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Iraq, Costa Rica, and Canada—Girding the Earth with Esri T-Shirts!
Ammar Ibrahim
Ammar Ibrahim, a server-based mapping system administrator for Iraq's Central Organization for Statistics and Information Technology and its Population 2009 Project, is wearing his Esri T-shirt while taking field results in Sulaimaniyah. |
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Kathy Scott and
Brian Hall
Kathy Scott, GIS coordinator for Washington State Parks, and Brian Hall, GIS analyst at Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, spent two weeks in the mountains of Costa Rica. They were volunteers in an Earthwatch expedition to study the ecological benefits of shade-grown coffee. It's nice that their Esri T-shirts weren't in the shade! |
Tat Ma (right) and Geoffrey Moore
Tat Ma, a GIS specialist for the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, is showing Geoffrey Moore, trainee, how to use a GPS unit and integrate the data into GIS. They are posing next to an inuksuit, which is a common man-made landmark used for navigation or as a reference location. The photo also shows two very cool Esri T-shirts! |
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|Online Only Photos|
What Do a Glacier, a Waterfall, a Reservation, and the Colosseum Have in Common? Esri T-Shirts, of Course!
Cathy L. Conner
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Cathy L. Conner, professor of geology, Department of Natural Sciences, University of Alaska Southeast, recently visited the sprawling Taku Glacier, about 25 miles from Juneau, Alaska. Her Esri T-shirt, which she is obviously happy to wear, reads "gis by esri". |
Michael Plante
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Michael Plante, senior hydrogeologist, Leggette, Brashears & Graham, Inc., St. Paul, Minnesota, traveled to Iceland, where he visited Gullfoss Waterfall, located approximately 60 miles from Reykjavik. He tells us, "As a geologist, the trip to Iceland was a dream, and the Esri T-shirt was a necessity!" |
William J. Howell
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William J. Howell, GIS coordinator, San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, Highland, California, had this shot snapped on San Manuel's Reservation. His Esri T-shirt just sparkles in the sun! |
Vicki Chan
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Vicki Chan, Department of Sociology, University of California, Irvine, took her Esri GIS T-shirt to the mighty Roman Coloseum. Good thinking! |
Wear an Esri T-shirt in a unique location and send a photograph to ArcNews. Photos will be considered for use in ArcNews, the expanded T-shirt section at ArcNews online, or both. While digital photos sent via e-mail (tmiller@esri.com) are preferred, prints or slides can be sent to Thomas K. Miller, ArcNews Editor, ArcNews T-Shirt Feature, Esri, 380 New York Street, Redlands, California 92373-8100 USA.
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