Enjoying the great vista of the Fedisphere.
View from central Stockholm towards the island Djurgården, where an amusement park and museums are visible.
Side note: the picture was taken the day after a roller coaster accident had occurred. The park was closed for some time.
Edit: maybe the image isn’t suitable for February, as this was taken in June.
So much hope for further studies. It’s such a cruel condition.
What the article doesn’t mention is that the train driver/engineer was worried that the terrain under the tracks was weakened by the weather and rain. The driver got in touch with the command centre and they agreed to the suggestion of lowering the train’s speed, which meant that the derailment wasn’t as dangerous or critical as it could have been otherwise.
Also, the brook Susabäck (bäck = brook) is not a river. It is a brook. “The rustling brook river” sounds like “DVD disc”.
Not in any way surprising, pretty much every square inch of viable land on the British isles has probably been lived on within the last 2000 - 3000 years.
We have similar discoveries in the south of Sweden, we joke that “you can’t throw a rock in a field or forest without hitting ancient ruins and relics”.
The first time I was ever put through a metal scanner and a pat down was when landing at an airport in the UK. Mind you, this was before 2001, but any traveler complaining was given dirty looks or pulled aside, one of my co-travelers was pulled aside and his luggage was searched and he was more thoroughly searched and questioned for a while (can’t remember exactly how long, but it delayed us for a conference and we were too late for our hotel check in, so we had out of pocket expenses).
I guess borders are a bottle neck…