Desert water 

574 creative works found

  • Did you order this item today? In appreciate I’d like you to know: Ten percent of all my proceeds go to The Mount Dora Center For The Arts, who has provided quality art experiences in the Lake County region of Central Florida. They are a community oriented 501©(3) charitable nonprofit organization dedicated to fostering an understanding and appreciation of art and culture through exhibitions, arts education programs and being host to the annual Mount Dora Arts Festival. / The remainding proceeds go towards purchasing higher quality programming and program accessories, to create my art. In todays world of computer technology, programs are ever changing, advancing, and improving quality, of course they can be quiet expensive as well. So please know when you buy my art youre investing in me as an artist and helping to advance my skills, and helping a small community art center to continue providing children and adults of all ages to partisipate and learn about art. I appreciate your support and hope you enjoy the selection you have purchased today. Sincerely, / Lisa C. Weber

  • The most well-known and important groundwater source in Australia is the Great Artesian Basin. This is a vast groundwater source that underlies 22 per cent of Australia – extending beneath the arid and semi-arid regions of Queensland, the Northern Territory, South Australia and New South Wales. It covers about 1.7 million square kilometres, and contains an estimated 8700 million megalitres of water. Not surprisingly, it’s one of the largest artesian water basins in the world. The water is coming from a depth of up to 3 kilometres, and some of the water is believed to be up to two million years old. The average water temperature is between 30 and 50 degrees, but it can be as hot as 100 degrees Celsius. The Great Artesian Basin has always been an important source of water for many Outback communities. Unfortunately, much of the water that is extracted is also wasted. It is estimated that up to 80 per cent of the total outflow from the Great Artesian Basin is wasted….

  • Landscape rendered in Vue, postwork in PSCS2.

  • Watering hole in the desert. And man made. The landscaped promitory is the give-away.

  • Footprint on a sandy beach with gentle wave

  • For Purchase Information: / J.Harris | NekoPhoto.com / tel: 801.541.6900 / Salt Flats Dream Series

  • This photo was taken during my trip to Luxor (Egypt, Africa) in 2007. When I was on the boat voyage on the Nile. The Nile is a major north-flowing river in Africa, generally regarded as the longest river in the world. Browse Palinchak Mikhail art by categories Art Nudes · Fractal Art · Egypt · Landscapes · Conceptual / / / /

  • Soon after the sun rises and the alpenglow fades, the lighting evens out and gives more natural daytime colors. The wind dies down and gives better reflections and the wildlife comes out to greet the new day. I saw a couple of deer while photographing that morning. They were wandering across the lakeside on the right. The fishermen started coming out in numbers around this time and made things a little tough on me since I was set up right near the marina and had to wait wile boats passed through my viewfinder every few minutes. In the end though, it was a beautiful summer morning that I wish I could experience everyday.

  • Acrylic on canvas 90cms X 66cms X 7.5cms deep. / Out west….....desert…......but the light! / It was the inner light that enchanted me – something that reflected back to me from the spirit of the place….because if I looked too hard, there was only mud and crocodiles…. (kidding about the crocodiles!) / Finally got to finish it after 2 years in storage!

  • Sailing down the Nile from Aswan to Luxor

  • Bardi ‘Saltwater’ people at England’s most famous sacred site Stonehenge: Photo: © Julian Andrews. The Bardi people are from the Dampier Peninsula situated around 200 kilometres north-east of Broome, Western Australia. They are coastal people who have looked to the land, open waters, tidal flats and mangrove creeks for thousands of years for food, law and traditions. Even to this day Bardi people continue to practice their culture and to live this way of life.

  • one of the new desert drawings series .

  • This is a photo I have been holding onto for a long time waiting to process. I finally decided how I wanted it to look so here it is! This is Lake George, in the Mammoth Lakes Basin, Eastern Sierras, Ca. Fly fisherman often fish off of this shelf. I was just starting a hike that passes the lake and this scene caught my eye. The mountain in the background doesn’t have an official name but I have heard it called Red Mountain before. There was a lot of mining activity there in the 1800’s and early 1900’s.

  • Wild horse reflection in a water drop. Took a picture of Scrutiny and placed upside down behind the water drop and this is what I came up with.

  • Steam rising from a warm creek on a chilly March morning. / Geothermal hot springs abound throughout southwestern Nevada. Nye County RedBubble Album: High Desert Oasis Canon 350D EOS / Tamron 55/200mm Corel PhotoImpact x3

  • A little oasis at the base of the Egan Mountains; this little pond is fed from a geothermal hotspring, and stays warm all year, even as the landscape all around is frozen and dry. Northern Steptoe Valley—Schell Creek Mountain Range in the distance / Eastern Nevada (2008.NOV.02) RedBubble Album: High Desert Oases Canon 350D EOS / Tamron 55/200mm + polarizing filter / Corel PhotoImpact x3 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— / Sales: 1 (8×10) – Online Direct

  • Schoodic peninsula, Maine, looking towards Mt. Desert Island (Mt. Cadillac) / this is the quiet part of Acadia National Park (near Winter Harbor) March, 2009 / Nikon P80, auto

  • Another of my paintings, hangs in my lounge room =] had to share this one also, the moon was especially tricky but people seem to like the outcome, plus don’t ask how long the sand dune ripple lines took :P I intended to add glow paint on top but as I used watercolour that made this almost impossible so I didn’t add it, shame though as I have a black light too :D but the white canvas areas still glow anyways.

  • A classic Australian scene, depicting a deserted and decaying old wood and tinned roof shack, with the harsh but beautiful Australian bush as a backdrop. The third image in this series. This wonderful old shack is just outside of Melbourne, in the Kangaroo Grounds/Christmas Hills area. I’ve put directions on my Flickr stream if anyone is interested in checking the place out. You can find them here. To view these images extra large on black, please see my website Copyright © 1989 – 2009 Tracy Edgar Fine Art Fotografie – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Any unauthorised use of these images is strictly prohibited.

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