life at Luton Sixth Form at the moment! Student end of year reference writing. Colin Souster doing the business.

Mantua, Ohio

Listed 9/4/2013

Reference Number: 13000682

The Mantua Center School is eligible for the National Register under Criteria A as representative of the continuing evolution of the educational process in the small community of Mantua Center. Within Portage County twenty-one township schools were constructed between 1913 and 1920 as a result of the centralization of township one-room schools into spacious, centrally located facilities. Mantua Center School was an early example in the county and one of only five that remain. At the time of its design and construction, the community ensured that its new building included the latest technology in fire safety and sanitation facilities. The school continued to be a central social as well as educational facility in the community, seeing continuous use as a school building through various consolidations encouraged by the state and pushed by the Portage County superintendent of schools. Finally, post-World War II population increase and educational trends of the 1950's and 60's prompted the planning of an addition to the school, which was completed in 1964. The school is also eligible under Criteria C as a good example of an early twentieth century Neo-Classical Revival educational facility. The restrained and dignified features of the Mantua Center School reflected its status in a small rural community and served as inspiration to the community members as well as to the students within its walls. It retains sufficient integrity to visually represent its significant past.

National Register of Historic Places Homepage

Mantua Center School Description Page

National Register of Historic Places on Facebook

Reference: APAAME_20181022_MND-0006

Photographer: Matthew Neale Dalton

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

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.

All the help that you could ever need

reference Agora for the pxc Challenge " old mansion"

Some skull reference gathered during the sculpting of the skull. Taken in the 'Dentists' at 'Beamish'!

With Mary Grogan, Assistant Manager of Reference Services

I did this reference 2 years ago.

7th Feb 2011 - Our reference collection will be on the wall here along with desks to study at.

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.

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.)

 

Reference edge carrels taking shape

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)

 

nice salvage piece of breccia medicea

Space 1999 Reference Pictures, mostly from the Network DVD

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.

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.

Following Chip Zdarsky's example (http://www.flickr.com/photos/zdarsky/), here's my embarrassing Photo Booth reference shots for comics, cartoons and generally art-related tomfoolery. I'm glad I'm not the only one who does this...

TUDOR – Fastrider Black Shield Chronograph 42000CN Black Leather strap

Vero Beach, Florida

Listed 12/11/2013

Reference Number: 13000900

The Treasure Hammock Ranch Farmstead is significant at the local level under Criterion A in the area of Agriculture/Subsistence as the headquarters of an active major cattle ranching operation in Indian River County, Florida. The barn, cow pens, scale, wooden squeeze chute, dipping vat, butchering pen and feed shed are part of a much larger 61 0-acre complex that includes many other assets of pasture, wetlands, fences, plants and wildlife. Still in operation today, the Sexton Ranch provides not only a historical context and resource for the people of Florida but also is a working, sustainable example of an agricultural complex of an industry that is crucial to this state. The period of significance extends from 1943-1963. The Sexton family enacted a Conservation Easement in 2007, preserving the ranch, its natural, historical, and agricultural resources in perpetuity, thus establishing and maintaining for posterity a complete and still-in operation example of a working cattle ranch in South Florida. The 61 0-acre Treasure Hammock Ranch has been used for cattle farming since 1943, when Waldo E. Sexton bought the original400 acres. It contains some ofthe oldest, continuously used cattle pens in Florida. Sean Sexton, the grandson of Waldo Sexton, is the manager of the Treasure Hammock Ranch, which has been owned and run by the Sexton family for 70 years.

National Register of Historic Places Homepage

TREASURE HAMMOCK RANCH FARMSTEAD Description Page

National Register of Historic Places on Facebook

(reference: rz2_7712)

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