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of an empty museum ...

 

;-) ...

 

3 x ƒ/5.6 24.0 mm 1/250 200

  

_NYC6393_96_pt3

Los tiburones cebra (Leopard Shark en Thailandia) son nocturnos y pasan la mayor parte del día inmóviles en el fondo marino. Por la noche cazan activamente buscando moluscos, crustáceos, pequeños peces óseos y ocasionalmente serpientes marinas dentro de las cavidades y huecos de los arrecifes. Aunque son criaturas solitarias durante la mayor parte del año durante la estación de apareamiento forman grandes concentraciones. El tiburón cebra es ovíparo: las hembras depositan varias docenas de cápsulas de huevos, que aferra a estructuras subacuáticas con filamentos adhesivos.

 

Los tiburones cebra (Tiburon leopardo en Tailandia) son inofensivos y no representan una amenaza para los humanos, son muy populares en acuarios públicos y en excursiones de buceo. La World Conservation Union tiene catalogada la especie como Vulnerable en todo el mundo. La principal amenaza para la especie es la pesca comercial que se realiza en toda su zona de distribución (excepto en Australia) debido a su carne, aletas y el aceite de su hígado. En los últimos años las estadísticas sugieren que su población se encuentra en retroceso.

Zebra shark (Leopard Shark in Thailandia) are nocturnal and spend most of the day motionless on the seabed. At night, they actively hunt for mollusks , crustaceans , small bony fish, and occasionally sea snakes within the cavities and hollows of reefs . Although solitary creatures for most of the year, they form large aggregations during the mating season. Zebra sharks are oviparous: females lay several dozen egg capsules, which they attach to underwater structures with adhesive filaments.

 

Zebra sharks are harmless and pose no threat to humans. They are very popular in public aquariums and on diving excursions. The World Conservation Union lists the species as Vulnerable worldwide. The main threat to the species is commercial fishing throughout its range (except in Australia) for its meat, fins, and liver oil. In recent years, statistics suggest that its population is declining.

   

Huge thanks to you for now 28 million clicks. The inspiration of your works, your comments and faves are encouraging and motivating.

Happy New Year - let's hope it's a good one

I am but a product of my Daddy's tutorials and influences..... and also, a fan of cute boys who catch balls... ♥

I love possibilities more than so-called facts.

 

I love imaginations more than an answer.

 

I love visuals more than statistics.

 

That’s me.

 

A capture from Musee Du Louvre, Paris.

 

If someone asks from where so much light trails on four lane highway (even though it was rush hour), and despite the fact that the exposure is only 10 seconds, I'll give a little explanation.

The photo was created by merging 6 photos in Photoshop. I used a sub-menu statistics in the menu scripts under the file menu. I used the option Maximum, and then automatically Photoshop everything is variable on each photo merge into a single image with maximum of this variability, and that variable in this case are the light trails.

I hope this explanation will help someone.

Sorry my friends, I have a little time to dedicate myself to Flickr. I wish everyone all the best and good light.

Do not use this image on any media, without my permission!

Thank you for the views, comments, and fav's Flickerites! When I picked up, what I would consider my first real camera ten years ago, I never thought that I would be quite as addicted in pursuing this hobby/craft! I'm amazed at the images that I see everyday and that inspires me to continue traveling, seeking out new locations/perspectives, and hitting that shutter button!

Fly agaric

The classic fairy tale toadstool, this red and white fungus is often found beneath birch trees in autumn.

Scientific name

Amanita muscaria

When to see

August to November

Species information

Category

Fungi

 

Statistics

Cap diameter: 8-20cm

Stem height: 8-18cm

Conservation status

Common

 

Habitats

Heathland and moorland

Woodland

Towns and gardens

About

Fly agaric is probably our most recognisable species of fungus, with the mushroom's distinctive red cap and white stalk featuring in countless stories, television shows and even video games! Fly agaric is found in woodlands, parks and heaths with scattered trees, typically growing beneath birch trees or pines and spruces. The colourful fruiting bodies can usually be seen between late summer and early winter.

 

Like most fungi, the parts we see are just the fruiting bodies, or mushrooms. These grow up from an unseen network of tiny filaments called hyphae, which together form a structure known as the mycelium. The fruiting bodies produce spores for reproduction, although fungi can also reproduce asexually by fragmentation. The mycelium of fly agaric often forms a symbiotic relationship with the trees around it, wrapping around the roots and supplying them with nutrients taken from the soil. In exchange, the fungus receives sugars produced by the trees.

 

Fly agarics are poisonous and should not be eaten. Reports of deaths are rare, but ingestion often causes stomach cramps and hallucinations.

How to identify

The distinctive mushrooms have a red cap, either flat or rounded, often with a scattering of white spots or warts, and a white stem. The gills, beneath the cap, are free of the stem.

Distribution

Widespread

Did you know?

Despite it being toxic to us, there are some animals that do eat fly agaric. These include red squirrels and slugs, as well as specialists such as fungus gnats - these flies lay eggs on the fungus, and when they hatch the larvae feed on the fruiting body.

How people can help

Fungi play an important role within our ecosystems, helping to recycle nutrients from dead or decaying organic matter, and providing food and shelter for different animals. The Wildlife Trusts manage many nature reserves sympathetically for the benefit of all kinds of wildlife, including fungi: you can help by supporting your local trust and becoming a member. Our gardens are also a vital resource for wildlife, providing corridors of green space between open countryside. Try leaving log piles and dead wood to help fungi and the wildlife that depends on it.

this site has a cool flickr API graph that allows you to track the growth of groups by posts and members...for the flickr geeks out there. the picture above is a static picture -- see this link for an updated look:Group Trackr: Statistics

Life in these United States, 2016

Manaus is a municipality, Amazonas state capital and the main financial center, corporate and economic development of northern Brazil. It is a historical and port city, located in the center of the largest rainforest in the world.12 It is situated at the confluence of the Negro and Solimões.13 rivers is one of the best known Brazilian cities worldwide, mainly by its tourist potential and ecotourism, which It makes the city the tenth largest tourist destination in Brazil.14 It belongs to the middle region of the Amazonian Centre and the homonymous micro-region, and stands out for its architectural and cultural heritage, with remarkable museums, theaters, temples, palaces and libraries. It is located in the far north, the 3490 km of the national capital, Brasília.4

 

It is the most populous city in the Amazon and the Amazon, with a population of 2,020,301 inhabitants, according to estimates by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) in 2014.6 At the national level, it stands as the seventh most populous in Brazil, 15 beyond the 131st most populous in the world. It is the seat of the metropolitan region of Manaus, the most populous of the north and the eleventh most populous in Brazil, with 2,360,491 inhabitants, representing 1.22% of the total population brasileira.16 Despite recording one of the largest economies in the country and be one of its most populated cities, Manaus has the worst Human Development Index (HDI) among Brazilian capitals, with 0.737 points, which places it in 23th place among the state capitals of the country, ahead only of other four capitals. In its metropolitan area, the rate is even lower, with 0.720 points, the worst result among the 16 major metropolitan areas brasileiras.17

 

Originally founded in 1669 by the Portuguese with the fort of Sao Jose do Rio Negro, 12 was elevated to the village in 1832 under the name of Manaos, in honor of the indigenous nation of manaós, one being legally transformed into town on October 24, 1848 with the name City of Barra do Rio Negro. Only on September 4, 1856 returned to have his name atual.12 became known in the early twentieth century, the golden age of rubber, attracting foreign investments and immigrants from some parts of the world, especially French. At that time was named as "Amazon Heart" and "Forest City" 12 Currently its main economic engine is the Manaus Free Zone.

 

With the sixth largest economy in Brazil, the city gradually increased its participation in the formation of Brazilian economic sector in recent years, rising to account for 1.4% of the economy brasileira.18 In the ranking of the magazine América Economía, Manaus appears as one of 30 best cities in the line of business in Latin America, 19 ahead of capital from South American countries such as Caracas, Asuncion and Quito.19 was one of the twelve Brazilian host cities for the World Cup 2014.

  

Time to say thank you to all of you for a total of 100 million clicks. Your support and inspiration throughout the 15 years ist just incredible and highly appreciated.

grr. me and my typos. pretend that says times, okay? thanks(: hahah.

 

i've been tagged a multitudnious of times so here, i'm gonna go ahead and do those now.

 

1 i am currently working on one of those "my favorites" collages where it's made up of all other flickrites photos and i credited them and link them so you get hands on to their brilliance. good idea? ohhyahh:) haha. the theme and who will be featured is secret so HUSH:)

2 i am going to get the lovely bones in about thirty minutes and my excitment to read that book is at an unearthly magnitude. i. cant. wait.

3 i am utterly and completely fascinated by hipster things. like beanies, nail polish, tattoos, piercings, glitter, hair styles and colors, glasses, clothes, belts, anything and everything remotely just amazing. i can sit on tumblr for hours looking at those kinds of photos. i just find it all so intriguing and i love it.

4 i cant stand when people hate on the mothers. how many times a day do i hear "i hate my mom" or "my mom's a bitch" or something remotely pesimistic towards a mom. it irratates me. and their reasoning is always the same "she's mean to me." okay big whoop if you fight with your mom. my mother and i argue ALL THE TIME. on a daily basis. sometimes hourly, depending on the day of the week. but i would never call my mother a bitch. i would never say anything cruel about her. i might say i'm mad at her but that's my limit. i love my mother. same goes for my father and the way i feel when people despise their dads. be grateful for your parents.

5 i cant wait for chirstmas. like i usually get excited, but this level of excitment is foreign to me. but i like it. a lot! haha.

6 i want to see the justin bieber movie at midnight whe it come out so freaking badly. like it's madening how badly i wanna see that movie at 12:01 when it's released

7 my phone's name is Natalie incase you were all wondering :) i love that phone really passionately. it's the best phone i've ever had i do declare.

8 my cousins and i are all really close, but i don't have one girl cousin and i wish i did.

9 i like using lighter makeup as opposed to dark

10 i hope my weekend isn't a fail.

 

I AM TAGGING THIS TIME WOOT:)

and thank you for the explore :D

Covid-statistics from Russia (April 12):

- 1 200 000 tests were made (test accuracy is estimately 80%)

- 15 000 covid positives confirmed

- two thirds of them are from Moscow

- half is younger than 45

- 130 people died

- 1 300 recovered

- two weeks of quarantine passed

- number of infected advances progressively

 

Wild South Africa

Kruger National Park

 

Last year 71 elephants were killed in the Kruger National Park, up from only 2 in 2014, 24 in 2015, 46 in 2016 and 67 in 2017. Another 4 died last year as a result of injuries sustained in snares. Most of the elephants were killed in the north-eastern part of the reserve, bordering Mozambique. While concentrating on protecting the Rhinos against humans the poaching of elephants is escalating. Where will it all end?

"The WHO statistics reflect that at least one in five women in the world has been physically or sexually abused at some time in her life."

 

The Princess and the Pea

 

Nobody could work out why the Princess was still black and blue, covered in bruises - even after she started sleeping on the sofa.

 

BIG BRUISES

 

Part of my new Behind the Scenes, Fairytales series.

 

125/365

  

when you look at the number of Covid related deaths and the number of families in the UK the numbers suggest that about 1 in every 200 families has lost a loved one so far in this pandemic.

 

People who have lost loved ones during the pandemic feel the UK has become desensitised to death.

 

Stay at home, stay safe, get vaccinated when you can.

 

With a white-morph standing behind it - both adults. I tried to find statistics on the frequency of blue-morphs in the lower mainland but could not find any, although there are counts for other areas. In some areas, such as Baffin Island, blue-morphs dominate (over 90% in some years) but that is clearly not the case here. There were hundreds of snow geese at Iona this morning and this is the only blue-morph I could find. Although I cannot say I checked each one of them carefully. :) The orange-brown on their heads is stains from feeding.

 

Iona Park, Richmond, BC

Quite a fun year on Flickr! My thanks to all that visit my photostream!

 

2021 was not quite as intense on Flickr, as Larry and I were doing our '65 Summit Project' that year, where we summited 65 peaks with over 650 m of elevation gain, during that special milestone year for me. That year we ended up walking 825 km's in the mountains, and after adding up all the ups and downs, gaining 73 km's of elevation. That's a bit like going from sea level to the summit of Mt Everest more than 8 times. So 2022 was a year of recovery and having fun on Flickr.

I was allowed to bring to the final exam for my third year Stats course at Laurier. Hey, they told us to bring in one page, with anything written on both sides as an aid. Going into Stats, I was assured it was an easy credit, but it was the hardest thing I'd ever taken (I'm not a math person). Studied longer for this than any other course in my life, and I am still grateful for the C that I received but didn't deserve. It was the worst of my grades in university but the most satisfying. Yes, I saved the sheet.

Yay! The question finally answered! :)))

Know which day is best for your shop! I'll have a handy dandy little tool available for this soon! Special thanks to Sylvia Vincent for assistance and Excel wisdom! Actually, when I do put this up for sale, it will have to be called a collaboration. :D

 

blogged

Homelessness Statistics

 

- 44% of the homeless population are employed.

 

- 62% of the homeless population have a high school diploma.

 

- 23% of homeless adults are veterans, 33% of homeless men are veterans.

 

- 57% of the homeless population report having experienced a mental health problem at some point during their lifetime.

 

- 25% report having experienced physical and/or sexual abuse as a child from someone with whom they lived.

 

- 23% of the adult homeless population have a mental illness.

 

- The National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty estimates that 40% of homeless people are eligible for SSI, but only 11% receive it.

 

- Only 37% of the homeless population receive food stamps.

 

- Only 33% receive Medicaid

 

- Only 1% of homeless veterans receive veteran-related disability payments.

 

"Key Data Concerning Homeless Persons in America," National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, July 2004 (www.nlchp.org)

Statistics

Length: 26-29cm

Wingspan: 47-63cm

Weight: 320-480g

 

Average lifespan: 18 years

 

Conservation status

Classified in the UK as Red under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021). Listed as Vulnerable on the global IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

 

When to see

March to August

 

Puffins are unmistakable birds with their black back and white underparts, distinctive black head with large pale cheeks and their tall, flattened, brightly-coloured bill. Its comical appearance is heightened by its red and black eye-markings and bright orange legs.

 

Used as a symbol for books and other items, this clown among seabirds is one of the world's favourite birds. With half of the UK population at only a few sites it is an Red List species.

Statistics

Length: 26-29cm

Wingspan: 47-63cm

Weight: 320-480g

 

Average lifespan: 18 years

 

Conservation status

Classified in the UK as Red under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021). Listed as Vulnerable on the global IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

 

When to see

March to August

 

Puffins are unmistakable birds with their black back and white underparts, distinctive black head with large pale cheeks and their tall, flattened, brightly-coloured bill. Its comical appearance is heightened by its red and black eye-markings and bright orange legs.

 

Used as a symbol for books and other items, this clown among seabirds is one of the world's favourite birds. With half of the UK population at only a few sites it is an Red List species.

I am only uploading this photo to see if the flickr stats change.

I had a spike in view totals of over 4,000 in an hour.

The bearded tit is an unmistakable cinnamon-coloured bird of reedbeds in the south, east and north-west of England. Males actually sport a black 'moustache', rather than a beard!

 

Statistics

Length: 12cm

Wingspan: 17cm

Weight: 15g

Average lifespan: 3 years

Conservation status

Classified in the UK as Green under the Birds of Conservation Concern 4: the Red List for Birds (2021). Protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, 1981.

 

When to see

January to December

  

Crikey! Thanks for all your comments, views and favourites.

Amazing support from you all.

Montage from bighugelabs.com/scout.php

 

30-Jun-2015 51 Explored, 2050k views, 3700 followers, 5 shots >1k faves, 3 shots >60k views,

31-Dec-2014 30 Explored, 850k views, 1600 followers

 

Look at your 3 best friends. If they're ok, then it's you :-)

― Rita Mae Brown

 

bleeding hearts, little theater garden, Raleigh, north carolina

Goes to mocha&&poker face <33

i love you guys<3

nd gddluck :**

Apologies to my long-suffering Flickr contacts. The Great Photo Flood of Late 2008 is now over! Occasionally, my obsessiveness gets the better of me, but I'm out of new stuff to post now. Yay!

 

Photodumps tend to blow up my statistics. I set a new one-day record today, with 1601 views and 81 comments by 9:45pm. Yikes.

think they'll spot us here?

nah. this is a perfect lookout.

good. when they enter the valley, fire the rockets.

they'll never know what hit 'em.

this place will be better off without them too.

can you imagine, preferring creamy peanut butter to crunchy?

it's disgusting. our supreme leader is right: they're the scum of the earth.

basically sub-human.

well, we won't have to worry about them anymore.

pass me a cracker, would you?

you want peanut butter on that?

sure.

crunchy, right?

are you kidding? extra crunchy! I'm not taking any chances.

ha ha. good idea.

Thank you all for the five million views.

Ontario population in 2018 14.32 million

(3,118 Died in Ontario from Marc 1 2020 till Oct 20 2010 from COVID19 a percentage of 0.0271%)

 

diagramma a punti dei miei battiti.

 

m.: valentina

duemilaenove.

bologna.

collage on paper / 2015

collaboration with random-cowboy (www.facebook.com/therealrandomcowboy)

Statistics vary, but in less than seven years there won't be a single cell left in any of our bodies that's the same as it is today. This means that any human being who 'wants' to change is like a mountain river wanting to reach the valley floor. It's a done deal; that's what mountain rivers do, and 'changing' should be our first nature.

Guy Finley

  

2014 09 09 205112 Wirral New Brighton Light House 1HDR

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Vernissage YA! dans les galeries d' Yves* & Anne** aujourd'hui à 17h00 (heure française)

 

Vernissage YA! on Yves* & Anne**'s photostreams today at 5:00 p.m. ( french time)

 

Vous êtes bienvenus! You're welcome!

  

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Better on Black

  

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© Anne d'Huart

  

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______________________________________

 

Three Million.... wow! I recall when I had 300,000 views on Flickr and thought that was quite impressive. I am so honored to have such wonderful Flickr contacts. I, in turn, love to see the images you post of this incredibly beautiful world. Thanks to all!

...From when this Flickr account (Bill Adams) was activated, which was in November of 2005.

 

As of this posting, I have fave'd 3,973 photos in 824 different photostreams.

 

What does this mean? I've not a clue. I just thought it was interesting.

 

PLEASE NOTE: The information presented here represents the number of faves I have left within the respective photostreams of my Contacts and other Flickr users. This is not the number of faves people have left for me.

 

Information about how often you fave my photos is not something I would ever publicly display.

 

I provided instructions on how you, too, can create this here.

 

You can actually read the information on this image if you view it like this.

Flickr statistics reported that my picture of a turkey had 211k views yesterday. And Google was the referrer. That could make sense since it is a Thanksgiving photo. But it feels like either a mistake or a testament to the power of Google search. Given that today Google continues to refer to that photo but at more normal levels, I suspect a glitch.

 

Has anyone experienced a similar thing?

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