Canyon water Wall Art

522 creative works found

  • south end of little river canyon

  • Light plays on the water at the bottom of a deep canyon in Western Australia. This painting was done with acrylic, ink and pastel on paper. Enjoy!

  • View of the Colorado River from the Top of the Grand Canyon.

  • these are slot canyons along the arizona/ utah/ nevada border.

  • Located in central New York. This is the tallest east of the Mississippi. It runs 12months of the year no matter how dry the season. /

  • The base of a tall falls showing the flow narrowing into different pools and their own mini-falls. /

  • A small series of falls that feed and old gristmill. /

  • This was shot about 100 yds away from the actual floor of this canyon~ zoomed up. / I enjoy the clarity of the water frozen in it’s movement; even at that distance. /

  • This small waterfall flowing into a large basin is called “Giant’s Bathtub” in Matthiessen State Park in northern Illinois. The long exposure traced the water circling to the right of the frame. Camera used was a Canon 5D.

  • Exciting colours … these falls were still in thaw … what a sight!

  • Idyllic pool on Grand Canyon tributary stream

  • Horseshoe Bend near Page, Arizona. This place was simply incredible. After spending hours at the Grand Canyon (South Rim) a 3-4 hour drive to Page, AZ finally revealed a great view of the Colorado River. Unfortunately I got there a little late, so the sun behind me cast the shadows of the cliff I was on, onto the bend part of the river. Because of this I am submitting this to the Do-Over Group.

  • I could not stop shooting in this spot. Everything was just glowing and so lush and beautiful. I felt like I was in Hawaii, not Illinois.

  • Definitely the most precarious and dangerous shot I took that day. Leaning over the edge of the waterfall at St. Louis Canyon in Starved Rock State Park in Illinois. The drop is 60 feet.

  • This was taken outside of Apache Junction, Arizona near Canyon Lake. The red bluffs add such great saturation to the landscape.

  • This is the first sight you see when you enter Watkins Glen State Park from the lower end. It was actually my last image, since I started my hike from the top. This picture was taken with a Canon 10D camera with a Canon EF 70-200mm f/4L lens at 70mm focal length. The camera’s ISO was set to 400 and exposure was 1/125th sec @ f/4. Your comments are always welcome! Constructive criticism is very much appreciated. © 2009 Gene Walls All copyright and reproduction rights are retained by the artist. Artwork may not be reproduced or altered by any process without the express written permission of the artist.

  • © copyright 2009 All Rights Reserved / You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent. It is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the “Niagara of the West,” Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high-36 feet (10.97 m) higher than Niagara Falls- and flows over a rim 900 feet (274 m) wide. A park overlooking the waterfall is owned and operated by the City of Twin Falls. Shoshone Falls is best viewed in the spring as diversion of the Snake River for irrigation often significantly diminishes water levels in the summer and fall. Shoshone Falls has existed for 30,000 to 60,000 years. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls was the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Only 35% of fish species of the upper Snake River are shared with the lower Snake and Columbia rivers. Fourteen fish species found in the upper Snake are also found in the Bonneville freshwater ecoregion (which covers the Great Basin portion of Utah), but not the lower Snake or Columbia rivers. The upper Snake River is also high in freshwater mollusk endemism (such as snails and clams).[1]. Used my Canon EOS, Digital Rebel XT, with Canon Ultra Sonic Zoom EF Lens 70-300 mm., 1:4-5.6, with Image Stabilizer. I took this shot on March 15, 2009.

  • Those aren’t two rocks in the foreground. That is water pooled up reflecting the stone past the cave opening. This needs to be viewed larger to understand it. I look at it and go back and forth between normal view and larger and it still plays with my mind. Camera: Canon 5D / Lens: Canon 24-70 mm / Shutter Speed: 1.6 sec. / Aperture: f16 / ISO 100 / Focal Length: 50 mm / White Balance Mode: Shade / Tripod: Slik 813 Carbon Fiber / Photoshop Used: Of course! Cascade Falls in the distance. Peeping through an opening in a cave in the lower dells of Matthiessen State Park in Illinois.

  • antelope canyon arizona / nikon d300

  • A closer view of Ottawa Canyon.

  • In Grand Canyon, some of the falls run red. The red color is from the iron in the rock rusting and the red rust settles into the sediment at the bottom of the water. When it rains and a lot of water is running, it stirs up the sediment, which turns the water red. This red, rusty water also stains the rocks red. Canon 30D / / Welcome! Thanks For Stopping By And taking A Look. / All Comments and Fav’s Are Truely Appreciated. Thank You!!! / / / /

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