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Posted

_Seriously would you share some_00006026

"Seriously, Would You Share Some?" 

 

© Krisztina Scheeff/Comedy Wildlife Photo Awards 2020

Scheeff took the photo in Scotland.

"Facing Reality" by Amos Nachoum

A leopard seal got into a lagoon just before low tide," Nachoum wrote. "The seal was hiding, waiting to ambush young penguins as they got closer. When a penguin got close enough, the seal moved extremely fast and caught the penguin by its feet, dragging it to the open water. I was following parallel to the action. The seal released the penguin twice and the terrified penguin succeeded in escaping, but the seal continued chasing after it, and on the third attempt, drowned the penguin and devoured it."

The many colours of Uluru....

Australia Photos -- National Geographic

Uluru Australia sunset www.transfercar.com.au | Ayers rock australia,  Wonders of the world, Australia

Helicopter Tour Uluru | Uluru Kata Tjuta Sunrise Helicopter Tour

Posted
23 hours ago, beecee said:

_Seriously would you share some_00006026

"Seriously, Would You Share Some?" 

 

© Krisztina Scheeff/Comedy Wildlife Photo Awards 2020

Scheeff took the photo in Scotland.

"Facing Reality" by Amos Nachoum

A leopard seal got into a lagoon just before low tide," Nachoum wrote. "The seal was hiding, waiting to ambush young penguins as they got closer. When a penguin got close enough, the seal moved extremely fast and caught the penguin by its feet, dragging it to the open water. I was following parallel to the action. The seal released the penguin twice and the terrified penguin succeeded in escaping, but the seal continued chasing after it, and on the third attempt, drowned the penguin and devoured it."

The many colours of Uluru....

Australia Photos -- National Geographic

Uluru Australia sunset www.transfercar.com.au | Ayers rock australia,  Wonders of the world, Australia

Helicopter Tour Uluru | Uluru Kata Tjuta Sunrise Helicopter Tour

Certainly Australia's landscape is unique. Uluru is of such beauty...

I know you like docos, as you say. I remember Australia's first Four Billion Years. One of the geographical features that most impressed me was the McDonnell Ranges. Because this mountain system formed so early, erosion has eaten away even the highest mountains. At some point it looks like the skeleton of a gigantic beast. It's one of the most strangely wonderful geological features I've ever seen. 

8bec8b55-5858-4009-be52-868239185f7d.jpg

Posted

Cairns 2-Day Combo: Great Barrier Reef Cruise and Kuranda

http://www.fitzroyisland.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Great-Barrier-Reef-Port-Douglas.jpg

Fitzroy Island: Great Barrier Reef.

Great Barrier Reef: home to over 2,000 marine species | Photo: Shutterstock

It's a marine playground and one of the most impressive natural scenarios our planet has to offer. Welcome to the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Earth's largest living structure.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, joigus said:

I read worrying news that the GBR is in danger. :( 

Yes, that is something that saddens many Aussies, particularly those that have seen some of it. The present government is turning a blind eye to the problem, but hopefully, next elections, we may get Labor bacl in again.

Posted
On 8/27/2020 at 11:42 AM, iNow said:

Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone

 

f9d5779479142f3

Clearly my own personal camera and editing capability doesn't match what I originally posted above, but supplementing this with a photo of my own:

 

image.thumb.png.033db792f859966c9ccfed1c968ba95a.png

Posted
14 minutes ago, iNow said:

Clearly my own personal camera and editing capability doesn't match what I originally posted above, but supplementing this with a photo of my own:

 

image.thumb.png.033db792f859966c9ccfed1c968ba95a.png

Amazed at the length of your selfie stick. ;) 

Colors are a bit more natural, if you ask me.

Posted
2 hours ago, iNow said:

Clearly my own personal camera and editing capability doesn't match what I originally posted above, but supplementing this with a photo of my own:

 

image.thumb.png.033db792f859966c9ccfed1c968ba95a.png

The first one probably used a polarizer.

Posted
1 hour ago, StringJunky said:

The first one probably used a polarizer.

Well, there you have it. I just used my phone lol

(also, smoke from California wildfires had blown into the air)

Posted
1 hour ago, iNow said:

Well, there you have it. I just used my phone lol

(also, smoke from California wildfires had blown into the air)

Right, that could cause diffusion and desaturation of the viewed scene. If it's a phone, you could try shading the lens with your hand or something to cut off incoming side light, which gets scattered in the lens, softening the image. A neater solution would be a lens hood. They seem quite widely available.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Original-ULHmobile-Ultimate-Mobile-Phones/dp/B082VKFDDD

 

  • 1 month later...
Posted
On 8/27/2020 at 2:19 PM, joigus said:

Unexpected and/or beautiful could be interpreted as curious/spectacular, or similar.

I recently visited what is claimed to be the clearest* lake in the country and this picture was unexpected. I tried to film the clear water and the resulting film was not anything worth sharing, but this single frame from the moment when the camera lens is half submerged turned out pretty well.

lake.thumb.jpg.dba286888435e7a43448f0a016611189.jpg

 

 

*) I have not found any conclusive official measurements, maybe it is tricky to perform standardised measurement as the bottom is visible from the surface. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rissajaure

Posted
On 12/6/2020 at 5:32 PM, joigus said:

The tepuis (tepuyes in Spanish) from Venezuela, Brazil, Guyana and Colombia. Karst topography is awesome almost beyond words or concepts. But not beyond belief, because it's there.

eb4a1e8c7da64fce9fe4793da71bd8a3.jpg

Awesome image! It looks like bridges and buildings in the center, what are those?

Example:

 1360324772_bridgesandmore.png.c9242bc071878b1be9638b834de8ad22.png

Posted
1 hour ago, Ghideon said:

Awesome image! It looks like bridges and buildings in the center, what are those?

Example:

 1360324772_bridgesandmore.png.c9242bc071878b1be9638b834de8ad22.png

Karsts are amazing. Experts will tell you more and better, but they basically consist of sedimentary rocks formed by many millions of years of deposition, made up of carbonate-rich substance from scheletons of marine animals; and later eroded by water. I suppose that those column-like features come from particular locations where the rock is less soluble in water for whatever reason. Differential erosion is the key.

7 hours ago, Ghideon said:

I recently visited what is claimed to be the clearest* lake in the country and this picture was unexpected. I tried to film the clear water and the resulting film was not anything worth sharing, but this single frame from the moment when the camera lens is half submerged turned out pretty well.

lake.thumb.jpg.dba286888435e7a43448f0a016611189.jpg

 

 

*) I have not found any conclusive official measurements, maybe it is tricky to perform standardised measurement as the bottom is visible from the surface. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rissajaure

Very nice picture. You always post a picture you took yourself. That's even more valuable! Thanks. +1.

Posted
10 minutes ago, joigus said:

I suppose that those column-like features come from particular locations where the rock is less soluble in water for whatever reason. Differential erosion is the key.

Thanks! I interpreted* the arc over the waterfall in the center (and other arcs) as a constructed bridge.
I wonder where the water comes from?

 

*) The solution might be wikipedia.org/Pareidolia, I'm a fan of art that blends nature and (large scale) constructions, for instance Pieter Bruegel's Tower of Babel (wikipedia.org/The_Tower_of_Babel (jpeg) )

Posted
5 hours ago, Ghideon said:

Thanks! I interpreted* the arc over the waterfall in the center (and other arcs) as a constructed bridge.
I wonder where the water comes from?

Oh boy, I didn't see those. You're right; they look human made...

Posted
On 9/11/2021 at 7:56 AM, Ghideon said:

I wonder where the water comes from?

I'd really like to know, since that particular tepui doesn't seem to be attached to the rest of the landscape. Do you think there's enough rainfall to fill a small lake?

Posted (edited)
16 minutes ago, Phi for All said:

I'd really like to know, since that particular tepui doesn't seem to be attached to the rest of the landscape. Do you think there's enough rainfall to fill a small lake?

I agree, the tepui does not seem to be attached. And there seems to be no room for a large enough lake. 

Edit: here is a link to discussion about the water: 

Note that the picture is posted in the art section.

Edited by Ghideon
Link added
Posted

Well spotted, @Ghideon!! My bad. I didn't give it a second thought. You really have an inquisitive spirit.

Keep it up, is all I can think of saying now.

😮 

Posted

No worries @joigus!

(In spirit of your opening post I showed the picture to one of my kids. Result was an interesting conversation about nature, digital art, Lord of the Rings, Angkor Wat, fiction and non-fiction.)

 

Posted
23 hours ago, Ghideon said:

I agree, the tepui does not seem to be attached. And there seems to be no room for a large enough lake. 

Edit: here is a link to discussion about the water: 

Note that the picture is posted in the art section.

Wow! Breathtakingly amazing!!

Not quite as spectacular but is up there.....

Amazing natural wonders Iguazu-Falls-www.istockphoto.comgbphotoargentina-iguazu-waterfalls-garganta-del-diablo-with-rainbow-gm155384430-19452951-Grafissimo

 Iguazu Falls are the world’s largest, highest waterfall system. A jaw-dropping sight, the chain of falls features nearly 300 drops as the Iguazu River snakes along the Brazil-Argentina boundary.

Posted

OK. I would like to make it up to you all for having posted that beautiful but non-legit picture.

A real tepui (mount Roraima in Venezuela):

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Roraima

The extraordinary plants of mount Roraima:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00lx3pb

Lack of nitrates in mount Roraima is due to heavy rain, that washes away all the nutrients.

BTW, I strongly recommend BBC's The Private Life of Plants.

Enjoy!

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