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begins with simple talks...
It blooms into a long and deep conversation...
Next thing you know… you begin to care so much :-).
A changed version of the view a few photo's back with a hint of blue and a border...didn't know how to do the border at the time...doh..BEST LARGE
I find that some of the most striking sunrises are in July - this year seems to be no exception.
This was the EDP readers picture of the day on 21/07/2010.
I was about early one recent Monday before work. This meant I was able to get Mac out for an early morning run on the beach.
When I got down onto the beach this was the sight that was waiting for me. It wasn't quite a sunrise, but the sun hadn't been up for very long & there was a striking light. It made for a good start to my day & my week.
A row of beach huts along Lowestoft seafront. Something to provide a little warmth on a very cold day.
I stumbled upon a field of literally thousands of sun flowers at the end of a day spent shooting in a city. I couldn't pass this up.
Nikon F301 + Nikon 50mm 1.8 Series E
Kodak Portra 400
Hoya/Itorex lens filters
Unretouched lab scan
July 2021
On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.1 earthquake struck off the northeast coast of Honshu on the Japan Trench. A tsunami that was generated by the earthquake arrived at the coast within 30 minutes, overtopping seawalls and disabling three nuclear reactors within days. The 2011 Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami event, often referred to as the Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami, resulted in over 18,000 dead, including several thousand victims who were never recovered.
The deadly earthquake was the largest magnitude ever recorded in Japan and the third-largest in the world since 1900.
In Japan, the event resulted in the total destruction of more than 123,000 houses and damage to almost a million more. Ninety-eight percent of the damage was attributed to the tsunami. The costs resulting from the earthquake and tsunami in Japan alone were estimated at $220 billion USD. The damage makes the 2011 Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami the most expensive natural disaster in history.
Although the majority of the tsunami’s impact was in Japan, the event was truly global. The tsunami was observed at coastal sea level gauges in over 25 Pacific Rim countries, in Antarctica, and on the west coast of the Atlantic Ocean in Brazil.
The tsunami caused $31 million USD damage in Hawaii and $100 million USD in damages and recovery to marine facilities in California. Additionally, damage was reported in French Polynesia, Galapagos Islands, Peru, and Chile.