Deserted park
312 creative works found
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Goosenecks State PArk at Sunrise on a November morning. The San Juan River covers 5 miles total while moving West only 1 mile as it bends back and forth through the sandstone of Southern Utah
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Yes I finally got my IR filter! This is the first shot I have taken with it so far, however as I took this this morning while rushing to work, I completely forgot to take a tripod or to set the white balance so I feel quite lucky it even turned out at all.. I just wish it wasn’t so overcast so I could have captured the dark infrared sky.. Sure it isn’t the best IR shot, but I have plenty of time to learn! Thanks for looking!
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Got out to see the Grand Canyon for the first time in my life. I could not believe how queezy it made my stomach to get close to the edge. There are no railings to protect you from falling off the edge. Needless to say, I was very careful. And…YES THOSE ARE PEOPLE OUT THERE ON THAT POINT…scary. The startling thing about the visitor’s first view of the canyon is how suddenly it appears. Driving across the flat Coconino Plateau south of the rim provides little preparation for the first view of the massive gash in the earth which is like nothing any first time visitor has ever seen before, anywhere. This is Mather Point. It lies at 7120 feet above sea level. The view northeast from Mather Point (shown below) looks out across O’Neill Butte on the south side of the river across to Zoroaster Temple on the other side. The north rim is about 10 miles across the canyon from this point. The depth of the canyon provides a progressive range of climates which supports different kinds of life. The temperature on the floor of the canyon may reach 120 degrees in the summer. Four of the North American continent’s “life zones” are represented within the park. Stretching 277 miles across northern Arizona, the Grand Canyon ranges in elevation from 2,400 feet to over 7,000 feet above sea level. In places, it is up to one mile deep and over 18 miles wide, while some of the canyon’s majestic plateaus to the north rise to 9,000 feet above sea level. The scenery is spectacular, and is a must see for anybody. Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. All images and writings are the copyright of the artist – © amari, amarica. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying, distributing and/or selling any image without prior written consent from the artist is strictly prohibited and subject to any and all legal remedies.
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A beautiful sunrise over the deep and winding canyons of the San Juna river at Goosenecks State Park
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Large hollow rock filled with Indian petroglyphs. Joshua Tree National Park, California.
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Red Rock National Park, California / Just a few minutes drive from my home. I’m glad I got this shot when I did. Since this shot, a large portion of the colorful rock has collapsed. It’s slowly deteriorating.
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Huge rock outcropping in Joshua Tree National Monument, California. / PLEASE NOTE: The original file and prints are better quality and more detailed than the reduced sized views shown here.
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Volcanoes Pomerape and Parinacota in the high Altiplano of Lauca National Park, on the Chilean/Bolivian border.
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Opinions needed. I need one or two more images for my Deserts Calendar and this is one candidate. Thumbs up or down? I found these fascinating formations of clay to remind me of pawns on a chessboard. Last Light illuminating the odd formations of Goblin Valley State PArk in Utah.
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A very narrow slot canyon appropriately named Spooky Gulch twists and turns for several hundred meters through a dry desert landscape. Its walls tower many meters overhead while the opening in front of you seems to get smaller and smaller. Those hikers that are both brave and thin enough to fit through will find that they are able to make it to the opposite side. At its narrowest point, the little canyon is only about 30 centimeters wide! [Escalante National Monument] [Spooky Gulch info and photos] / Copyright © 2004 Brian W. Schaller – All rights reserved. Copies, reproductions and altered versions are not permitted.
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This shot was taken somewhere in Colorado. September, 2007
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“One Tree Hill” Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, Colorado / HDR Processed from RAW inside Photomatix, slight use of LucisArt. Captured on my Minolta 5D and Minolta 18-200 DT Lens, using a Sigh-Ray CPL, Hoya UV. Thoughts welcomed, print to come! _“We turn away to face the cold, enduring chill / As the day begs the night for mercy love / The sun so bright it leaves no shadows / Only scars / Carved into stone / On the face of earth / The moon is up and over One Tree Hill / We see the sun go down in your eyes You run like a river, on to the sea / You run like a river runs to the sea” / —-U2, “One Tree Hill”_
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Looking out the entrance of a wind eroded hole in a large rock. Joshua Tree National Park, California. PLEASE NOTE: The original file and prints are better quality and more detailed than the reduced size views shown here.
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Storm approaching Australian outback.
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Joshua Tree National Park, California
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Photographed in morning light at Garden Of The Gods Park in Colorado Springs, Colorado, processed in HDR Thoughts welcomed!
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Amazing rock formations and colours in Death Valley – April 2008 WARNING / ©2008 Globalphotos All rights reserved. / All photographs, text and images by Globalphotos are the exclusive property of Globalphotos – protected under Australian and international copyright laws. / These images may not be reproduced, copied or manipulated without written permission. / No use for Public Domain. / Use of any image for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright.
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A curving line of pure white gypsum crystals in the heart of White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, USA. This National Park unit preserves a large part of the world’s largest gypsum dune field, which advances slowly to the east day-by-day. [U.S. National Park Service website] [Wikipedia entry] / Copyright © 2001 Brian W. Schaller – All rights reserved. Copies, reproductions and altered versions are not permitted.
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One of the clay structures at Lake Mungo with a tree growing from it. Taken near sunset on the lunette.
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The sand dunes at Mesquite Flats, just outside Stovepipe Wells in Death Valley National Park. Having spent the night sleeping on a park bench at the camp ground outside Furnace Creek, I raced up here ahead of the sunrise for a nice 5.30am photoshoot to make the most of the early light. I love how low horizontal sunlight brings out the texture in the dunes- by 8am this place is pretty much a washout, but I had a good sixty minutes of gorgeous tones and contrast… and yes, left my tracks all over the sand. Another spot I can’t wait to head back to someday. May 2007.
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A church abandoned in the ghost town of Bodie, California
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Acadia Nat’l Park, Mt. Desert Isle, Maine Thought I’d try my own shot at a well photographed lighthouse… :)
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Most people aren’t aware just how dynamic the Colorado landscape is, and there are few other places in North America that have so many features. From the rolling plains on the East to the high mountain peaks of the front rage, to the desert landscapes in the south, to plateau desert on the western slope. This is one shot that shows that. Usually I post pictures of snow covered peaks, well, this shows otherwise. This is an older shot, a couple years old taken at Garden of the Gods outside of Colorado Springs, Colorado. It has been sitting here just gathering dust, reworked for a long time now.. / I am uploading this shot specifically for a print in mind. I think it will make a good one!
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Wild Vicunas graze in front of Mount Quisiquisini and Lake Chungara in the Lauca National Park, Altiplano, Chile.
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