Mariner ocean 

1578 creative works found

  • Love this dive. hope to get there soon. Fessej Rocl on Gozo VIEW BY SUBJECT Marine Life Wreck Dives Reefs, Divers & Siloetes Sun Sets Black & White Digital Art & Posters

  • The beautifull but deadly jelly fish. this was taken at dusk and lit from slightly above. Shot taken at Cirkewwa Malta.

  • Manatee by Lyuda. / lavrentyeva.com

  • This image was created using 5 different photos and layering.

  • She really was the most inquisitive of creatures!

  • This artwork was featured by RB groups: / Decorative and Traditional Art / Going Coastal / Sea / Solo Exhibition / Waves / You’re Accepted / This fine art giclée and other artworks are available at / MY GALLERY A seascape of “The Golden Hind” (a.k.a. Golden Hinde – hind meaning doe); the ship was originally named the Pelican. She was an English galleon and was captained by Sir Francis Drake. This is the vessel he used to circumnavigate the world. This is a panoramic view that shows the ship in the distance with the moon behind it peeking through the clouds. It’s a complete digital creation. Art by Kinnally™ Featuring Giclee Art Prints / What are Giclee prints? / Beautiful reproductions of classic paintings / Beautiful Contemporary Art / How to Paint

  • A random drawing that a friend of mine wanted me to come up with… of course, with an example, but changed quite a bit, giving it my own style and color – edited with photoshop too as well. This would make a great T-shirt!

  • This 16”X20” original acrylic painting depicts the Halfmoon on patrol in the North Atlantic battling heavy seas. I served on a ship of this type in the l960’s and have encountered many days of rough seas.

  • Another in Skye’s neo-primitive series with Australian Aboriginal influences. This design features a diving Dolphin, a creature often associated with mythologies in coastal civilisations around the World, including Australia. This design was first hand-painted onto rock then photographed to produce this print effect. “Dolphin Dreaming” is one of my early works in the 3D painting medium I created a few years ago. I consider this series my tribute to the many happy years I lived in Australia as a nearly starving artist :o-) 25% proceeds benefit the great wildlife protection group WildlifeDirect.org / Thanks for viewing my designs. ~ Skye

  • An incoming tide at the beach at Cathedral Rock on The Great Ocean Road , site of the original Memorial Arch, just North of Lorne. Taken about twenty minutes after sunrise. A great spot for surfing, especially on a low tide with a moderate to heavy swell. Pentax istDS Camera – Three images bracketed together to create an HDR image. / /

  • Closup of a blue Heron. Santa Barbara, CA Nikon D90 / 80-200/2.8 / 1/400 f8 / 100 ISO Featured: Happy Haven 1/22/09 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- I will donate 50% of all proceeds from the sale of this image and the ones below to the American Bird Conservancy

  • A schooner, one of many in the area, is shown here off the Schoodic Peninsula, with the archipelago of islands south of Acadia National Park, Maine, in the distance under cumulus clouds.

  • I love the ocean and its inhabitants. Whenever I find a seashell, I put it to my ear and listen. I wrote the following for the image. Put your ear to the shell / and hear the ocean’s swell. / Within its ripple and its tide, / there are many who reside. / Listen closely to all its glory / and you will hear a mermaid’s story. — / Anne Hale Featured in The Patchwork Group. Also vailable as a print. /

  • The Galápagos Hawk (Buteo galapagoensis) is a large hawk endemic to the Galápagos Islands. Known for its fearlessness towards humans and authority over the islands as the only original predator, this bird has inhabited the Galápagos archipelago for over 300,000 years. I was lucky enough to see this fellow just sitting on a rock, with the Pacific ocean in the background.

  • 3d art render of a Plesiosaur up from the murky depths to feed. / Made with Bryce 3d. Plesiosaurs were carnivorous aquatic (mostly marine) reptiles. After their discovery, they were somewhat fancifully said to have resembled “a snake threaded through the shell of a turtle”, although they had no shell. The common name ‘plesiosaur’ is applied both to the ‘true’ plesiosaurs (Suborder Plesiosauroidea) which includes both long-necked (elasmosaurs) and short-necked (polycotylid) forms and to the larger taxonomic rank of Plesiosauria, which includes the pliosaurs. The pliosaurs were the short-necked, large-headed plesiosaurians that were the apex predators for much of the Mesozoic. There were many species of plesiosaurs, while most of them were not as large as Elasmosaurus. Plesiosaurs (sensu Plesiosauroidea) appeared at the start of the Jurassic Period and thrived until the K-T extinction, at the end of the Cretaceous Period. While they were Mesozoic reptiles that lived at the same time as dinosaurs, they were not dinosaurs. Plesiosaurs had a broad body and a short tail. They retained their ancestral two pairs of limbs, which evolved into large flippers. Plesiosaurs evolved from earlier, similar forms such as pistosaurs or very early, longer-necked pliosaurs. There are a number of families of plesiosaurs, which retain the same general appearance and are distinguished by various specific details. These include the Plesiosauridae, unspecialised types which are limited to the Early Jurassic period; Cryptoclididae, (e.g. Cryptoclidus), with a medium-long neck and somewhat stocky build; Elasmosauridae, with very long, inflexible necks and tiny heads; and the Cimoliasauridae, a poorly known group of small Cretaceous forms. According to traditional classifications, all plesiosaurs have a small head and long neck but, in recent classifications, one short-necked and large-headed Cretaceous group, the Polycotylidae, are included under the Plesiosauroidea, rather than under the traditional Pliosauroidea. Size of different plesiosaurs varied significantly, with an estimated length of Trinacromerum being 3 meters and Mauisaurus growing to 20 meters. Unlike their pliosaurian cousins, plesiosaurs (with the exception of the Polycotylidae) were probably slow swimmers {Massare, 1988}. It is likely that they cruised slowly below the surface of the water, using their long flexible neck to move their head into position to snap up unwary fish or cephalopods. Their four-flippered swimming adaptation may have given them exceptional maneuverability, so that they could swiftly rotate their bodies as an aid to catching prey. Contrary to many reconstructions of plesiosaurs, it would have been impossible for them to lift their head and long neck above the surface, in the ‘swan-like’ pose that is often shown {Everhart, 2005; Henderson, 2006}. Even if they had been able to bend their necks upward to that degree (which they could not), gravity would have tipped their body forward and kept most of the heavy neck in the water. From Wikipedia, the free Internet encyclopedia.

  • Morning reflections on the water caught in the rock formation at the beach at Cathedral Rock, just North of Lorne, on The Great Ocean Road, Victoria,Australia. / / Pentax istDS Camera. An HDR image with three exposures bracketed and processed using Dynamic Photo HDR.

  • Heteractis magnifica. Coral reefs, rocky reefs. Depth 5 to 15 meters. Up to 1 meter width. The magnificent sea anemone is one of the largest single structured tropical anemones. It is generally seen in areas of relatively strong water movement along the fringes and slopes of coral reefs. The column is mostly a dark orange-brown to purple and the tentacles range from bright green to greenish black

  • Taken in Tenerife in Canary Islands.

  • This fractal design reminds me of a Kogelvis / Ball fish. I don’t know the proper English name and my dictionary does not tell me it either. This fish got its name because of the ball rounds shape. / I created this fractal design with Ultra fractal and I did some postwork with Photoshop. Designer: Thea Walstra / /

  • Pt. Bonita Lighthouse, in the Marin Headlands…CA

  • Mixed-Media on Rag / (unfortunately some cropping has occurred)

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