Two Adult Acorn Woodpeckers in their Nest Hole, Lake Hodges.
Location: Lake Hodges, San Diego, California
Image ID: 39405
Panorama dimensions: 8640 x 5760
Lake Hodges Dam and western arm of Lake Hodges, Del Dios, California, aerial photo.
Location: Escondido, California
Image ID: 38111
Lake Hodges reservoir, aerial panoramic photo, San Diego.
Location: Escondido, California
Image ID: 38218
Panorama dimensions: 4989 x 9219
A human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by University of California San Diego engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09768
A human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by University of California San Diego engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09769
The propellers and steering foils of a human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by University of Washington engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09773
The OMER 5 human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by Montreal, Canadas École de Technologie Supérieure (University of Quebec) engineering students. The submersible is 16 feet long and has two people inside powering and piloting the sub. Made of high tech composite materials and containing networked computers, the OMER 5 has reached a speed of nearly 7 knots underwater, a world record for human-powered submarines.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09774
The OMER 5 human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by Montreal, Canadas École de Technologie Supérieure (University of Quebec) engineering students. The submersible is 16 feet long and has two people inside powering and piloting the sub. Made of high tech composite materials and containing networked computers, the OMER 5 has reached a speed of nearly 7 knots underwater, a world record for human-powered submarines.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09775
The OMER 5 human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by Montreal, Canadas École de Technologie Supérieure (University of Quebec) engineering students. The submersible is 16 feet long and has two people inside powering and piloting the sub. Made of high tech composite materials and containing networked computers, the OMER 5 has reached a speed of nearly 7 knots underwater, a world record for human-powered submarines.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09776
The OMER 5 human-powered submarine, designed, built and operated by Montreal, Canadas École de Technologie Supérieure (University of Quebec) engineering students. The submersible is 16 feet long and has two people inside powering and piloting the sub. Made of high tech composite materials and containing networked computers, the OMER 5 has reached a speed of nearly 7 knots underwater, a world record for human-powered submarines.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09777
A human-powered submarine passes through an underwater electronic timing gate that will measure the speed of the sub, designed, built and operated by University of California San Diego engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09778
Student engineers prepare a human-powered submarine for an underwater time trial. The submarines pilot and source of power is visible in the cockpit, and breathes on SCUBA while operating the sub. The submersible was designed, built and operated by High Tech High School (San Diego, California) engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09779
A human-powered submarine, composed off a streamlined casing which encloses half the operator as well as his air supply. The operator kicks a single large monofin to propel the sleek submersible. It was designed, built and operated by Virginia Tech engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09780
A human-powered submarine, composed off a streamlined casing which encloses half the operator as well as his air supply. The operator kicks a single large monofin to propel the sleek submersible. It was designed, built and operated by Virginia Tech engineering students.
Location: Offshore Model Basin, Escondido, California
Image ID: 09781