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JIM RICHARDSON

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JIM RICHARDSON

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  • Toronto seen at night from the CN Tower.
    MM7509_20080410_2682-B.jpg
  • Carloway Broch at Carloway on the Isle of Lewis is believed to date from 100 to 300 BC.  Though massive it is not thought to be a fortification as such, but a impressive dwelling for a small community.Dun Carloway (in Scottish Gaelic Dùn Chàrlabhaigh) is a broch situated in the district of Carloway, on the west coast of the Isle of Lewis, Scotland. It is a remarkably well preserved broch - on the east side parts of the old wall still reaches to 9 metres tall. In places there are also more modern repairs to the east wall. At the base the broch is around 14 to 15 metres in diameter and the walls around 3 metres thick.<br />
Dun Carloway was probably built some time in the 1st century BC, and radiocarbon dating evidence from remains found in the broch show that it was last occupied around 1300 AD.  To buy this print click on the SHOPPING CART below.
    MM7701_20080704_8991 (1).jpg
  • Children take a ride down Main Street in the shadow of the town water tower in Petersburg, Texas on their way to see thier babysitters mother at the local newspaper.  Petersburg, like many other High Plains towns has lost a lot of population.  They have tried to keep empty buildings torn down to keep main street looking better.  The lot where the kids are riding was a store at one time.  Petersburg has a population of about 1200.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220057.jpg
  • St Clement's Church (Scottish Gaelic: Tur Chliamainn, meaning Clement's Tower) is a fifteenth century church in Rodel, Harris, Scotland, built for the Chiefs of the MacLeods of Harris. It is dedicated to Pope Clement I. It is sometimes known as Eaglais Ròdal or Rodal Church.
    MM7937_20110509_06718.jpg
  • St Clement's Church (Scottish Gaelic: Tur Chliamainn, meaning Clement's Tower) is a fifteenth century church in Rodel, Harris, Scotland, built for the Chiefs of the MacLeods of Harris. It is dedicated to Pope Clement I. It is sometimes known as Eaglais Ròdal or Rodal Church.
    MM7937_20110509_06718.jpg
  • Foggy morning at the Ingalls Feedlot east of Garden City, Kansas.  Cattle being loaded into cattle trucks, cattle in feelots, feed trucks coming out of the feed tower hauling hot steam flashed corn.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220265...jpg
  • Forsinard Flows near the hamlet of Forsinard in Sutherland, Scotland. The Flow Country is a vast area of peat bog, a fragile environment valued as wildlife habitat as well as for storing vast quantities of carbon.  This is now an RSPB Reserve and there is a newly built observation tower overlooking the bogs.
    MM8321_20160417_27354.jpg
  • St Clement's Church (Scottish Gaelic: Tur Chliamainn, meaning Clement's Tower) is a fifteenth century church in Rodel, Harris, Scotland, built for the Chiefs of the MacLeods of Harris. It is dedicated to Pope Clement I. It is sometimes known as Eaglais Ròdal or Rodal Church.
    MM7937_20110509_06718.jpg
  • For one euro visitors to Santiago can have their picture taken with this "pilgrim" dog on the plaza of the clock tower.
    Galicia 20050731 2230.jpg
  • Malted barley being prepared to dry at Highland Park distillery in Scotland. The grain has been soaked in water and allowed to sit until the seeds are just ready to sprout, then transferred to this tower where heat will be used to dry it out.
    SC-0039 Highland Park Grai.jpg
  • The pagoda towers at Lagavulin Distillery, Isle of Islay, Scotland.
    SC-0081 Lagavulin Tower.jpg
  • Jim Richardson on Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161008_30152.jpg
  • On Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161008_30152.jpg
  • On Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161008_29672-Pano.jpg
  • View of Conwy, famous for the castle overlooking the River Conwy.<br />
<br />
Conwy is the classic walled town. Its circuit of walls, over three quarters of a mile long and guarded by no less than 22 towers, is one of the finest in the World.
    Wales 20050816 3750.jpg
  • Jim Richardson on Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161009_30190.jpg
  • Jim Richardson on Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161008_30106-Pano-2.jpg
  • Towering high above the Dee Valley and the bustling town of Llangollen is Castell Dinas Bran, one of Britain's most spectacular sites. A rugged, foreboding pinnacle, the hillock was the ideal spot to erect a castle but the native Welsh princes of Powys occupied the hilltop for only a few decades.
    Wales 20050817 4080.jpg
  • Bagui Traue with the harvest of ground peas (?) that he grows by intercropping with his sorghum, seen towering above him. Intercropping allows the farmer to get double crops from the land. Additionally he may plant the same field several times a year.
    MM8154_20131030_22193 - Version 2.jpg
  • Stac Pollaidh, Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161009_30297-Pano.jpg
  • Jim Richardson on Sgorr Tuath in Assynt in the far northwest of Scotland, a vast land of will moors and towering mountains. <br />
Sgorr Tuath is 589m (1933ft) and a rough climb but is still the 2,944th highest mountain in Scotland. Views here are across to Stac Pollaidh (Stack Polly) which is a popular hiking destination.
    MM8321_20161008_30106-Pano-2-Edit.jpg
  • Towering high above the Dee Valley and the bustling town of Llangollen is Castell Dinas Bran, one of Britain's most spectacular sites. A rugged, foreboding pinnacle, the hillock was the ideal spot to erect a castle but the native Welsh princes of Powys occupied the hilltop for only a few decades.
    Wales 20050817 3981.jpg