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Sample grouping designed to give people ideas on how these might look good together. Some work better than others and were created when certain pieces were finished near the same time.
Modern original abstract painting art gems. Mixed material on canvas.
This series is taking off as people are getting into the idea of making their own custom arrangement by grouping several of these together.
Join the craze! Find them at www.daviniart.com or on eaby. ebay ID is ddartgems.
Affordable smaller paintings created with custom mixed materials & unusual techniques developed by artist Danny Davini.
Jeffrey Dubinsky, Wilma Subra, Kermit D., Paul Orr
Photo Credit: Michael Orr
Copyright: LMRK.org
May not be used for commercial or editorial purposes without the express consent of the Lower Mississippi RIVERKEEPER.
the nice man at the pear stand gave me a sample of each of his 3 different flavors....deliciousness!
This is another piece of paperwork from my embroidery project. Again this was developed into a jacquard sample.
Shown is a sample bottle, demonstrating how saturated with contaminant the water in the tributary to the Apple River is.
This is a sample image of an experimental Garmin Custom map produced for Mt Richardson and the Blowhard track in North Canterbury.
A plinthic horizon contains a significant amount of plinthite (15 percent or more). If the horizon constitutes a "continuous phase", zones that roots can enter are more than 10cm apart and plinthite makes up 50 percent or more of the volume of the horizon (proposed).
www.flickr.com/photos/jakelley/50520699463/in/album-72157...
This large (24x30x6 inch) section of the plinthic horizon was moderately cemented and could be removed as a continuous fragment.
Plinthite (Gr. plinthos, brick) is an iron-rich, humus-poor mixture of clay with quartz and other highly weathered minerals. It commonly occurs as reddish redox concentrations in a layer that has a polygonal (irregular), platy (lenticular), or reticulate (blocky) pattern. Plinthite irreversibly hardens upon exposure to repeated wetting and drying, especially if exposed to heat from the sun. Other morphologically similar iron-rich materials that do not progressively harden upon repeated wetting and drying are not considered plinthite. The horizon in which plinthite occurs commonly has 2.5 percent (by mass) or more citrate dithionite extractable iron in the fine-earth fraction and a ratio between acid oxalate extractable Fe and citrate-dithionite extractable Fe of less than 0.10.
Soils that classify as Plinthudults have one or more horizons within 150 cm of the mineral soil surface in which plinthite either forms a continuous phase or constitutes one-half or more of the volume.
For more information about a plinthic horizon, visit;
www.researchgate.net/publication/242649722_Rationale_for_...
or;
www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S00167061220043...
For more information about describing and sampling soils, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/field...
or Chapter 3 of the Soil Survey manual:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/sites/default/files/2022-09/The-Soil-Su...
For additional information on "How to Use the Field Book for Describing and Sampling Soils" (video reference), visit:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_hQaXV7MpM
For additional information about soil classification using USDA-NRCS Soil Taxonomy, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/keys-...
or;
www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/soil-...