View allAll Photos Tagged serpentine

A serpentine hot spring winds its way through a patch of snow in the Namafjall Geothermal Area, Hverir, Myvatn, North Iceland.

15/01/2021 www.allenfotowild.com

The name, serpentine, is thought to come per Wikipedia "from the similarity of the texture of the rock to that of the skin of a snake." Also per Wikipedia, "The mineral alteration is particularly important at the sea floor at tectonic plate boundaries." Many plants cannot grow near this rock because it leeches plant toxins like chromium and nickel. Near this outcropping in Southeastern Pennsylvania grow rare serpentine asters and the round-leafed fame flower.

The name, serpentine, is thought to come per Wikipedia "from the similarity of the texture of the rock to that of the skin of a snake." Also per Wikipedia, "The mineral alteration is particularly important at the sea floor at tectonic plate boundaries." Many plants cannot grow near this rock because it leeches plant toxins like chromium and nickel. Near this outcropping in Southeastern Pennsylvania grow pretty rare serpentine asters and the round-leafed fame flower.

#serpentine #smilesFilm #smilesfilm13428763782

Serpentine Falls, Western Australia

The Serpentine Pavilion in Hyde Park. It is always interesting to see the variety in this changing display each year.

 

View the entire - Shapes and Forms Set.

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View from fortress of Angelocastro on serpentine road to the sea near Paleokastritsa, Corfu island

Early morning fog on the Serpentine River in Mandurah.

Shot on my Fuji G617 and Velvia 50 film.

 

All images are © Michael McDermott, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my written consent.

Serpentine Bridge in Hyde Park. Marks the boundary between Hyde Park & Kensington Gardens

The Serpentine Gallery’s annual architectural commission showcases new temporary buildings by international architects. This years Pavilion opened in June and stays on display until to 8th October. Photographically this one is not up to the exceptional Pavilion of last year but it has its possibilities. The building was designed by the Berlin-based architect Francis Kéré. It is intended to celebrate the triangle and the shape of a tree

 

The picture was taken handheld with a Sony A700 with a Samyang Fisheye at 8 mm. 3 raw images 2EV spacing processed with Photomatix Fusion Real Estate. More detail was brought in using Topaz Adjust. Adjustment layers to lower saturation and contrast a touch.

 

For my Photography books Understand Your Camera and Compose Better Pictures see My Author Page USA or My Author Page UK

 

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For Galleries, Prints and Licences see Edwin Jones Photography

 

I wanted to take a photo of how the ship is going around the loop. For this I have 6 different pictures to one combined and so come to a total exposure time of 1685 seconds.

  

Serpentine Fen Nature Reserve, Surrey BC

Wentworth Castle parklands

Serpentine Falls at Serpentine National Park, Jarrahdale WA Australia

Serpentine River, Surrey, British Columbia

UP9553 leads units 6114 and SP 109 on APOA6 through Serpentine Canyon, CA on the Feather River route on 17.10.95

SERPENTINE, a mineral which, in a massive and impure form, occurs on a large scale as a rock, and being commonly of variegated colour, is often cut and polished, like marble, for use as a decorative stone. It is generally held that the name was suggested by the fancied resemblance of the dark mottled green stone to the skin of a serpent, but it may possibly refer to some reputed virtue of the stone as a cure for snake-bite. Serpentine was probably, at least in part, the XLOos 6cgrns of Dioscorides and the ophites of Pliny; and this name appears in a latinized form as the serpentaria of G. Agricola, writing in the 16th century, and as the lapis serpentinus and marmor serpentinum of other early writers. Italian sculptors have sometimes termed it ranochia in allusion to its resemblance to the skin of a frog.

 

What's a little confusing is that the description on my box of minerals says serpentine but when you google serpentine the red form is known as jasper. But I also have a sample labeled jasper... so what is it?

 

This sample is about 4mm across, is cross polarised with polarising film over the flash and a hoya polariser between lens and sensor. The setup uses an el-nikkor 50mm f2.8 reversed on 75mm or so of tubes.

 

Had I not cross polarised this you'd see a wicked reflection of the flash on the rounded edge leading from topright to midleft. xpol worked really well here. Also, because you're looking into the mineral, cross polarisation shows off the internal structure nicely.

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

Whilst doing this repair i found it was easier as

 

The Alternator had to be repaired to remove the diesel fuel filter

 

and to gain more room in order to remove the serpentine

 

Fan belt & Tension pulley system! This also involved removing

 

The top engine mounting, Using a separate car jack & wooden block under the sump to support the weight

   

I made a tensioner release tool using a large hex bolt cut down to square 13mm size

   

Thanks for viewing

 

Regards, Dave DAA, 2W0DAA / GW4JKR

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

Serpentine grassland, view southeast from Trail 3.

#serpentine #smilesFilm #smilesfilm13431456761

#serpentine #smilesFilm #smilesfilm13428670952

Fatehpur Sikri (Hindi: फ़तेहपुर सीकरी, Urdu: فتحپور سیکری‎) is a city and a municipal board in Agra district in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. The city was founded in 1569 by the Mughal emperor Akbar, and served as the capital of the Mughal Empire from 1571 to 1585. After his military victories over Chittor and Ranthambore, Akbar decided to shift his capital from Agra to a new location 37 km WSW on the Sikri ridge, to honor the Sufi saint Salim Chishti. Here he commenced the construction of a planned walled city which took the next fifteen years in planning and construction of a series of royal palaces, harem, courts, a mosque, private quarters and other utility buildings. He named the city, Fatehabad, with Fateh, a word of Arabic origin in Persian, meaning "victorious." it was later called Fatehpur Sikri. It is at Fatehpur Sikri that the legends of Akbar and his famed courtiers, the nine jewels or Navaratnas, were born. Fatehpur Sikri is one of the best preserved collections of Indian Mughal architecture in India.

 

According to contemporary historians, Akbar took a great interest in the building of Fatehpur Sikri and probably also dictated its architectural style. Seeking to revive the splendours of Persian court ceremonial made famous by his ancestor Timur, Akbar planned the complex on Persian principles. But the influences of his adopted land came through in the typically Indian embellishments. The easy availability of sandstone in the neighbouring areas of Fatehpur Sikri, also meant that all the buildings here were made of the red stone. The imperial Palace complex consists of a number of independent pavilions arranged in formal geometry on a piece of level ground, a pattern derived from Arab and central Asian tent encampments. In its entirety, the monuments at Fatehpur Sikri thus reflect the genius of Akbar in assimilating diverse regional architectural influences within a holistic style that was uniquely his own.

 

The Imperial complex was abandoned in 1585, shortly after its completion, due to paucity of water and its proximity with the Rajputana areas in the North-West, which were increasingly in turmoil. Thus the capital was shifted to Lahore so that Akbar could have a base in the less stable part of the empire, before moving back to Agra in 1598, where he had begun his reign as he shifted his focus to Deccan. In fact, he never returned to the city except for a brief period in 1601. In later Mughal history it was occupied for a short while by Mughal emperor, Muhammad Shah (r. 1719 -1748), and his regent, Sayyid Hussain Ali Khan Barha, one of the Syed Brothers, was murdered here in 1720. Today much of the imperial complex which spread over nearly two mile long and one mile wide area is largely intact and resembles a ghost town. It is still surrounded by a five mile long wall built during its original construction, on three sides. However apart from the imperial buildings complex few other buildings stand in the area, which is mostly barren, except of ruins of the bazaars of the old city near the Naubat Khana, the 'drum-house' entrance at Agra Road. The modern town lies at the western end of the complex, which was a municipality from 1865 to 1904, and later made a "notified area", and in 1901 had a population of 7,147. For a long time it was still known for its masons and stone carvers, though in Akbar time it was known and 'fabrics of hair' and 'silk-spinning'. The village of Sikri still exists nearby.

 

ARCHITECTURE OF FATEHPUR SIKRI

Fatehpur Sikri sits on rocky ridge, 3 kilometres in length and 1 km wide, and palace city is surrounded by a 6 km wall on three side with the fourth being a lake at the time. Its architect was Tuhir Das and Dhruv Chawla and was constructed using Indian principles. The buildings of Fatehpur Sikri show a synthesis of various regional schools of architectural craftsmanship such as Gujarat and Bengal. This was because indigenous craftsmen were used for the construction of the buildings. Influences from Hindu and Jain architecture are seen hand in hand with Islamic elements. The building material used in all the buildings at Fatehpur Sikri, palace-city complex, is the locally quarried red sandstone, known as 'Sikri sandstone'. It is accessed through gates along the five-mile long fort wall, namely, Delhi Gate, the Lal Gate, the Agra Gate, Birbal's Gate, Chandanpal Gate, The Gwalior Gate, the Tehra Gate, the Chor Gate and the Ajmere Gate.

 

Some of the important buildings in this city, both religious and secular are:

 

Buland Darwaza: Set into the south wall of congregational mosque, the Jama Masjid at Fatehpur Sikri, this stupendous piece of architecture is 55 metre high, from the outside, gradually making a transition to a human scale in the inside. The gate was added some five years later after the completion of the mosque ca. 1576-1577 as an 'victory arch', to commemorate the Akbar's successful Gujarat campaign. It carries two inscriptions in the archway, one of which reads: "Isa, Son of Mariam said: The world is a bridge, pass over it, but build no houses on it. He who hopes for an hour may hope for eternity. The world endures but an hour. Spend it in prayer, for the rest is unseen".

The central portico comprises three arched entrances, with the largest one, in the centre, is known locally as the Horseshoe Gate, after the custom of nailing horseshoes to its large wooden doors for luck. Outside the giant steps of the Buland Darwaza to left is deep well.

Jama Masjid: It is a Jama Mosque meaning the congregational mosque, and was perhaps one of the first buildings to come up in the complex, as its epigraph gives AH 979 (AD 1571-72) as the date of its completion, with a massive entrance to the courtyard, the Buland-Darwaza added some five years later. It was built in the manner of Indian mosques, with iwans around a central courtyard. A distinguishing feature is the row of chhatri over the sanctuary. There are three mihrabs in each of the seven bays, while the large central mihrab is covered by a dome, it is decorated with white marble inlay, in geometric patterns.

Tomb of Salim Chishti: A white marble encased tomb of the Sufi saint, Salim Chisti (1478–1572), within the Jama Masjid's sahn, courtyard. The single-storey structure is built around a central square chamber, within which is the grave of the saint, under an ornate wooden canopy encrusted with mother-of-pearl mosaic. Surrounding it is a covered passageway for circumambulation, with carved Jalis, stone pierced screens all around with intricate geometric design, and an entrance to the south. The tomb is influenced by earlier mausolea of the early 15th century Gujarat Sultanate period. Other striking features of the tomb are white marble serpentine brackets, which support sloping eaves around the parapet.

On the left of the tomb, to the east, stands a red sandstone tomb of Islam Khan I, son of Shaikh Badruddin Chisti and grandson of Shaikh Salim Chishti, who became a general in the Mughal army in the reign of Jahangir. The tomb is topped by a dome and thirty-six small domed chattris, and contains a number of graves, some unnamed, all male descendants of Shaikh Salim Chisti.

Diwan-i-Aam : Diwan-i-Am or Hall of Public Audience, is a building typology found in many cities where the ruler meets the general public. In this case, it is a pavilion-like multi-bayed rectangular structure fronting a large open space. South west of the Diwan-i-Am and next to the Turkic Sultana's House stand Turkic Baths.

Diwan-i-Khas: the Diwan-i-Khas, or Hall of Private Audience, is a plain square building with four chhatris on the roof. However it is famous for its central pillar, which has a square base and an octagonal shaft, both carved with bands of geometric and floral designs, further its thirty-six serpentine brackets support a circular platform for Akbar, which is connected to each corner of the building on the first floor, by four stone walkways. It is here that Akbar had representatives of different religions discuss their faiths and gave private audience.

Ibadat Khana: (House of Worship) was a meeting house built in 1575 CE by the Mughal Emperor Akbar, where the foundations of a new Syncretistic faith, Din-e-Ilahi were laid by Akbar.

Anup Talao: A ornamental pool with a central platform and four bridges leading up to it. Some of the important buildings of the royal enclave are surround by it including, Khwabgah (House of Dreams) Akbar's residence, Panch Mahal, a five-storey palace, Diwan-i-Khas (Hall of Private Audience), Ankh Michauli and the Astrologer's Seat, in the south-west corner of the Pachisi Court.

Hujra-i-Anup Talao: Said to be the residence of Akbar's Muslim wife, although this is disputed due to its small size.

Mariam-uz-Zamani's Palace: The building of Akbar's Rajput wives, including Mariam-uz-Zamani, shows Gujarati influence and is built around a courtyard, with special care being taken to ensure privacy.

Naubat Khana: Also known as Naqqar Khana meaning a drum house, where musician used drums to announce the arrival of the Emperor. It is situated ahead of the Hathi Pol Gate or the Elephant Gate, the south entrance to the complex, suggesting that it was the imperial entrance.

Pachisi Court: A square marked out as a large board game, the precursor to modern day Ludo game where people served as the playing pieces.

Panch Mahal: A five-storied palatial structure, with the tiers gradually diminishing in size, till the final one, which is a single large-domed chhatri. Originally pierced stone screens faced the façade, and probably sub-divided the interior as well, suggesting it was built for the ladies of the court. The floors are supported by intricately carved columns on each level, totalling to 176 columns in all.

Birbal's House: The house of Akbar's favorite minister, who was a Hindu. Notable features of the building are the horizontal sloping sunshades or chajjas and the brackets which support them.

 

Recent excavation done by ASI in 2000 led to unearthing of an ancient jain city very near to the fort complex.

 

Other buildings included Taksal (mint), 'Daftar Khana (Records Office), Karkhanas (royal workshop), Khazana (treasury), Turkic styled Baths, Darogha's Quarters, stables, Caravan sarai, Hakim's quarters etc.

 

DEMOGRAPHICS

Fatehpur Sikri has a population of 28,757. Males constitute 53% of the population and females 47%. Fatehpur Sikri has an average literacy rate of 46%, lower than the national average of 74%: male literacy is 57%, and female literacy is 34%. In Fatehpur Sikri, 59% of the population is under 6 years of age.

 

ADMINISTRATIVE ESTABLISHMENT

Fatehpur Sikri is one of the fifteen Block headquarters in the Agra district it has 52 Gram panchayats (Village Panchayat) under it.

 

The Fatehpur Sikri, is a constituency of the Lok Sabha, Lower house of the Indian Parliament, and further comprises five Vidhan Sabha (legislative assembly) segments:

 

Agra Rural

Fatehpur Sikri

Kheragarh

Fatehabad

Bah

 

In all there are 12 villages of Sisodia Rajputs near Fatehpur Sikri fort in Agra district. These are Daultabad, Nayavas, Satha, korai, Behrawati, Byara, Undera, Kachora, Singarpur, Vidyapur, Onera, Arrua.

 

TRANSPORT

Fatehpur Sikri is about 39 km. from Agra. The nearest Airport is the Agra Airport (also known as Kheria Airport), 40 km from Fatehpur Sikri. The nearest railway station is the Fatehpur Sikri Railway Station, about one km. from the city centre . It is suitably connected to Agra and neighbouring centres by road, where regular bus services of UPSRTC ply, apart from Tourist buses and taxies.

 

WIKIPEDIA

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serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

Serpentine - a piece of the countryside in London

serpentine gallery pavilion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

serpentine gallery pavillion 2011

design by peter zumthor

garden by piet oudolf

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