EVENING HIGH SCHOOL OF ARGOSTOLI
Our Wikipedia contributions...
About our island, Kefalonia...
Article about MarinosAntypas, a famous
Kefalonian activist of the past.
by Maria Papadatou.
The beautiful “Melissani” Cave-lake.
by Konstantina Kostopoulou.
About the village of Lakithra, with a Mycenaean archaeological site.
by Georgia Galiatsatou.
About the village of Vouni. The locals used to harvest salt in the natural cavities of the rocky
shoreline.by Paraskevi Antonellou.
The Falari bridge. A stone-built bridge that is now a cultural
monument.by Mina Theofilatou.
Maspali hill. In older times the porous limestone material was quarried and used for building.
by M. Theofilatou, with reference material provided by P. Antonellou
Animals, Animal farming,Beekeeping
One new article and 4 photos…
German Shepherd.by Christos Paanikolaou.
Beekeeper. by Costas Vasilatos.
Sheep shearing.by Costas Vasilatos.
A herd of sheep.by Panagis Maroulis.
Sheep swimming in the sea. This photo caused a stir: we didn’t
know sheep could swim… neither did the Wikipedia admins!
by Panagis Maroulis.
Renewable Energy Sources
This was our first endeavour with Wikipedia!
New articles, diagrams & photos…
Wind Energy.by Maria Papadatou.
Solar Energy.by Mina Theofilatou.
Photovoltaic system.by Mina Theofilatou.
Solar Tracker.by Mina Theofilatou.
Hybrid renewable/conventional energy system.
by Konstantina Kostopoulou.
Manolati-Xerolimba Wind Farm.by M. Theofilatou.
Imerovigli Wind Farm.by M. Theofilatou.
Agia Dynati Wind Farm.by M. Theofilatou.
Biomass (woodworking waste pellets).
by M. Theofilatou.
Since last year (2010) we have been uploading multimedia to Wikimedia
Commons…
Files on Commons are available to all Wikimedia projects all over the
world!
Tordylium apulum, a common pot herb in Kefalonia.by M. Theofilatou.
Olive picking tool.by Vicky Souti.
Kofinias bridge.by P. Antonellou.
Landscape with olive trees.by George Tekmenidis.
Agios Thomas beach .by Fotini Pefani.
Olive picking video.by Demo Leskai.
Statue of Kefalonian poet Nikos Kavvadias.
by M. Theofilatou.
And there’s much more to come!
Because we never stop learning… and we never stop sharing our knowledge
Music:
George Friedrich Händel“The Messiah”, 1st Movement
Performed by the MIT Concert Choir
The music and photo were downloaded from Wikimedia
Commons (http://commons.wikimedia.org)
Thank you for your attention…
Looking forward to seeing your Wikimedia contributions!
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