#edward ironstone
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de oppresso liber
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edward ironstone ♱
#ironstone#vampy#aesthetic#fashion#gothic#goth#goth aesthetic#gothcore#alternative goth#goth fashion#romantic goth#dark aesthetic#gothic fashion#gothic aesthetic#vampcore#vampy vibes#vampire aesthetic#vampiric#vamp goth#vamp aesthetic#vampirecore#vampire goth#web finds#goth subculture#alternative#vocalist#prog metal#progressive metal#men
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edward ironstone as young silco?? yes? no? maybe so?? 👀
#i mean he is a bit too conventionally pretty to actually be silco but i did immediately thought of silco when he popped up on pintrest#however being a little ugly is what makes silco hotter and i stand by that#arcane silco#young silco#silco#arcane
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What The Bright Sessions characters look like in my head (but it's mildly embarrassing)
Joan Bright - Lucy Liu
Sam Barnes - Daisy Edgar Jones
Chloe Turner - Ayo Edebri
Caleb Michaels - Nate Oaks (tiktok Hamilton twink) OR Xolo Mariduena
Adam Hayes - Alex Wyse (dont ask. I dont know.) OR Alexander Arnold, but only as short haired Rich from skins
Agent Green - Adrian Chase (specifically as Freddie Stroma) OR Cory Michael Smith
Damien - Edward Ironstone OR Eduardo Perez as Mirco Vladimoff (yes, this affects my ability to dislike Damien)
Mark Bryant - Godfrey Gao OR Zac Oyama
I'm only at the beginning of s3. I'm so excited to continue!
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like rodrick heffley type hair?
Yeah I love that! Or Jason Momoa, Edward Ironstone, Yu Lei (on instagram)
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Set of 2 Vintage White & Blue Oval Bowl Dish Embossed & Smooth.
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Edward ironstone on instagram
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so just discovered that this is actually the singer of a metal band called Ironstone. they're cool! they only have 4 songs on Spotify but they're quite nice. his name is Edward.
if you're wondering this is exactly how I see Lucifer. Maybe with longer hair, but that's it. This is very spot on.
"Hey Lucifer" and this shows up. I love him so much.
I personally think he shows up in different forms that are appealing to the person in particular. And this is how I picture him when he shows up. He wants you to feel attracted to him because he is attractive, and because that can vary between people he shapes himself according to your taste (it doesn't matter what type of relationship you guys have, he'll obviously respect that over anything else)
So yeah I guess that's my type, guys that look like crows who wished to be human.
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An undecorated chamber pot with a molded floral design (wheat pattern) was discovered during the 2006 excavation of an early 1840s–1860s privy in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. The maker’s mark on the bottom has “Ironstone China Edward Pearson” with a shield, a horse, and a unicorn. The bottom of the pot is also impressed with the label “E. Pearson/ CoBridge/Ceres Shape.” The Edward Pearson company utilized designs such as this on white ironstone from circa 1850 to 1873 (Kowalsky and Kowalsky 1999:301). This chamber pot is about 5½ inches tall, 9 inches in diameter at the rim, and 6 inches in diameter at the base.
Kowalsky, Arnold A., and Dorothy E. Kowalsky 1999 Encyclopedia of Marks on American, English, and European Earthenware, Ironstone, and Stoneware 1780–1980. Schiffer Publishing, Atglen, Pennsylvania.
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(PDF) Yao & Artusio’s Anesthesiology 9th Edition By Fun-Sun F. Yao
This is the PDF eBook version for Yao & Artusio’s Anesthesiology – Problem-Oriented Patient Management 9th Edition by Fun-Sun F. Yao, Hugh C. Hemmings, Vinod Malhotra, Jill Fong. https://booksca.ca/library/pdf-yao-artusios-anesthesiology-9th-edition-by-fun-sun-f-yao/
Table of Contents
vii Contributors xi Preface xix Acknowledgments xx SECTION 1 The Respiratory System 1 1 Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease 1 Jaroslav K. Usenko and Fun-Sun F. Yao 2 Bronchoscopy, Mediastinoscopy, and Thoracoscopy 26 Alessia Pedoto, Paul M. Heerdt, and Fun-Sun F. Yao 3 Aspiration and Postoperative Respiratory Failure 47 Kapil Rajwani, Edward J. Schenck, and David A. Berlin 4 Lung Transplantation 72 Choy Lewis, Ryan Hood, and Charles W. Hogue SECTION 2 The Cardiovascular System 90 5 Ischemic Heart Disease and Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting 90 Yasdet Maldonado, Nikolaos J. Skubas, and Fun-Sun F. Yao 6 Mechanical Circulatory Support 137 Lisa Q. Rong, Mudit Kaushal, and Adam D. Lichtman 7 Valvular Heart Disease 151 Meghann M. Fitzgerald and Natalia S. Ivascu 8 Pacemakers, Implantable Cardioverter-Defi brillators, and Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Devices 180 Alan Cheng and Fun-Sun F. Yao 9 Thoracic and Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysms 201 Yong Zhan, Frederick C. Cobey, Sharon L. McCartney, Madhav Swaminathan, and Jamel Ortoleva 10 Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair 236 Fun-Sun F. Yao and Anup Pamnani 11 Hypertension 259 Christopher W. Tam and Fun-Sun F. Yao 12 Cardiac Tamponade 279 June M. Chan 13 Heart Transplantation and Subsequent Noncardiac Surgery 303 Jeff T. Granton, Ranjana Bairagi, and Davy Cheng 14 Ischemic Heart Disease and Noncardiac Surgery 319 Christopher Szabo and Manuel Fontes Contents Yao9e_FM.indd vii ao9e_FM.indd vii 2/5/20 10:17 PM /5/20 10:17 PM viii CONTENTS SECTION 3 The Gastrointestinal System 340 15 Intestinal Obstruction and Enhanced Recovery after Surgery 340 Leif Ericksen and Tong J Gan 16 Liver Transplantation 366 Christopher H. Choi and Vivek K. Moitra SECTION 4 The Nervous System 386 17 Brain Tumor and Craniotomy 386 June M. Chan, Elena V. Christ, and Kane O. Pryor 18 Carotid Artery Disease 415 Priscilla Nelson and Hugh C. Hemmings Jr. 19 Awake Craniotomy for Mapping and Surgery in the Eloquent Cortex 440 Th omas A. Moore II and Kenneth G. Smithson 20 Head Injury 460 Chris C. Lee, Susan A. Ironstone, and M. Angele Th eard 21 Cerebral Aneurysm 481 Patricia Fogarty Mack SECTION 5 The Endocrine System 499 22 Pheochromocytoma 499 Anup Pamnani and Vinod Malhotra 23 Diabetes Mellitus 510 Mark E. Nunnally and Vinod Malhotra SECTION 6 The Genitourinary System 522 24 Transurethral Resection of the Prostate and Geriatric Anesthesia 522 Anuj Malhotra, Vinod Malhotra, and Fun-Sun F. Yao 25 Kidney Transplant 540 Christine Lennon and Fun-Sun F. Yao 26 Robotic-Assisted Laparoscopic Surgery 556 Judith Weingram SECTION 7 The Reproductive System 580 27 Placenta Previa/Placenta Accreta Spectrum 580 Jill Fong 28 Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy 608 Sharon Abramovitz and Jennifer Wagner Yao9e_FM.indd viii ao9e_FM.indd viii 2/5/20 10:17 PM /5/20 10:17 PM CONTENTS ix 29 Breech Presentation, Fetal Distress, and Mitral Stenosis 624 Jill Fong and Jaime Aaronson 30 Appendectomy for a Pregnant Patient 648 Robert S. White and Farida Gadalla SECTION 8 The Hematologic System 661 31 Hemophilia and Disorders of Coagulation 661 Elizabeth M. Staley 32 Sickle Cell Disease 686 Chris R. Edmonds and Vinod Malhotra SECTION 9 Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat 699 33 Airway Trauma 699 Richard P. Dutton and LaRita Yvette Fouchè-Weber 34 Open-Eye Injury and Cataract Surgery 710 Alaeldin A. Darwich 35 Laser Treatment for Laryngeal Lesions 724 Stephanie Marie Vecino and Hugh C. Hemmings Jr. SECTION 10 Pediatrics 736 36 Tracheoesophageal Fistula 736 Jacques H. Scharoun 37 Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia 745 Dana L. Gurvitch and Fun-Sun F. Yao 38 Tetralogy of Fallot 753 David Whiting and James A. DiNardo 39 Transposition of the Great Arteries 770 David Whiting and James A. DiNardo 40 Pyloric Stenosis 790 Aarti Sharma and Vinod Malhotra 41 Infl ammatory Airway Disease in Childhood: Laryngotracheobronchitis 800 Miles Dinner and Anthony Longhini 42 Cleft Palate 811 Aarti Sharma 43 Congenital Heart Disease with a Cervical Mass in Infancy 821 Miles Dinner and Elizabeth Q. Starker 44 Patent Ductus Arteriosus and Prematurity 833 Albert C. Yeung and Fun-Sun F. Yao 45 Post-tonsillectomy Hemorrhage 849 Dana L. Gurvitch, Jessica A. Latzman, and Hugh C. Hemmings Jr. Yao9e_FM.indd ix ao9e_FM.indd ix 2/5/20 10:17 PM /5/20 10:17 PM x CONTENTS SECTION 11 Pain Management and Neuraxial Blocks 858 46 Brachial Plexus Block 858 Tiff any Tedore and William Urmey 47 Nerve Blocks of the Lower Extremity 874 Roniel Weinberg, Melvin La, and Danielle M. Gluck 48 Complex Regional Pain Syndromes 894 Mohammad M. Piracha, Neel D. Mehta, Sudhir A. Diwan, and Vinod Malhotra 49 Cancer Pain 906 Shakil Ahmed and Sudhir A. Diwan 50 Low Back Pain and Sciatica 924 David Y. Wang 51 Perioperative Pain Management 945 Anuj Malhotra and Vinod Malhotra 52 Acupuncture 965 Yuan-Chi Lin SECTION 12 Miscellaneous 972 53 Myasthenia Gravis 972 James B. Eisenkraft and Bryan S. Carter 54 Malignant Hyperthermia 982 Henry Rosenberg, Harvey K. Rosenbaum, and Vinod Malhotra 55 Postoperative Residual Neuromuscular Weakness and Prolonged Apnea 997 Mary So, Danielle McCullough, and David J. Kopman 56 Burns 1010 Shreyajit R. Kumar and Anup Pamnani 57 Trauma 1023 Rohan K. Panchamia, Jaideep K. Malhotra, and Ralph L. Slepian 58 Scoliosis 1049 Jordan M. Ruby and Victor M. Zayas 59 Hypoxia and Equipment Failure 1073 James B. Eisenkraft and Garrett W. Burnett 60 Electroconvulsive Therapy 1093 Patricia Fogarty Mack 61 Ambulatory Surgery 1103 Melinda Randall and Hugh C. Hemmings Jr. 62 Magnetic Resonance Imaging 1119 Jayanth Swathirajan, Dana L. Gurvitch, and Hugh C. Hemmings Jr. 63 Morbid Obesity, Obstructive Sleep Apnea, and Bariatric Anesthesia 1132 Jon D. Samuels
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AND he’s (edward ironstone) australian CAMPAEO DE MUNDO 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
those two fuckers haunt my pinterest idgaf anymore theyre so pretty look at them idk whatever look at my vampire guys faceclaims idk who even cares anymore cringe is dead we ocpost idc
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Bedgebury National Pinetum Bedgebury Kent UK
I spent the afternoon here on 4 and 13 October 2017
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Bedgebury was established as the National Conifer Collection in 1925 and is now recognised as the most complete collection of conifers on one site anywhere in the world. The collection has over 10,000 trees growing across 320 acres, including rare, endangered and historically important specimens.
Bedgebury is home to five National Plant Collections: Yew, Juniper, Thuja, Lawson's Cypress and Leyland Cypress. The collection contains 56 species that have been officially declared vulnerable or critically endangered.
Bedgebury is mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter in AD 841, the name deriving from the Old English bycgan, meaning "buy", and the Kentish vecge, meaning "to bend or turn", possibly in reference to a stream.
John de Bedgebury is listed as the earliest resident of Bedgebury, in the time of Edward II. In the 15th century Agnes de Bedgebury, married John Colepeper, whose heirs, financed by mining clay-ironstone on the estate, were resident until at the time of the restoration of Charles II, and who created an ornamental park on the Bedgebury estate. Elizabeth I visited in August 1573.
The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and the Forestry Commission established the site as The National Pinetum in 1924, as the National Conifer Collection, because air pollution was rendering London unsuitable for growing conifers.
In the Great Storm of 1987 almost a quarter of the trees were brought down.
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Hidden England: Rutland travel guide
Rutland packs in picturesque villages, mighty castles and scenic views: England’s smallest county is full of surprises
Not many people have heard of Rutland, not even those who live in the UK. Comprising less than 150 square miles in the very heart of England, scenic, sleepy Rutland is flanked by the more famous counties of Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire.
Rutland regained its status as a ceremonial county in 1997 and was given the motto “Multum in parvo”, the Latin for “Much in little” – and rightly so. What the smallest county in England lacks in size, it makes up for in charisma. With pretty Rutland Water at its heart, this is a county of golden ironstone villages, ancient churches, breathtaking farmland vistas, twinkly old pubs and the picture-perfect market towns of Uppingham and Oakham – home to two of the country’s most historic schools.
While many gems lie just beyond county lines, there’s plenty to be explored within. Oakham – the county town and home to Rutland’s only train station – dates back to medieval times and is peppered with independent boutiques and coffee shops like Castle Cottage, purveyor of locally legendary cakes. The recently restored Oakham Castle, built 1180-90, is one of the oldest aisled stone halls in the country. Inside hang 240 horseshoes, gifted to the Lord of the Manor by royalty and peers, with the oldest dating back to Edward IV’s visit in 1470. The castle is the longest-running seat of justice in England – since 1229 – and is still occasionally used as a Crown Court. Nearby at Rutland County Museum visitors can learn more about crime and punishment in the county, and take a look at the only surviving ‘New Drop’ gallows in England.
The Buttercross at Oakham. Credit: eye35.pix/Alamy
A mile or so east, you reach the shores of Rutland Water. The reservoir has an interesting history, having been constructed in the 1970s via the demolition of one and a half villages and the flooding of a valley. The village of Upper Hambleton survived, and now sits on a peninsula, home to the 19th-century Hambleton Hall hotel.
Rutland Water has evolved not only into a notable fishing and bird-watching destination – site of a programme to reintroduce osprey to England – but also as a place for bike and boat rides. Cycle round the scenic shores on bikes hired from Normanton – stopping for a pint or a pub lunch en route – or sail on the Rutland Belle from Whitwell.
Illustration credit: Michael A Hill
Another reservoir, the Eyebrook, straddling Rutland and Leicestershire, offers stunning views and is a Site of Special Scientific Interest after being used in 1943 as a practice site for the Dambuster raids. Be sure to pop into nearby Stoke Dry church, whose walls bear a 13th-century mural. As legend has it, this is where Guy Fawkes and his co-conspirators thrashed out plans to blow up James I in 1605.
Travel a few miles south, just over Rutland’s border into Northampton, and you come to the Norman Rockingham Castle, standing proudly above the Welland Valley, with dramatic views across five counties. It was built under the instruction of William the Conqueror and boasts a Great Hall with portraits of Elizabeth I and her advisors, Lords Burghley, Howard and Dudley. The Long Gallery was once the focal point of family entertainment and holds an array of family artefacts, including a well-loved rocking horse.
Belvoir Castle. Credit: Ian Dagnall/Alamy
Those on a castle-hopping tour shouldn’t miss Belvoir Castle in nearby Leicestershire. This fairytale Regency castle, home to the Duke of Rutland’s family since 1067, holds one of the country’s finest art collections, displayed in some breathtakingly grand rooms.
Smaller than Oakham, Uppingham is known for its antiques shops and the renowned Goldmark Gallery, which specialises in 20th-century art and hosts a drop-in buffet lunch daily, free of charge. Bustling pubs line the square of this historic market town, which puts on an annual Fatstock Show: an opportunity for Rutland farmers to show off their pigs, sheep and cattle.
Another lovely town hereabouts is Stamford. Often described as the finest stone town in England, it built up and prospered in Georgian times thanks to the wool trade and its position as a mail coach interchange on the Great North Road, almost halfway between London and York.
Peterborough Cathedral in nearby Cambridgeshire. Credit: Ivan Vdovin/Alamy
Its attractiveness has led to its use as the backdrop for numerous TV costume dramas and films, including the 2005 iteration of Pride & Prejudice. In the village of Little Casterton nearby, Tolthorpe Hall is home to the Stamford Shakespeare Company, which puts on summer plays in an auditorium in the grounds.
Any trip to Stamford should include a visit to magnificent Burghley House, one of England’s finest Elizabethan houses, set in sprawling parkland. It was built and mostly designed by William Cecil, Lord High Treasurer to Elizabeth I, between 1555 and 1587. A series of special events celebrating 500 years since Cecil’s birth is planned for 2020.
It’s a short detour to another historic site, Fotheringhay. While only the earthworks and the conical motte remain of Fotheringhay Castle, the site is worth a visit for its significance in British history. In 1587 the castle was chosen to host the trial and execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, whose body was subsequently transported to nearby Peterborough Cathedral for burial, before being moved for final burial at Westminster Abbey.
With scenic views and historic sites galore, you could spend days exploring this pocket of hidden England, but make time too for its low-key charms. The real spirit of Rutland is to be found in its countless sleepy (or not so sleepy) villages, whose cosy pubs play host to fireside meet-ups in winter, and whose squares and grassy verges come alive with the clinking of Pimm’s glasses come summer. “Much in little”, indeed.
READ MORE: Regional guide to the Peak District
The post Hidden England: Rutland travel guide appeared first on Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture.
Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture https://www.britain-magazine.com/features/hidden-england-rutland-travel-guide/
source https://coragemonik.wordpress.com/2019/12/21/hidden-england-rutland-travel-guide/
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Set of 2 Vintage White & Blue Oval Bowl Dish Embossed & Smooth.
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