The photos on this site were contributed by expedition participants and portray daily life on board the JOIDES Resolution. We encourage use of the following images, however not all the photos on this page are in high resolution. Please contact the Webmaster to check on high-resolution availability. Also visit our IODP Photo Gallery for scientist profiles or higher quality images.
CSS galleries are a design element that allows you to display a collection of images or other content in an organized and aesthetically pleasing manner on your webpage. They can be used to showcase your portfolio, display product images, or create a photo album.
The Web module in Lightroom Classic lets you create web photo galleries, which are websites that feature your photography. In a web gallery, thumbnail versions of images link to larger versions of the photos, on the same page or on another page.
The panels on the left side of the Web module in Lightroom Classic contain a list of templates and previews of their page layouts. The center pane is the image display area, which automatically updates as you make changes and lets you navigate between the pages in your gallery. Panels on the right have controls for specifying how the photos appear in the template layout, modifying the template, adding text to the web page, previewing the web gallery in a browser, and specifying settings for uploading the gallery to a web server. For more details on the Web module, see Web module panels and tools.
If your source photos are in a collection or a folder that doesn't contain any subfolders, drag photos in the Filmstrip to rearrange them in the order that you want them to appear in the gallery. See Rearrange web gallery photo order.
On the left side of the Web module, move the pointer over a name in the Template Browser; a preview of the template appears in the Preview panel above the Template Browser. Click a template name to select it for your gallery. See Choose a web gallery template.
In the Site Info panel on the right side of the module, type a title for your website (Site Title), a title for your gallery (Collection Title), and a description (Collection Description). You can also enter your e-mail address so that visitors to your gallery can click your name to send you an email. See Add titles, description, and contact information to web photo galleries.
After you finish your gallery, you can either export the files to a specific location or upload the gallery to a web server. In the Upload Settings panel, choose Web Server from the FTP Server menu, or choose Edit Settings to specify settings in the Configure FTP File Transfer dialog box. If necessary, consult your ISP for help with FTP settings. See Preview, export, and upload web photo galleries.
If you plan to reuse your web gallery settings, including layout and upload options, save the settings as a custom web template. Or save the settings as a web collection to preserve a set of specific Web module options with a collection of photos. See Create custom web gallery templates and Save web settings as a web collection.
A web photo gallery is a website that features a home page with thumbnail images that link to gallery pages that display full-size images. Adobe Output Module provides various gallery templates, which you can select and customize using the Output panel.
Options vary depending on selected template. Specify the size of images and thumbnails, the quality of the JPEG images, transition effects, layouts, and whether to include filenames on HTML gallery images.
Note: You can also use the Contact Sheet II plug-in. In Adobe Bridge, choose Tools > Photoshop > Contact Sheet II. For more information, see Print photos in a picture package layout in Photoshop Community Help.
Without the generosity and cooperation of many photographers working throughout NOAA, members of other government agencies, and private citizens who have given access to their collections, this site would not be possible.
The Thorncrown Chapel Photo Gallery was donated to Thorncrown Chapel by Randall Connaughton. A former practicing architect, Randall holds a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Louisiana State University and a Master of Fine Arts degree in photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design. Born in New York and raised in Hawaii and Miami, Randall explores the contrasts of the urban and natural environments and his photographic approach emphasizes a sensitivity to the nuances of light. He contributes to efforts in historic preservation and his photographs of historic buildings are in the collections of the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Library of Congress. He currently resides in Atlanta, where he specializes in architectural photography and exhibits landscape photographs.
Elfsight Gallery widget is the easiest way to show your pictures or make an attractive albums on your website. Insert any amount of photos, place descriptions, and choose the optimal way to position them on the page. Our widget includes six templates and diverse additional design possibilities. Each photo opens in popup mode, people can navigate through them or watch a slideshow, zoom in and out, and open the pictures full-screen. You can find custom colors for the widget elements and apply a custom background, apply text options and more style features.
The materials displayed on this website, including but not limited to all text, audio, video, images, photographs, illustrations, artwork, animation files and other graphics, names, logos, trademarks, and service marks, are property of Subaru or its parent or affiliated companies or its licensors and are protected by copyright, trademark, and other intellectual property laws. This site may be displayed, downloaded, and/or printed solely for your personal, non-commercial home use, provided that you do not delete or modify any copyright, trademark, or other proprietary notices. Any other use of the material on this site without the prior written consent of Subaru is strictly prohibited.
Once you have uploaded files to a folder, you can publish your photo gallery by clicking the Websites button located on the Files screen. From there, click the Create Website button at the top of the screen.
You can include some basic html tags in the comments, for example wrapping your text in tags for bold, and tags to italicise. If you add a URL, such as , it will automatically be converted into a hyperlink.
Mitosis is the mechanism that allows the nuclei of cells to split and provide each daughter cell with a complete set of chromosomes during cellular division. This, coupled with cytokinesis (division of the cytoplasm), occurs in all multicellular plants and animals to permit growth of the organism. In this part of the Photo Gallery, we illustrate the various steps in mitosis that occur in onion root tips, which are relatively easy to capture in all stages. We apologize for the poor quality of the photomicrographs in this section, but it was built using pre-prepared (stained and mounted) microslides that we obtained commercially. In the future, we hope to obtain higher quality images.
A normal resting cell exists in a state called interphase in which the chromatin is undifferentiated in the heavily-stained nucleus, as illustrated above. Before the cell enters the mitosis phase, it first undergoes a synthesis or S phase where each chromosome is duplicated and consists of two sister chromatids joined together by a specific DNA sequence known as a centromere. Centromeres are crucial to segregation of the daughter chromatids during mitosis. The first phase of mitosis is known as the prophase, where the nuclear chromatin starts to become organized and condenses into thick strands that eventually become chromosomes. During prophase, the cytoskeleton (composed of cytoplasmic microtubules) begins to disassemble and the main component of the mitotic apparatus, the mitotic spindle begins to form outside the nucleus at opposite ends of the cell. The photomicrograph below depicts the initial chromosome condensation at the beginning of prophase (early prophase) when the nucleolus is still intact.
The next identifiable phase is called metaphase where the chromosomes, attached to the kinetochore microtubules, begin to align in one plane (the metaphase plate) halfway between the spindle poles. The kinetochore microtubules exert tension on the chromosomes and the entire spindle-chromosome complex is now ready for the next event. The photomicrograph below depicts onion root tip cell chromosomes in metaphase, ready for separation. The kinetochore and polar microtubules are clearly visible and radiate out the ends of the cell leaving the chromosomes in the middle of the complex.
This sets the stage for chromosome separation in the next stage of mitosis: anaphase. Almost immediately after the metaphase chromosomes are aligned at the metaphase plate, the two halves of each chromosome are pulled apart by the spindle apparatus and migrate to the opposite spindle poles. The kinetochore microtubules shorten as the chromosomes are pulled toward the poles, while the polar microtubules elongate to assist in the separation. The photomicrograph below illustrates the early stage of anaphase where the chromosomes are just becoming completely separated. The microtubules are clearly visible in this complex.
Anaphase typically is a rapid process that lasts only a few minutes. When the chromosomes have completely migrated to the spindle poles, the kinetochore microtubules begin to disappear, although the polar microtubules continue to elongate. This is the junction between late anaphase and early telophase, the last stage in chromosome division. The photomicrograph below shows the positioning of the chromosomes in late anaphase. The polar microtubules are a clearly formed network and the synthesis of a new cell membrane has been initiated in the cytoplasm between the two spindle poles.
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