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  • A Twin Otter aeroplane refuels before departure during a British mountaineering expedition to Knud Rasmussens Land, East Greenland, Arctic, 2006.
    Greenland-35.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2549.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2542.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2534.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2528.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2539.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2538.tif
  • Angel of the North is a modern sculpture designed by Antony Gormley in 1994, which is located in Gateshead, United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is a steel sculpture of an angel, standing 66 feet (20 metres) tall, with wings measuring 178 feet (54 metres) across ? making it wider than the Statue of Liberty's height. The wings themselves are not planar, but are angled 3.5 degrees forward, which Gormley has said aims to create "a sense of embrace". It stands on a hill, on the southern edge of Low Fell overlooking the A1 road and the A167 road into Tyneside and the East Coast Main Line rail route. It has now come to be considered by some as a landmark for the North East of England and is one of the 12 official 'Icons of England'.
    125_2533.tif
  • The Queensferry Crossing (with plane), Scotland.
    Fife-Print-Collection-19.jpg
  • The Queensferry Crossing (with plane), Scotland.
    Fife-Print-Collection-09.jpg
  • The Queensferry Crossing (with plane), Scotland.
    361-Kinghorn-Queensferry-46.jpg
  • The Queensferry Crossing (with plane), Scotland.
    361-Kinghorn-Queensferry-31.jpg
  • Big Chute Marine Railway, a ship lift at Lock 44 of the Trent-SevernWaterway in Ontario. It works on an inclined plane to carry boats in a cradle over a change 18m high. Although a conventional lock would have been simpler, the marine railway was chosen to prevent the possible migration of sea lamprey from Georgian Bay into the Trent-Severn system. Built in 1977. Ontario, Canada 1990
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Abbot’s Cliff Acoustic mirror,  between Folkestone and Dover, a precursor to radar was uses as a listening device for detecting Zeppelin's and planes in WW1.
    012-Dover-Folkestone-17.jpg
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