Volcanoes 

1755 creative works found

  • Dormant Volcano in the middle of Auckland…Dead for 500 years. The cone is 100m deep and you can walk to the bottom. Beautiful views of Auckland city.

  • Mt. Yotei dominates the scene from the peaks of Niseko, Hakaido, Japan. Like Mt. Fuji, Yotei is an active volcano. Skiers actually climb it for the big steep ride, but it’s not an easy treck as you could imagine…thanks for looking…

  • An abstract representation of the two main features of the Tongariro National Park, Mt Tongariro (in the background) and Mt Ngauruhoe. The Tongariro Crossing, the most famous day walk in NZ, takes you between these awesome volcanoes where the power of nature overwhelms your senses.

  • This is a bit different; the primary image was shot from the inside of an ice cave in North Eastern CA two years ago…...Ice caves are prominent in this part of California due to the volcanism that dominates the area. It was a bit on the “blah” side so I dressed it up a bit just for fun…..the moon is mine; the bubbles are graciously donated by PhotoImpact11…PLEASE VIEW IN LARGE FORMAT FOR THE BEST IMPACT…. / 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. © 2008Joyce Dickens: Using my images for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action!

  • Probably one of my favourite places in the world! This is the aptly named “Valley of the Moon” (Valle de la Luna) in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. In the distance, the peak of the Volcano Licancabur seems to float above the horizon. It is just before sunset when the rocks take on a golden glow. The moment is short lived as the tropical dusk descends quickly. The white stuff is salt and the lack of humiidity makes the Valley of the Moon devoid of life. This is the most inhospitable place on the planet.

  • Featured in Alphabet Soup – April 20th, 2009 / Featured in Hawai’i ~ Aloha Na’au – March 2009 When asked about Hawaiian volcanoes, most people imagine the Island of Hawai`i and its eruptions at Kilauea or Mauna Loa volcanoes. But East Maui volcano has witnessed at least ten eruptions in the past 1,000 years. It is the giant volcano that peaks out at over 10,000 feet and looms over Maui. Haleakala last erupted in the 1790s. It is 33 miles wide and 24 miles long, and the main crater is 7.5 miles long and 2.5 miles wide. / This is how the crater looks like right after the sunrise, around 6:30am. / / Featured in Hawai’i ~ Aloha Na’au group.

  • © copyright 2007 All Rights Reserved / You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent. This is a photo of Mount Shasta in Northern California. This was taken in April 2008 still full of snow. Using my Canon EOS, Shutter Speed was set at 1/1000 sec. F-stop was F/5.6, ISO 100, Focal length on lens 80mm.

  • Volcano, El Misti, in the Arequipa region of southern Peru. I’d love to say the puffy white stuff above the crater is an eruption, but it is only a cloud.

  • Tanna Island volcano.

  • This macro photograph taken within inches of the tree trunk shows a small world of its own, looking much like an abstract oil painting, hidden from all passers-by except me! A small story to add a little atmosphere for your enjoyment! “The fresh clean air rushed into our lungs as we pushed aside the last of the rocks digging our way towards freedom….....the bright morning sunlight blinded us. It had been 60 days since we last saw daylight. The journey through the dormant volcano had taken us deep into the bowels of the earth. I’ll never forget this adventure…......ever! The fear and terror we had experienced could never be told…....no-one would believe us…...........” Macro photograph taken from an Australian Gum Tree.

  • Tanna – Vanuatu

  • View from Potenciana Farm to the east. This is how Coffee Land looks after a rain. Due to the rainy season the land is lush green. This must have been the view of the Spanish Colonialists when they explores Costa Rica to get to the Pacific. / Location: Potenciana, Santiago de Puriscal, Costa Rica This picture is participating in the Challenge 2009 Latin America Calendar#2. Follow the link to vote for this picture, Thank you

  • .... ha, try saying that over and over…. A white Llama stands guard at the entrance to the Lauca National Park, at the Altiplano end of the Lluta Valley in northern Chile. In the background is the peak of Volcano Parinacota which lies on the Chile/Bolivia border. / /

  • WILD AND FREE / / To spend an hour with Mountain Gorillas is one of the best wildlife experiences you can ever hope for. They captivate you with their eyes and you become lost in the moment. Your time with them goes so fast you are left just wanting more… / / / Unfortunately, Mountain Gorilla numbers are small, with only approximately 700 left in the wild. The primary threat comes from forest clearance and degradation, as the region’s growing human population struggles to eke out a living. I am hopeful ways can be found to control these problems before it is too late. / / (Virunga volcanoes – Rwanda) / /

  • Molten lava texture. Kilauea volcano, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Big Island, Hawaii, USA Copyright © Olga Zvereva (All Rights Reserved) / This image can not be reproduced, copied or manipulated. / Please, do not use it in any way without my written permission.

  • We got snow on the mountain! / 2/2009 . Images copyright ©Kimberly Palmer. / Copying, displaying, manipulating or redistribution of any image from this portfolio without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited

  • Eastern Shores…........... / Of Hawaii….......... / Where Kilauea…...... / Runs to the Kai…....... / Watch your step….......... / acrylic on fabric / Original Available for Sale /

  • Dawn at Kitimani in central Bali. This was one of my first travel photographs. It was 1976 and I had just stepped into Asia, carrying an old camera my mother had given me for my journey (which never ended…but thats a longer story). The camera had a worn brown leather case, and I was shooting with kodachrome film, which was for me then expensive and hard to find. I took this one photograph of this scene, but I still remember the incredible view over Mt Batur, the active volcanoe that I had climbed the previous day. Asia was beginning to mesmerise me…

  • Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / My images do not belong to the public domain. / Reproduction is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved. No portion of this site or my photography may be reproduced by printing, uploading, copying, publishing, photocopying or any other means of mechanical or electronic reproduction without my express written permission. For reproduction permission and inquiries on licensing for use and/or publishing of my images, please contact me. Mahalo! Beautiful Art and Greeting Cards For Sale ~ Shop securely and view my collection here Haleakala Crater is a large erosional valley at the summit of Haleakala volcano, East Maui. It formed after the rimrock lava flows were erupted around the top of the volcano about 145,000 years ago, give or take about 10,000 years. Cinder Cones are small volcanoes within the crater composed of cinder and ash ejected during the volcanic eruption. Several volcanic eruptions blew the top off the cinder cones. Pu’u ‘o Maui is the crater’s largest Cinder Cone. You may also see Ka Moa ‘o Pele, Halali’i, Pu’u ‘o Pele, Pu’u Mamane Cinder Cones. Gazing into the mouth of the volcano. Imagine many of the cinder cones and spouts you are seeing are over 600 feet high. Haleakala is sleeping, dormant in perceived inactivity since 1792 when the last recorded volcanic eruption flowed over Makena and Ahihi Kinau. This photograph is taken as I am standing at the summit at 10,023 feet above sea level gazing into the crater. You may notice the tiny roads used by scientists to study the protected region within the volcano. Haleakala is a shield volcano. Built up from the ocean floor by countless eruptions, it was once a mountain that rose several thousand feet higher than today’s elevation. Haleakala dominates the east side of the Valley Isle and is sacred to the Hawaiian people. The mountain’s face is a mighty wall looming over the valley. Haleakala’s width spans 20 miles, ocean-to-ocean “Jelal-ud-Din Rumi has said centuries ago, that before man fire, water, earth, air, are objects; before God they are living beings that work at His command. The meaning of what Rumi has said is that all objects, all places are as gramaphone records: what is put into them they speak; either your soul hears it or your mind, according to your development.” by the Sufi Master, Hazrat Inayat Khan Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / Aperature 13 Shutter Speed 1/400 ISO 400

  • Captured looking East just outside my living room window, on 09/03/09 at 6:48AM… that’s Mount Lassen (aka: Lassen Peak) midscreen to the right – Please view in large format…. Lassen Peak (also known as Mount Lassen) is the southernmost active volcano in the Cascade Range. It is part of the Cascade Volcanic Arc which is an arc that stretches from northern California to southwestern British Columbia. Located in the Shasta Cascade region of Northern California, Lassen rises 2,000 feet (610 m) above the surrounding terrain and has a volume of half a cubic mile, making it one of the largest lava domes on Earth.[5] It was created on the destroyed northeastern flank of now gone Mount Tehama, a stratovolcano that was at least 1,000 feet (300 m) higher than Lassen. Lassen Peak has the distinction of being the only volcano in the Cascades other than Mount St. Helens to erupt during the 20th century. On May 22, 1915, an explosive eruption at Lassen Peak devastated nearby areas and rained volcanic ash as far away as 200 miles (320 km) to the east.[5] This explosion was the most powerful in a 1914–17 series of eruptions that were the last to occur in the Cascades before the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington. Lassen Volcanic National Park was created in Shasta County, California to preserve the devastated area and nearby volcanic geothermal features. Unlike most lava domes, Lassen is topped by craters. A series of these craters exist around Lassen’s summit, although two are now covered by solidified lava and sulfur deposits. Lassen is the largest of a group of more than 30 volcanoes that have erupted over the past 300,000 years in the Lassen Volcanic Center. / Compliments of Wikipedia /

  • abstract interpretation series

  • abstract landscape series / best viewed larger

  • Torn Tissue collage, photograph, computer alteration Featured in the Group: Sets of Two / Featured in the Group: Live, Love, Dream / Featured in the Group: Alphabet Soup (Letter V) / Featured in the Group: Feel, Don’t Copy / Companion Work: Kilauea Volcano II /

  • landscape series / view larger

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