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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 10, 2024, 10:25:11 am
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Pqeu The mesmerizing traffic of the Panama Canal in a fascinating time lapse
By CBSNews s Stephen SmithNew York City s medical examiner ruled that a retired detective died last year from misusing drugs - not from toiling for 420 hours in the ruins of the World Trade Center, the cop s family revealed Thursday.Charles Hirch s ruling on James Zadroga came five months after Zadroga s parents, Joseph and Linda Zadroga, had given their son s autopsy report to the medical examiner in a bid to have their son s name added to the official list of Sept. 11 victims.Despite Hirsch s ruling, the city s former medical examiner, Dr. Michael Baden, disputed the claim. Baden said that the 34-year-old Zadroga s death was indeed linked to his exposure to the toxic debris at ground zero. There s no evidence of any drug addiction, Baden said, who added that all the evidence supports that Zadroga died of chronic lung disease caused by the inhalation of dust at the ground zero site.When Hirsch ruled Zadroga s death was unrelated to 9/11, Zadroga s parents enlisted Baden for a second opinion. Baden spoke Thursday at an interview conducted at the Manhattan office of Michael Barasch, the lawyer for Zadroga s parents. A producer from CBSNews and reporter from the Associated Press attended the session. Last week, stanley becher (https://www.cups-stanley.de) Hirsch wrote a letter to Zadroga s parents stating with certainty beyond doubt, stanley deutschland (https://www.stanley-cups.de) that the foreign material in your son s lungs did not get there from the result of inhaling dust at the World Trade Center or elsewhere. In stanley uk (https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk) a private meeting, Hirsch later told t Slkb We have absolutely no clue what built this crazy-complex structure
These are sandcastles only in th stanley cup becher (https://www.stanley-cup.com.de) e technical sense; instead of temporary structures erected on the beach, they ;re images engraved on individual grains of sand, best enjoyed with the help of a microscope. Artist Vik Muniz often plays with medium and scale; he recreated a photograph of Jackson Pollock in chocolate syrup, photographed giant portraits rendered in trash, and carved 500-meter wide pictures in the dirt. For his latest project, however, he decided to think small, creating works that are imperceptible to the naked eye. Muniz collaborated with artist and researcher Marcelo Coelho to figure out a way to etch his castle images. Laser etching proved unsuccessful, destroying softer grains of sand and failing to produce sufficiently sharp images on harder grains. Instead, they turned to a Focused Ion Beam for their microscopic engraving. Each pixel in the 6 stanley vaso (https://www.cup-stanley.es) 40 pixel image above is about 50 nanometers wide. And photographing the images isn ;t a simple process, since the lines are .4 to 1.0 micrometers, close to diffraction limit of visible light. Head over to the Creators Project blog to see more of Muniz sandcastles and read more about the project. The blown-up images are on display at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art as part of comprehensi stanley drinking cup (https://www.stanleywebsite.us) ve exhibition of Muniz works. Creating Sand Castles With A Single Grain Of Sand [The Creators Project via The Colossal]