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Photographed in 2019. 6-inch gun M1900 on pedestal mount M1900, generally similar to the 5-inch gun M1900 on pedestal mount M1903. The 5-inch gun M1897 (127 mm) and its variant the M1900 were coastal artillery pieces installed to defend major American seaports between 1897 and 1920.
Flavobacterium is a genus of Gram-negative, nonmotile and motile, rod-shaped bacteria that consists of 130 recognized species. [1] [2] Flavobacteria are found in soil and fresh water in a variety of environments.
A US Army coast artillery 5-inch gun M1897 on a balanced pillar mount M1896. U.S. Endicott-era balanced pillar and masking parapet mounts were, in a sense, a hybrid of simple pedestal mounts and disappearing mounts: the guns were hidden from observation while out of action, but, once engaged, remained vulnerable to direct observation and direct ...
Picture this: It’s 4 p.m. and you are running late for the school pick-up car line. You still have to head to soccer and swimming after getting the kids, and you have no idea what to make for ...
By 1917, pedestal mounts for 6-inch guns (all of them M1900 weapons) were known to be superior to disappearing mounts, being able to more rapidly track targets with a faster rate of fire. Thus, most disappearing guns (except the M1897, shorter than the others) were dismounted for use as field guns, while most of the few pedestal guns dismounted ...
Flavobacteriia is the largest of the four classes of phylum Bacteroidota. It is a single-order class, and its largest family is Flavobacteriaceae. [4] Flavobacteriaceae is the largest family in the phylum Bacteroidota.
The pedestal is the foundation piece of the gun carriage. On the M1903 carriage the pivot yoke is mounted in the pedestal and rests upon a ring of ball bearings on the base of the pedestal. The entire weight of the gun and top part of the carriage rests upon this ring of ball bearings.
Flavobacteriales is of one of the orders from the phylum Bacteroidota. [2] Comparative genomic studies have identified several conserved indels, as well as 27 proteins that are uniquely shared by different sequenced Flavobacteriales and Bacteroidota species supporting this inference.