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  • Close up of a scientist at work with computer
    BGS029_QL-23.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-19.tif
  • Wet lab 2
    BGS029_QL-14.tif
  • A scientist at work in Wet Lab 1
    BGS029_QL-10.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work in an individual office
    BGS029_QL-09.tif
  • Exterior in sunlight
    BGS029_QL-02.tif
  • A scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-30.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-29.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work at microscope
    BGS029_QL-28.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work at microscope
    BGS029_QL-27.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work in extraction cabinet
    BGS029_QL-26.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work in extraction cabinet
    BGS029_QL-25.tif
  • Laboratory viewed from computer work area
    BGS029_QL-24.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work with computer
    BGS029_QL-22.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-21.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-20.tif
  • Close up of a scientist at work
    BGS029_QL-18.tif
  • A men at work in admin area
    BGS029_QL-17.tif
  • Two men at work in admin area
    BGS029_QL-16.tif
  • Wet lab 2
    BGS029_QL-15.tif
  • Cold room interior
    BGS029_QL-13.tif
  • Extraction cabinets
    BGS029_QL-12.tif
  • Two scientists at work in Wet Lab 1
    BGS029_QL-11.tif
  • A scientist at work in an individual office
    BGS029_QL-08.tif
  • Computer work area viewed through glazing from circulation space
    BGS029_QL-07.tif
  • Close up of a  scientist by window in laboratory
    BGS029_QL-06.tif
  • A scientist works at work bench next to circulation space
    BGS029_QL-05.tif
  • A scientist by window in laboratory
    BGS029_QL-04.tif
  • Two scientists in laboratory
    BGS029_QL-03.tif
  • Exterior in sunlight
    BGS029_QL-01.tif
  • PBX Switchboard I, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-14.jpg
  • Arriving at night at the innocuous-looking Guardhouse to the former cold war bunker and radar station at RAF Inverbervie, Now Bervie Brow Research Station, Bervie Brow, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-08.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-05.jpg
  • Air Conditioning Plant Room, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-14.jpg
  • PBX Switchboard II, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-13.jpg
  • Senior Officers Accommodation, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-10.jpg
  • Blast doors III, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-08.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker II, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-05.jpg
  • Royal Research Ship Discovery, the ship that took Scott and Shackleton to Antarctica in 1901 and the last traditional wooden three-masted ship to be built in the United Kingdom. Dundee (where she was built), Scotland.
    356-Dundee-StAndrews-10.jpg
  • Blast doors III, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    Kincardineshire-Print-Collection-11.jpg
  • Guardhouse, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-15.jpg
  • Guardhouse and radar plinths, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-16.jpg
  • PBX Switchboard I, Room 27. Comm Ops, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-12.jpg
  • Control Room II,  RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-11.jpg
  • Blast doors II, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-07.jpg
  • Control Room I,  RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-09.jpg
  • Blast doors I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-06.jpg
  • Tunnel to bunker I, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-04.jpg
  • Underground tunnel entrance, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-01.jpg
  • Caution Men Working on Apparatus, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-02.jpg
  • Emergency Accommodation (the entrance tunnel was converted into a dormitory for personnel in the 1980s), RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-03.jpg
  • The communal house is the most important building in a Bahnar village. Traditionally, communal houses serve as meeting halls for the men in the village and as places where rituals, celebrations, and preparation for war or defense of the village take place. This house was built after the model of the 20th century communal house of Kon Rbang village (Vinh Quang commune, Kontum Town, Kontum Province). This model house in Kon Rbang is the only one that maintains the traditional system of building with poles and beams, which has existed for over 70 years in the Central Highlands. In order to create a traditional communal house untouched by modernization, museum researchers worked closely with villagers and consulted old photographs to better understand the traditional model. The form, size, and structure of the museum's communal house replicate those found in the village now, though the house you see here has restored many of the traditional features that have been lost in today's village houses. The roof here is made of straw rather than corrugated iron. The rafters are made of circle-shaped pieces of wood rather than square ones. The floor is made of bamboo rather than wooden planks. The stairs are rounded pieces of wood rather than cement. The wood, bamboo, rattan, and straw used for making the house were brought from the Central Highlands. The diameter of the largest poles is 60cm. The length of the beams is 14-15 m. The height of the roof is nearly 19m including the decorative frame, with each of the principal roof beams about 13m long. The 90m2 floor is elevated 3m above the ground and accessed by four sets of stairs. The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology invited 29 Bahnar people from Kon Rbang to construct the house on the museum grounds. The first poles were erected on April 26, 2003. On June 4, 2003, the house was fully completed. Visitors to the VME now have the rare opportunity of experiencing this unique architectural style first-hand and appreciating the tradition
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-25.jpg
  • The communal house is the most important building in a Bahnar village. Traditionally, communal houses serve as meeting halls for the men in the village and as places where rituals, celebrations, and preparation for war or defense of the village take place. This house was built after the model of the 20th century communal house of Kon Rbang village (Vinh Quang commune, Kontum Town, Kontum Province). This model house in Kon Rbang is the only one that maintains the traditional system of building with poles and beams, which has existed for over 70 years in the Central Highlands. In order to create a traditional communal house untouched by modernization, museum researchers worked closely with villagers and consulted old photographs to better understand the traditional model. The form, size, and structure of the museum's communal house replicate those found in the village now, though the house you see here has restored many of the traditional features that have been lost in today's village houses. The roof here is made of straw rather than corrugated iron. The rafters are made of circle-shaped pieces of wood rather than square ones. The floor is made of bamboo rather than wooden planks. The stairs are rounded pieces of wood rather than cement. The wood, bamboo, rattan, and straw used for making the house were brought from the Central Highlands. The diameter of the largest poles is 60cm. The length of the beams is 14-15 m. The height of the roof is nearly 19m including the decorative frame, with each of the principal roof beams about 13m long. The 90m2 floor is elevated 3m above the ground and accessed by four sets of stairs. The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology invited 29 Bahnar people from Kon Rbang to construct the house on the museum grounds. The first poles were erected on April 26, 2003. On June 4, 2003, the house was fully completed. Visitors to the VME now have the rare opportunity of experiencing this unique architectural style first-hand and appreciating the tradition
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-24.jpg
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