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  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-18.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-15.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-11.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-07.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-02.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-20.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-19.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-17.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-16.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-14.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-13.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-10.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-09.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-08.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-06.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-05.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-04.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-03.jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-01.jpg
  • Pick Up Sticks Enterprises, Studio & Workshop of Architect & Artist Christopher Dukes, Kingsford, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
    Pick-Up-Sticks-Enterprises-Christoph...jpg
  • Aarhus University Aquarium. Experimental Recirculation System for tropical fish species.
    Aarhus-University-Aquarium-12.jpg
  • Vintage chaff-cutter, for chopping up hay and oat-straw for feeding to animals. Tal-y-bont, Gwynedd.
    129-Barmouth-Harlech-04.jpg
  • Detail of the shaft of a highly ornate carving of a cross surrounded depictions of angels, animals and serpents on the eastern or seaward-facing of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-13.jpg
  • Detail of a highly ornate carving of a cross surrounded depictions of angels, animals and serpents on the eastern or seaward-facing of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-14.jpg
  • A corral of llamas on the high Puna at approx. 4000m in the Andes. Peruvian Andes, 2008
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Detail of a wall of recycled electrical fittings in Nek Chand's Rock Garden. From 1957 he secretly collected stones, metal, bricks, and other waste from Le Corbusier's building sites. When discovered in 1975, it had become a 12-acre (49,000sq.m) complex of interlinked courtyards, filled with hundreds of pottery-covered, concrete sculptures of dancers, musicians, and animals. Chandigarh, India, 2002
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-22.jpg
  • A doorway in Ta Prohm to a temple built in the late 12th and early 13th centuries as a monastery and university. The door is surrounded by silk cotton tree roots encased by strangler figs roots, which develop their own underground root system. They then grow quickly, often strangling the host tree, which in time dies and rots away. The strangler fig continues to exist as a hollow tubular lattice that provides shelter for many forest animals. Siem Reap, Cambodia, 2003
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • A disused caravanserai on the road from Yazd to Isfahan. The buildings served as a roadside inn for travellers. They provided security and each merchant stayed in one of the identical bays with the square used for animals. Iran, 2008
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-23.jpg
  • Built in 1998 by Rchom Ju, Rchom Ek, Rchom Uek, Ksor Ul, and Ksor Ka-ro (Giarai Arap group), from Mrong Ngo village, Ia Ka commune, Chu Pa district, Gia Lai province. The most prominent decorations on the Giarai tomb are large wooden sculptures carved from tree trunks using adzes, cutlasses and knives. Carvings of sexually-explicit men and women and pregnant women symbolise fertility and birth. Other carvings of seated children (often placed at the four corners), animals, and everyday people are the 'servants' of the dead in the afterlife. Broken or inverted serving dishes, bottles, cups and trays, and wooden models of tools are placed inside the tomb to provide the deceased with the necessities they will need in the other world. The tomb's wooden roof is covered with a tightly plaited bamboo matting. Men join together to embellish this with delicate, curvilinear designs painted with natural red pigments. Crowning the roof is an intricately carved openwork panel depicting the rituals that accompany the tomb and its abandonment ceremony. Once the ceremony is concluded, the tomb will be abandoned to fall to pieces.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-21.jpg
  • Kbal Spean, valley of a 1000 Lingas, Cambodia. Is an Angkorian era site on the southwest slopes of the Kulen Hills in Cambodia, 25 km from the main Angkor group. The motifs for the stone carvings are roughly three: myriads of lingams, depicted as neatly arranged bumps that cover the surface of a rock; lingam - yoni designs; and various Hindu mythological motifs, including depictions of gods and animals.
    Kbal Spean, Angkor, Cambodia-3.jpg
  • Kbal Spean, valley of a 1000 Lingas, Cambodia. Is an Angkorian era site on the southwest slopes of the Kulen Hills in Cambodia, 25 km from the main Angkor group. The motifs for the stone carvings are roughly three: myriads of lingams, depicted as neatly arranged bumps that cover the surface of a rock; lingam - yoni designs; and various Hindu mythological motifs, including depictions of gods and animals.
    Kbal Spean, Angkor, Cambodia-2.jpg
  • Kbal Spean, valley of a 1000 Lingas, Cambodia. Is an Angkorian era site on the southwest slopes of the Kulen Hills in Cambodia, 25 km from the main Angkor group. The motifs for the stone carvings are roughly three: myriads of lingams, depicted as neatly arranged bumps that cover the surface of a rock; lingam - yoni designs; and various Hindu mythological motifs, including depictions of gods and animals.
    Kbal Spean, Angkor, Cambodia-1.jpg
  • Unicorn (Scotland’s national animal) with Saltire on Mercat Cross, Edinburgh, Scotland.
    363-Edinburgh-Musselburgh-08.jpg
  • Cairds’ Cave (The Tinkers' Cave). Samples of charcoal and animal bone found in the bottom layers of the floor were carbon-dated and showed that the cave had been in use in 300 BC. Rosemarkie, Black Isle, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    334-GallowHill-Fortrose-28.jpg
  • Looking up at the edge of field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-08.jpg
  • Ground eye view looking up in field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-07.jpg
  • Looking up at the edge of field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-05.jpg
  • Field of bright yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) under a blue sky next to woodland woodland. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-02.jpg
  • Glass disks on the façade of Galleria Fashion Store treated with iridescent foil on a metal support structure. A back-lit animated colour scheme ensures that the façade appears to be always changing by day and night. Architect: UN Studio. Engineer: Arup. Seoul, South Korea, 2007
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Looking up at the edge of field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-10.jpg
  • Looking up at the edge of field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-09.jpg
  • Bright yellow field of rapeseed in flower (canola) Close up of flowerhead. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-06.jpg
  • Edge of a field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-04.jpg
  • Ground eye view looking up in field of yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) showing stems and flowerhead under a blue sky on a sunny day. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England..Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-03.jpg
  • Field of bright yellow rapeseed in flower (canola) under a blue sky overlooked by a solitary house in woodland. Seven Springs, Gloucestershire, England. Rapeseed (Brassica napus), also known as rape, oilseed rape, rapa, rappi, rapaseed and (in the case of one particular group of cultivars, canola). Rapeseed is grown for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel
    Field-of-yellow-rapeseed-canola-01.jpg
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