Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Ann Arbor, MI 7/9 and 7/10/14



We left Mississauga and drove through southern Ontario,…




despite the fact that our g--d--- GPS showed us driving on a phantom road,…


to the U.S. border and Michigan.



More bridges.




We arrived in Ann Arbor late in the afternoon and took a walk on the University of Michigan campus.  We visited the university’s Museum of Natural History where we saw a photo study of the relationship between architectural settings and human experiences in the Inca empire.  These photos, taken at Machu Pichu in Peru, are examples of the interplay between human-made and natural features that is typical of Incan architecture.



How these enormous stones (some weighing as much as 300 tons) were moved and fitted together is unknown.


A building in present-day Cuzco, Peru, rests on a foundation built by the Incas.  The stones fit together perfectly; no mortar was used, an advantage in this earthquake-prone region,


Hill Auditorium on the U. of Michigan campus.


Hatcher Graduate Library.


A student standing in a long archway through a building using the echo to reverberate beautiful tenor a cappella songs across a campus quad.


A student standing on a university quad making soap bubbles with a wand he built.





Our new friend told us that visitors to campus must have their picture taken with the U. of Michigan “M.”


Then he showed Jim how to make giant bubbles.




It was the perfect end to our day, and to our trip.








1 Comments:

At July 16, 2014 at 7:09 PM , Blogger Jane said...

Fantastic! Thank you for posting such marvelous photos--the extraordinary glass with wild swirling colors in Corning, the impressive Falls at Niagara, the graceful huge soap bubble, and Jim's darling shorts! I want your trip to be longer, so I can see more!! Anyway, Welcome Home!

 

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