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Post by dinodragon on Feb 15, 2011 20:44:46 GMT -5
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Post by hallucygenia on Feb 15, 2011 21:06:15 GMT -5
Hi Dinodragon, and welcome to the forum. Any chance of putting a picture on here - not everyone is on facebook!
Lucy
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Post by dinodragon on Feb 15, 2011 21:49:11 GMT -5
I don't know how to post photos directly on this forum. Sorry for that.
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Post by Joe Botting on Feb 15, 2011 21:52:03 GMT -5
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Post by dinodragon on Feb 15, 2011 23:37:32 GMT -5
Let me try this. Photo was not shown in Preview.
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Post by Joe Botting on Feb 16, 2011 0:55:27 GMT -5
Looks like it won't work from facebook. Could you use a Flickr or Photobucket account instead? They certainly do work.
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Post by dinodragon on Feb 16, 2011 1:57:28 GMT -5
Wonder if the photo album of the FaceBook is recognizable by this forum application? If not, why?
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Post by Joe Botting on Feb 16, 2011 2:07:54 GMT -5
Probably because it's not universally accessible. I've found that photos on Flickr have to be public before you can put them on here or blog them, for example... just one of those things, I guess!
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Post by dinodragon on Feb 16, 2011 4:38:01 GMT -5
This album and my photos are not prohibited for anyone to see, i.e. it's universally accessible.
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Post by hallucygenia on Feb 17, 2011 8:27:01 GMT -5
Perhaps its only available to people who are already on Facebook? (i.e. not me). I've tried your link twice now, and can't see anything.
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Feb 17, 2011 19:18:32 GMT -5
this is what Dino Dragon was trying to post all credits are attributed to Tim H. Maybe Tim you can add the narration to what we are looking at... All pictures are from Dino Dragon, all credits belong to Dino Dragon. PL
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Post by dinodragon on Feb 18, 2011 13:21:39 GMT -5
These are some of the closeups of the tubular creature(s) of my Ediacaran site. By the way, tubular fossils are the most abundant ones on the site. All of them have the 'tree-ring' structure.
Fig. 1 One more slighted bend tubular fossils, layers of 'tree-ring' can be easily seen.
Fig. 2 A tubular creature with center filled with mud, layers of 'tree-ring' can be seen.
Fig. 3 End of a tubular fossil, layers of 'tree-ring' can be easily seen.
Fig. 4 Horizontal cut of a fused tubular creature, layers of 'tree-ring' can be easily seen.
Fig. 5 Another slighted bend tubular fossils, layers of 'tree-ring' can be easily seen.
Fig. 6 Even when the tube was squashed, , layers of 'tree-ring' still can be seen.
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Mar 3, 2011 8:36:17 GMT -5
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Post by dinodragon on Mar 3, 2011 10:03:58 GMT -5
Thanks, Pete
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Mar 3, 2011 16:04:43 GMT -5
You are welcome Tim. PL
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