View allAll Photos Tagged topday
My bowl for the southsea free art event
Mydogbowl
Topday
Props to lex and elmo
Mydog puppies in the pic
Today the photostream will count 20.000 views and all over almost 70.000 (don't understand exactly the difference...) My TOPday I reached 601 views. I don't have much money on my account but this are nice numbers.
I want to thank everybody who took the effort to look through my eyes to the world, never I need one word anymore to explain.
Thanks Thanks Thanks , you all made me happy...
So here a view on one of my rare selfportraits, maby my first try with the Olympus
25 years ago.
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by a severe earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans from the mainland at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Compared to the excavations of other Minoan palaces I've visited in the last two months, Knossos seems a little strange. A bit excavation site and a bit Disneyland.
Quick little hit at Flevo Park while waiting for Nol to finish his interview and everyone else to turn up
It warmed up to 55+ degrees topday and the thaw was awesome exposing lots of plants that have been covered for weeks by snow like these lambs ears.
At around 3PM topday in Woodland Hills I spotted around 8 to 10 BMW i8s at the junction of Topanga and Ventura, heading north. They were all occupied with two people. I looked on line and couldn't find any news about an i8 event anywhere in the neighbourhood.
I have higher rez images than these on my phone - these are just screen caps from Facebook so they're quite small.
What a cool car though - this is what cars are supposed to look like in the 21st century.
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by a severe earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans from the mainland at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Compared to the excavations of other Minoan palaces I've visited in the last two months, Knossos seems a little strange. A bit excavation site and a bit Disneyland.
Bought my self some Fishing Equipment , have not fished for years bought a caro fishing set 12ft Rod,Landing net,Reel,Ground mat small compact set of hooks & bag to hold everything£59.00 from glasgow Angling Centre.Topday i am fishing at pinewood fishery £22 for 6 fish and 8 hours. 1hour has passed still no fish
At around 3PM topday in Woodland Hills I spotted around 8 to 10 BMW i8s at the junction of Topanga and Ventura, heading north. They were all occupied with two people. I looked on line and couldn't find any news about an i8 event anywhere in the neighbourhood.
I have higher rez images than these on my phone - these are just screen caps from Facebook so they're quite small.
What a cool car though - this is what cars are supposed to look like in the 21st century.
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by a severe earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans from the mainland at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Compared to the excavations of other Minoan palaces I've visited in the last two months, Knossos seems a little strange. A bit excavation site and a bit Disneyland.
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by an earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Thousands of tourists visiting every day only in summer. In winter there are only a few - and the dogs sleep in the sun at the entrance.
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by a severe earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans from the mainland at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Compared to the excavations of other Minoan palaces I've visited in the last two months, Knossos seems a little strange. A bit excavation site and a bit Disneyland.
27 Likes on Instagram
3 Comments on Instagram:
eliranavital: @ronielectroni לואי מתגעגע :-)
eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4 #iphoneonly #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #fun #photooftheday #sunset #cloud #clouds #sky #dog
eliranavital: @pugsofinstagram
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eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #photooftheday #israel #telaviv #Makeup #Fashion #woman #girl
Helicopter navigation.. #gps #Helicopter #navigation #Fly #Fligh#all_shots #photooftheday #photography #popularpics #popularpage #popular #instagranhub #instanced #instagram #iphoneonly #iphonesia #ipoto #fun #webstagram #beautiful #bastoftheday #instagrammers #ig #igdaily #jj #iphoneography #now #2012 #day #topday
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mr_bar: מה אתה אומר... נייס. מכה על חטא עכשיו, שלשום רודי (אלמוג) הזמין אותי לטיסת צילום, וברגע האחרון חיזלשתי בגלל עבודה.. איך בא לי! אחלה תמונה מנצ׳ו!
eliranavital: @mr_bar הוא כנראה טס להנאה ואני לעבודה :-)
mr_bar: דווקא צילומי הנדסה אווירים.
mr_bar: נייס לך, עבודה.
eliranavital: @nadav1
Knossos was settled around 7000 BC. Immigrants, perhaps from Asia Minor, brought livestock and plants to the southern Aegean for the first time. The initial settlement was a hamlet of 25–50 people. In the Early Neolithic (6000–5000 BC), a village of 200–600 persons occupied most of the area of the later palace and the slopes to the north and west. The settlement of the Middle Neolithic (5000–4000 BC), housed 500–1000 people. In the Late Neolithic ( around 4000–3000 BC), the population increased dramatically.
The Palace of Knossos was built between 2100 and 1800 BC on the site of the Neolithic settlement. Like almost all palaces in Crete, Knossos was destroyed by a severe earthquake between 1750 and 1700 BC, but was soon rebuilt. Knossos experienced its greatest prosperity and developed into the leading Cretan city-state, probably possessing the largest fleet, whose ships sailed to Phoenician, Egyptian, and Peloponnesian ports. Around 1650 BC, another earthquake caused minor destruction. An invasion of the Mycenaeans from the mainland at the beginning of the 14th century BC led to the complete collapse of the Minoan culture. A fire that must have raged for several days, fueled by wood and oil, destroyed the upper floors and many of the palace's limestone and gypsum walls around 1370 BC. The palace was subsequently abandoned. Knossos was not repopulated until around 1050–900 BC.
The youngest palace at Knossos was built as a complex of buildings with up to five floors and a total floor area of 21,000 m². 800 rooms are documented, but the palace may have had up to 1,300 rooms in total. The palace was never fortified. Like all Minoan palace complexes, it is built around a rectangular central courtyard measuring 53 × 28 m. The complex served as an administrative center and contained numerous workshops
The Cretan amateur archaeologist Minos Kalokairinos discovered Knossos in 1878. He uncovered two storage rooms. In 1900, the English ethnologist Arthur Evans was able to purchase the area and began systematic excavations. With the help of upto 200 workers he uncovered 20,000 m² of the palace in three years. Since he was not interested in the Mycenaean structures, they were demolished without documentation.
Topday most archaeologists view Evans' work very critically. His reconstructions are highly controversial. They cement Evans' interpretations and make further research virtually impossible. In his effort to preserve the exposed rooms and artifacts from decay, he used concrete. Since this is heavier than ancient plaster structures, it requires ongoing restoration, given the thousands of tourists visiting every day.
Compared to the excavations of other Minoan palaces I've visited in the last two months, Knossos seems a little strange. A bit excavation site and a bit Disneyland.
32 Likes on Instagram
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kristy_karpach: עוצר נשימה
eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #clouds #cloud #sky #hdr #hdrday #hdrspotters #hdrr #sunset
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kristy_karpach: יאמי :))))
noyke: מונייה?
eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #food #Dessert #Gourmet #Eat #Special #Cookie #Cake #truffles #Chocolate #Chocolatetruffles
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tomerhakim: אההההההההההההההה
eliranavital: @tomerhakim אתה מוזמן.. זה נפתח טוב מהבטן חחח
tomerhakim: חחח
eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #food #Dessert #Gourmet #Eat #Special #Cookie #Cake #Cinnamon
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eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #cars #car #AntiqueCar #Antique #Old #Special #Mercedes #Collection #People #me
20 Likes on Instagram
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nadav1: תותח
eliranavital: #photography #iphonesia #iphone4s #iphone4 #ipoto #iphoneonly #instanood #instagranhub #instagram #topday #popularpage #popularhub #popular #popularpics #fun #food #Dessert #Gourmet #Eat #Special
TOP… while browsing my folders for hhis fanarts and photos I noticed i had a picture of Ricky on his folder..((otl this reminds me how ricky had been a very big fanboy for seunghyun alongside changjo happy topday toppa)) posted by bembem