German photographer, Lucas Zimmerman’s recent photo series titled “Traffic Lights” portrays ordinary traffic lights illuminating a foggy night somewhere near Weimar, Germany. The images, however, are anything but ordinary.

Lucas, in his early 20s, was driving through the night when he saw the lights. He set up his camera, the Canon 5D Mark II, and took long exposures between 5 and 30 seconds to capture the beams shinning into the distance. Lucas says, seeing it was easier than capturing it and he had to experiment with many different shutter speeds. He also had to watch out for speeding cars, often waiting for several minutes between shots of the same set-up because each car had a profound effect on the exposure and color due to the fog.

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via SLRloungs
Jessica Shyba, mother of three, and blogger at the site MommasGoneCity.com picked up their puppy Theo - a shar-pei and German shepherd mix - from a pound in Santa Cruz when he was about 7 weeks old. Jessica decided to train Theo to sleep in his pen, but the pup wouldn’t sleep alone. Unable to stand his cries at night, she eventually let him sleep in bed with her. 

The moment she introduced Theo to their bedroom, Theo climbed up on top of her two-year old son Beau, and “it was just the cutest, most natural thing," tells Jessica. Every day now, when Shyba puts Beau down for his nap, Theo follows and they sleep together for a minimum of 2 hours. Beau and Theo are now internet sensation after pictures of them napping together went viral on Instagram last month.

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Toddler Beau and his puppy Theo are more like brothers. "The most interesting part about their relationship is that while they immediately found comfort in each other, they also fight like siblings -- the roughest out of our three kids," says Jessica.

Theo and Beau’s popularity has landed the mother on a book deal with Feiwel & Friends featuring the duo. Bedtime for Theo and Beau, the first of the two volumes, is set to be published on February 4, 2015 -- and according to the publisher, the Santa Cruz SPCA, through which Shyba's family found Theo, will be involved with the project.

The photo series is also raising awareness for shelter dogs and donations are pouring in for Santa Cruz SPCA.

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With extensive coastlines on the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, France has always been prone to attacks from seafaring enemies. To defend the enormous French coast from a variety of enemies that ranged from Barbary pirates to the Holy Roman Empire, the British, Prussia and Spain, French rulers over many centuries have built countless fortresses along the coast. Today these abandoned war buildings stand witness to the violent military history of France and colonial supremacy that the country achieved under rulers such as Louis XIV and Napoleon Bonaparte.

Fort Louvois

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Fort Louvois, known locally as Fort Chapus or Fort du Chapus, was built between 1691 and 1694 during the reign of Louis XIV on the Chapus islet. The fort is located about 400 meters offshore opposite the citadel of Château d'Oléron on the island of Oléron. The fort was positioned so that a crossfire from the château and the fort would control the Pertuis de Maumusson (Passage of Maumusson) and impede access to the Rochefort roads from the south. Fort Louvois only saw action towards the end of World War II when bombardment greatly damaged the fort, necessitating later restoration.
Since 1972 the fort has been the site of a museum of oyster farming, and there are oyster beds next to the causeway that joins the fort to the shore. The fort also houses a permanent exhibition that describes the history of the fort and that contains models of fortifications on the Charente coast. During the summer a shuttle boat that operates during high tide takes visitors to the fort; at low tide the fort is accessible via a causeway.
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Fort Enet

Fort Énet is located near the city of Fouras in the Charente-Maritime region, and can be reached on foot by a causeway during low tide. The fort was built on orders of Napoleon starting 1810 and completed between 1848 and 1850. Initially called "Enette", it was built to block the passage between the Ile d'Aix and the coast, although it mainly served as a prison for convicts transit.
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Fort Boyard

Fort Boyard is located half way between Aix and Oléron Island in the Pertuis d'Antioche straits, on the west coast of France. The fort was started in 1801 and was completed in 1857 under the reign of Napoleon Bonaparte, although he never saw the finished construction, as he left the Ile d'Aix to go into exile. But progress in artillery, which advanced quicker than the building work, rendered it useless even before it was finished. It cost the equivalent of more than two hundred million Euros today.
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Fort de La Prée

Fort de La Prée is a star fort near the eastern end of the Ile de Ré, built in the 17th century. In 1625, the French officer Toiras led the Royalist troops when they captured Ré from the Huguenots under the command of admiral Duke of Soubise. After his victory, Toiras received the title of Count, and became Governor of Ile de Ré. It was he who built Fort de La Prée.
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Fort Îles Saint-Marcouf

In the Baie de la Seine region of the English Channel off the coast of Normandy lies two small uninhabited islands called Îles Saint-Marcouf. The larger island, île du Large, is 500 metres east of the smaller île de Terre and contains a fort built between 1803 and 1812 under the orders of Napoleon. The islands are now protected nature reserve with restricted access.
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Fort-la-Latte

Fort-la-Latte is a 14th-century castle fortified with bastions in the 1700s. It is located southeast of Cap Fréhel on the Emerald Coast of Brittany, and is considered one of Brittany's finest fortifications. The castle has been a popular location for file shoots including The Vikings (1958) and Ridicule (1996).
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Fort Lupin

Fort Lupin, also called Fort de la Charente, is located on the southern bank the Charente river, built on a rock midway between the river mouth and the first meander toward Rochefort. This 17th century fort is an example of the very elegant fortification design of a series of forts built along the French shores, consisting of a semi-circular battery for use against ships, a cenrtal tower and a front to protect the landward side.
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Pacu is a South American freshwater fish found in most rivers and streams in the Amazon and Orinoco river basins of lowland Amazonia, but they have also been reported as far as Papua New Guinea, where it was artificially introduced to aid the local fishing industry. Pacu is related to the meat-eating piranha, both sharing the same subfamily Serrasalminae, although they have different food habits. The piranha is a carnivorous species while the pacu is omnivorous with vegetative tendencies. The difference is evident in the structure of their teeth. Piranha have pointed, razor-sharp teeth whereas pacu have squarer, straighter teeth, that eerily resemble those of humans.
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Pacu uses its teeth mainly to crush nuts and fruits, but sometimes they also eat other fish and invertebrates. They usually eat floating fruits and nuts that drop from trees in the Amazon, and on a few occasions were reported to attack the testicles of male swimmers mistaking them to be floating nuts. This has earned them the name of "ball-cutter" after they castrated a couple of local fishermen in Papua New Guinea. So when the fish was spotted in a few odd lakes in Denmark and later in Washington, New Jersey and Illinois last year, a mild panic ensued.
While they are not aggressive carnivores like the piranha, their crushing jaw system can be hazardous. One toddler needed surgery after a pacu bit her finger at Edinburgh Butterfly and Insect World in Scotland. Commenting on the incident, Deep Sea World zoological manager Matthew Kane warned, "Pacus will eat anything, even children's wiggling fingers.
Pacus are legal to own in the United States, can be bought in aquarium stores and are easy to raise. The trouble is many aquarium owners are unaware that pacus can grow up to 4 feet long, which is way too large for a typical home aquarium. When pet pacus outgrow their fish tank, many owners end up dumping the fish in nearby lakes.
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Aside from pacu the Sheepshead fish (Archosargus probatocephalus) also has human teeth but a little too many.
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Photo credit: Scientificamerican.com
A fully-grown adult sheepshead has well-defined incisors sitting at the front of the jaw, and molars set in three rows in the upper jaw and two rows in the lower jaw. It has strong, heavy grinders set in the rear of the jaw too, which are particularly important for crushing the shells of its prey. As with humans, this unique combination of teeth helps the sheepshead process a wide-ranging, omnivorous diet consisting of a variety of vertebrates, invertebrates and some plant material.

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Sheepshead fish are also called convict fish due to the black and white bands that run down its silvery body. Photo credit