The forts of Genoa are a set of military fortifications dating back to different eras in defense of the urban area.

I forti di Genova_2_fratelli
I forti di Genova_Diamante
I forti di Genova_Fratello_Minore
I forti di Genova_Puin
I forti di Genova_Quezzi
I forti di Genova_Quezzi1
Forte dei Ratti
forte_tecla
I forti di Genova_Santa_Tecla
I forti di Genova_Sperone
Genova_Torre_Granarolo

www.zanox.com
Forte_Diamante Genova6 The forts of Genoa are a set of military fortifications dating back to different eras, the Republic of Genoa built to defend the urban area of ​​Genoa during its history.

This defensive system marks the events of much of the city's history, as if to punctuate the complex theory of the seven walls which have overlapped in time.

Among these, the six-eighteenth-century walls still encircle the crown heights which are the first spur of the imminent Ligurian Apennines and are the longest city walls in Europe and second in the world after the Great Wall of China.

I forti di Genova_QuezziMuch of the Genoese fortifications are still visible and in some cases also visited.

The major fortifications (total 16) must be added those built to the west, on the heights between Cornigliano and Sestri Ponente, in the second half of the nineteenth century (Casale Erselli Forte, Forte Monte Cross, demolished in 1959, and Fort Monte Guano), as well as the bastion San Bernardino, the nineteenth-century towers (not completed, except for the Tower and the San Bernardino Quezzi) and numerous shore batteries, some of which still exist (the best known of these is known as the Battery Vagno).
If you liked this article, subscribe to the feed by clicking the image below to keep informed about new contents of the blog:

Wildlife of the Malvinas Islands.

www.zanox.com
The Malvinas Islands are an archipelago of two main islands and about 200 islands in the South Atlantic. You are a British overseas territory, located at about 50 degrees south latitude, off the east coast of South America. The islands are from Argentina and claimed in Spanish Islas Malvinas called.

The term “city” can only be for the capital Stanley use, which houses about 2,000 people, about four-fifths of the entire island population. As “villages”, you can normally only call a few places, Port Howard, 120, Goose Green / Darwin together with 70 and Fox Bay East / West with 50 and 4 more with a little more than 35 residents.


The remaining approximately 120 residents living on the islands habitable-divided into “camp-settlements”, (like us to “homestead” or “Hamlet”). The sheep shearing time is here is an exception, then the settlers meet in larger groups, larger even in the villages.

Many animals can be dangerous if they blocked the escape route is, or they have young.

Elephant seals and sea lions are the most dangerous – keep a safe distance when you see these animals.

 
If you liked this article, subscribe to the feed by clicking the image below to keep informed about new contents of the blog:

Natural wonder Spider cocoons in Sindh (Pakistan).

Spider cocoons in Sindh 1
Spider cocoons in Sindh 2
Spider cocoons in Sindh 3
Spider cocoons in Sindh 4
Spider cocoons in Sindh 5
Spider cocoons in Sindh 6
Spider cocoons in Sindh 7
Spider cocoons in Sindh 8
Spider cocoons in Sindh 9
www.zanox.com
Sindh_Coat_of_Arms_PKA girl walks past a tree covered in spider webs in the flood affected areas of K.N. Shah, located near Dadu in Pakistan's Sindh province.
The cocooned trees are a side-effect of spiders escaping flood waters in the area. Although people in this part of Sindh have never witnessed this phenomenon, they report there are now less mosquitoes, thus reducing the risk of malaria.

As if being devastated by monsoon floods weren't bad enough, it seems the people of disaster-laden Sindh, Pakistan (circa 2010) were also the recipients of a more surreal holocaust: SPIDER TREES.

Sindhi_Map_SAUK_RKThis has made the rounds on the mainstream interWEB I'm sure but it was too terrifying for me to resist.

The general consensus seems to be that the flood waters drove billions of spiders and other insects up into the trees where they then sealed them in ghostly cocoons.

The people of Sindh said they have seen nothing like it before yet apparently no formal scientific analysis was made.

National Geo sent photographers who insist that when you stood under these things lots of tiny, tiny spiders would fall on your head.

This has been heavily contested, many say that certain moth larvae or other silk spinning worm types are more likely to be blamed. But in the end does that really make this any less of a nightmare made flesh? Yet another relentless, overwhelming example of the wonder/terror that is the natural world.

If you liked this article, subscribe to the feed by clicking the image below to keep informed about new contents of the blog:

Italy's Best Pictures: Pictures from the Most Beutiful Towns of Tuscany.

Val_d'orcia_-pienza
Val_d'Orcia
Tuscany_landscape_west_of_Siena
Siena
Prato,_Castello_dell'imperatore,_da_S-E
Prato
Firenze.PalVecchio05
Florence
Pisa
Pisa
Anfiteatro_Lucca
Lucca
San_Gimignano
San Gimignano
Cala_Grande_Argentario
Cala Grande Argentario
Sasso_Pisano_il_borgo_medievale_visto_da_Sud
Sasso Pisano
Castiglioncello
Castiglioncello
Serra_pistoiese
Serra Pistoiese
Viareggio,_excelsior_e_principe
Viareggio
Pisanino_da_Tambura
Pisanino da Tambura
Elba_Enfola
Elba Enfola
Leonardo_self
Leonardo da Vinci
www.zanox.com
Tuscany_Coat_of_armsTuscany is a region in Italy. It has an area of about 23,000 square kilometres (8,900 sq mi) and a population of about 3.75 million inhabitants. The regional capital is Florence (Firenze).
Tuscany is known for its gorgeous landscapes, its rich artistic legacy and its influence on high culture. 

Tuscany is regarded as the true birthplace of the Italian Renaissance, and has been home to some many influential people in the history of arts and science, such as Petrarch, Dante, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Niccolo Machiavelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Galileo Galilei, Amerigo Vespucci, Luca Pacioli and Puccini. As a result of this, the region has several museums (such as the Uffizi, the Pitti Palace and the Chianciano Museum of Art). Tuscany has a unique culinary tradition, and is famous for its wines (most famous of which are Chianti, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, Morellino di Scansano and Brunello di Montalcino).

tuscany_mapSix Tuscan localities have been designated World Heritage Sites: the historic centre of Florence (1982), the historical centre of Siena (1995), the square of the Cathedral of Pisa (1987), the historical centre of San Gimignano (1990), the historical centre of Pienza (1996) and the Val d'Orcia (2004). 

Tuscany has over 120 protected nature reserves. This makes Tuscany and its capital Florence popular tourist destinations, attracting millions of tourists every year. Florence receives an average of 10 million tourists a year, placing the city as one of the most visited in the world (in 2007, the city became the world's 46th most visited city, with over 1.715 million arrivals).
If you liked this article, subscribe to the feed by clicking the image below to keep informed about new contents of the blog:

Recent Posts

Antipixels & Counters

Add to Technorati Favorites Peru Blogs BlogESfera Directorio de Blogs Hispanos - Agrega tu Blog

blogspot hit counter

Facebook Twitter RSS