American
2871 creative works found
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Canon 20D – 17-40mm L – 17mm – 1s – f/11 Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. It is located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. Antelope Canyon formed over the course of millions of years by erosion of the Navajo Sandstone, primarily due to flash flooding and secondarily due to wind erosion. Rainwater (especially during monsoon season) runs into the wash that Antelope Canyon is part of, picking up speed and sand as it rushes through the narrow passageways. Over time the passageways are eroded away, making the corridors wider and smoothing hard edges in such a way as to form characteristic ‘flowing’ shapes in the rock. Upper Antelope Canyon, called Tse bighanilini, “the place where water runs through rocks” by the Navajo, is the most frequently visited by tourists, due to two considerations. First, its entrance and entire length are at ground level, requiring no climbing. Second, beams (shafts of direct sunlight radiating down from openings in the top of the canyon) are much more common in Upper than in Lower. Beams occur most often in the summer months, as they require the sun to be high in the sky. / In the same series: / / /
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Self-Portrait Please view Large view or it doesnt really have the same feel, Thank you! This is me and my very best friend ‘Baby’. This is a self-portrait and very hard to achieve as I was shooting and working with an animal at the same time. But after about 200 shots, I finally got the interaction between us captured, along with the pose I was going for. Thank you for looking! Baby is an Indian Ringneck Parrot; 2 yrs old.* / Visit us on YouTube: babytheringneck. He… we talk a lot. / ____ / / ________ / All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. / © 2008. Using this image for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, will lead to legal action.
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Sun Beam entering Upper Antelope Canyon, Arizona, USA. Antelope Canyon is the most-visited and most-photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest. It is located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. Antelope Canyon formed over the course of millions of years by erosion of the Navajo Sandstone, primarily due to flash flooding and secondarily due to wind erosion. Rainwater (especially during monsoon season) runs into the wash that Antelope Canyon is part of, picking up speed and sand as it rushes through the narrow passageways. Over time the passageways are eroded away, making the corridors wider and smoothing hard edges in such a way as to form characteristic ‘flowing’ shapes in the rock. Upper Antelope Canyon, called Tse bighanilini, “the place where water runs through rocks” by the Navajo, is the most frequently visited by tourists, due to two considerations. First, its entrance and entire length are at ground level, requiring no climbing. Second, beams (shafts of direct sunlight radiating down from openings in the top of the canyon) are much more common in Upper than in Lower. Beams occur most often in the summer months, as they require the sun to be high in the sky. / In the same series: / / /
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The eye is one of those universal images we all drawn to. When shown in an anatomical sense rather than belonging to a face there is a strange disconnect.
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/ ...................................................................................................... / The Heartbeat of America. / The New Chevy Camaro I believe due out in 2009 / The Camaro was seen in the Transformers Movie / ......................................................................................................... / Click to View By Category: / - Waterfall Photos / - Selective Coloring / - Infrared Photos / - Black and White Photos / - Animal Photos / ............................................................................................................... /
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A Lego recreation of Joe Rosenthal’s 1945 photograph “Raising the flag on Iwo Jima”
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Pastel on canson.This is if you like my logo,He is with me always. / I mostly paint from my imagination,and Shadow Walker is a deep part of me. “Thank you so much for taking time to view , and commenting.:):):)” / * © Copyright 2008 Jo Hoden, All Rights Reserved.
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Also available in Sepia.
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Oil / Spirit Guide
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American Mountain Lion
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This berg was as big as a house! We were bobbing around in a little lifeboat so we could be close to these and get some photos. Our main ship, the Skorpios III, although happy to plough through ice flows would not venture closer than 1 kilometre to the glacier face. The glacier in the background is the Pope Pio XI, the largest glacier (I think) in South America. Southern Patagonia, Chile.
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A little image to remind us all of the pressures some people feel in life…especially when they get in, over their head into debt. A readvertising concept by no frills* art. Available as a tee here…
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Trail of Tears Pow Wow
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oil
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He said, “Kanyen’keha Tewatati” (Let’s speak Mohawk).
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FEATURED! MAY 08 KOLaboration with the talented sjem She look so cool in her new Camaro / It’s black as coal and it goes boy, go go go / I brought my fight next to her Camaro / And when I fire on a smile then she blows, she blows
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My second close-up of a bird,an american Kestrel. /
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Pastel on canson. / Horse sprit, / This four legged came in strong, with the wind running through his mane. / A sprit soo strong with the sense of freedom, Galloping through life and dreams. “Thank you so much for taking time to view , and commenting.:):):)” © Copyright 2008 Jo Hoden, All Rights Reserved.
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The American Pika, a small flower-gathering relative of the rabbit, may be one of the first mammals in North America known to fall victim to global warming if heat-trapping emissions are not reduced soon. American Pikas are typically found in rocky areas, called talus, within alpine regions of the western United States and southwestern Canada. Many hikers, while passing through pika habitat in these rocky areas, have heard these shy creatures call and whistle to each other. Since food is difficult to obtain in winter in the alpine environment, Pikas cut, sun-dry, and later store vegetation for winter use in characteristic ‘hay piles.’ They are often called ‘ecosystem engineers’ because of their extensive haying activities. According to research, global warming appears to have contributed to local extinctions of Pika populations. American Pikas may be the ‘canary in the coal mine’ when it comes to the response of alpine and mountain systems to global warming. Information from WWF. / ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ After decades of living and exploring the mountains of Montana, Wyoming and Idaho…this is the ONLY Pika I have EVER seen!! And if what the above information says is true…this might be the only one you ever see, either!! I can’t tell you how excited I was to get a few seconds to capture this charming and elusive and endangered Pika…it was a moment I had dreamed about for years. ~ Diana Aren’t his chubby little toes the cutest?!!?
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This piece was originally made with pencil, acrylic, and novel pages.
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watercolor
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