An update to a previous post, the Big Picture also has a Vietnam War retrospective.
***PLEASE NOTE, SOME OF THESE PHOTOS ARE FOR THE FEINT HEARTED.***
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/05/vietnam_35_years_later.html
An update to a previous post, the Big Picture also has a Vietnam War retrospective.
***PLEASE NOTE, SOME OF THESE PHOTOS ARE FOR THE FEINT HEARTED.***
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/05/vietnam_35_years_later.html
Some stunning photos of water and the lack of water in places.
My thoughts are with the people of Haiti today. The place looks like it has been obliterated.
If you are in Australia, Red Cross is accepting donations for the Haiti Earthquake: 1800 811 700. For those in the USA, you can text HAITI to 90999 to donate $10. Google Trends has more info. Please give generously.
Merry Christmas one and all.
The Big Picture takes us back over the last decade in news photos. It certainly went quickly when you look at some of these shots and think that that all happened in the last ten years.
Regular readers of the blog will realise I am a huge fan of the Boston Globe’s Big Picture web site. Well there are 2 parts into their 3 part look back at 2009. (I would expect Part 3 tomorrow)
2009 in photos (part 1 of 3).
2009 in photos (part 2 of 3).
2009 in photos (part 3 of 3).
Here is a little taste of what you can expect.
Once again The Big Picture comes up with the goods.
National Geographic’s International Photography Contest 2009 – The Big Picture – Boston.com.
More wonderful photos from the Big Picture.
The lastest instalment of the the Big Picture is about the 64th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. From the site…
August 6th, marks 64 years since the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan by the United States at the end of World War II. Targeted for military reasons and for its terrain (flat for easier assessment of the aftermath), Hiroshima was home to approximately 250,000 people at the time of the bombing. The U.S. B-29 Superfortress bomber “Enola Gay” took off from Tinian Island very early on the morning of August 6th, carrying a single 4,000 kg (8,900 lb) uranium bomb codenamed “Little Boy”. At 8:15 am, Little Boy was dropped from 9,400 m (31,000 ft) above the city, freefalling for 57 seconds while a complicated series of fuse triggers looked for a target height of 600 m (2,000 ft) above the ground. At the moment of detonation, a small explosive initiated a super-critical mass in 64 kg (141 lbs) of uranium. Of that 64 kg, only .7 kg (1.5 lbs) underwent fission, and of that mass, only 600 milligrams was converted into energy – an explosive energy that seared everything within a few miles, flattened the city below with a massive shockwave, set off a raging firestorm and bathed every living thing in deadly radiation. Nearly 70,000 people are believed to have been killed immediately, with possibly another 70,000 survivors dying of injuries and radiation exposure by 1950. Today, Hiroshima houses a Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum near ground zero, promoting a hope to end the existence of all nuclear weapons. (34 photos total)
This one isn’t for the feint of heart.
If you haven’t bookmarked the Boston Globe’s Big Picture web site yet, you really should do yourself a favour. Time after time they produce the goods.
In the latest batch of photos, we have people diving into water. Sounds a bit dull, but wait until you see the photos. From cliffs in Dubrovnik, to spring boards in Rome. Ruins in Baghdad, to the coolish waters of the Australian Antarctic.
(PAUL ENDERSBY/AFP/Getty Images)
(AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
In what is becoming one of my favourite sites in the interwebs, The Boston Globe’s Big Picture, has come up with the goods once more. Looking at President Obama’s first 167 days in office.
Possibly the coolest note written for being away from school is my favourite from this crop of great shots.
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/07/president_obamas_first_167_day.html
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