View allAll Photos Tagged Solidifies
This Park is a tribute to the mighty volcanic forces that created and sculpted this archipelago in the middle of the Pacific. Featuring ancient lava tubes snaking through verdant tropical jungles as well as rough undulating black masses of freshly solidified lava with still-smouldering vents, this Park contains enough features to satiate the appetite of budding and mature vulcanologists alike. But perhaps what captivated me most was staring at the orange glow from the gaping maw of the active volcano: it was a chilling reminder of the geological forces that was responsible for these and many other volcanic islands, and of how quickly it can change the landscape around.
I returned back to the park that evening to see the scintillating night sky framing the rising smoke from the volcano, a memory I will never forget of the first volcano I had ever visited.
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
HI USA
A snowman will always be on every Gingerbread house that I make,
I love making these little figures, I hope you like my planters filled with Poinsettias,
the dirt is made with coffee grinds and brown sugar, that gives it wonderful texture and the brown sugar solidifies it.
All is sweet and edible, after the squirrels have all that sweet they need that coffee:-)
* Clue for the house, it has something to do with a Queen.
Have a great weekend everyone!
The song.......in July 1945. It was written in Hollywood, California during one of the hottest days on record.
photo rights reserved by B℮n
It will be k-k-cold this weekend. The temperature can drop to -15 degrees celcius and that means of course only one thing: skating! After a few nights of good frost we could skate on February 11, 2021 in Waterland. In Broek in Waterland, Zuiderwoude and at the Gouwsea. Waterland in the winter is a real skater’s paradise. As temperatures plunge across Europe, many are cursing the cold. But not in the Netherlands. Many are hoping for further frigid conditions. Photo taken of two skaters skating in direction of Amsterdam till sunset on the vast frozen Kerk Ae. A historical moment since skating in Waterland is such a rare occurrence. Today I skate in Zuiderwoude and from Uitdam to Marken and back, such a beautiful sea of ice to enjoy. An infinitely beautiful sight on this icy sea in 2021. It was a pleasure. The meadows here are white, the Gouwzee completely frozen and the breath comes out of my mouth in small gray puffs. Put your hands behind your back. Breathe calmly. I enjoy the sound of the irons over the ice and the beautiful view of the snowy landscape . The ice surface is great here. I stop for a moment to take a photo. Many skaters enjoy the beautiful ice until sunset. It provides a beautiful picture.
Today 11th of February 2021 we got the opportunity to go ice skating on real ice instead of going to an ice rink. A good freeze only comes from a win in the climatic lottery. Thus the chance for our Dutch to be wild adventurers on their own land comes only every few years. We glide across solidified, frosted lakes with fish frozen into the ice. Waterland near Amsterdam in the winter is a real skater’s paradise. Photo taken in Zuiderwoude at the Kerk Ae. Two Dutch speed skaters enjoying the natural ice. It was getting late and the sun was almost down. It was also getting colder. Photo taken while I was skating too.
Het wordt k-k-koud dit weekend. De temperatuur kan dalen tot wel -15 graden en dat betekent natuurlijk maar één ding: schaatsennn! Na een paar nachten goede vorst konden we op 11 februari 2021 schaatsen in Waterland. Na een extra nacht van vorst ligt het ijs er redelijk goed bij. Eindelijk weer heerlijk ijs om voor schaatsliefhebbers de ijzers onder te binden. Er kan heerlijk kilometers geschaatst worden in Broek en Waterland, Zuiderwoude en tussen Uitdam en Marken. Je beleeft de natuur op plekken waar je normaal niet kan komen. De Gouwzee is een paradijs voor schaatsers uit het westen van Nederland, omdat het meestal het eerste grootschalige gebied is waar men goed kan schaatsen op natuurijs. Maar het blijft een historische gebeurtenis. Vele schaatsenrijders zoeken vandaag de bevroren oppervlakte van de Gouwzee op en elders in Waterland. Op de Gouwzee voor een schaatsrit langs de dijk van Uitdam naar Marken. Een oneindig mooi gezicht op deze ijszee anno 2021. Het was genieten. De weilanden zijn hier wit, de Gouwzee totaal bevroren en de adem komt in kleine grijze pufjes uit mijn mond. Handen op de rug. Rustig ademen. Ik geniet van het geluid van de ijzers over het ijs en het prachtige uitzicht over de besneeuwde landschap. Het ijs is geweldig hier. Ik stop nog even voor het maken van foto. Vele schaatsers genieten tot zonsondergang hier van het mooie ijs. Het levert een prachtig plaatje op.
North Clear Creek is a tributary of the Rio Grande. The waterfall flows over a deck of Nelson Mountain tuff, solidified ash from a volcano in the San Juan volcanic field that erupted about 27 million years ago. Reference en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Clear_Creek_Falls
Image - Copyright 2020 Alan Vernon
Excerpt from www.teamlab.art/ew/resonating_microcosms_mossgarden_plane...:
Moss Garden of Resonating Microcosms - Solidified Light Color, Dusk to Dawn
Ovoids that change appearance with the sunrise and sunset are laid out in the moss garden.
With sunrise, the ovoids begin to reflect the world around them. When pushed down by a person or blown by the wind, the ovoid falls back and then rises, releasing a resonating tone. The ovoids around it also respond one after another, continuing to resonate with the same tone.
As the sun sets, the ovoids shine by themselves. When an ovoid is pushed by a person or blown by the wind, it shines brightly and emits a sound tone, as it rights itself. The ovoids around it also respond one after another, emitting the same light color and sound tone that continues to resonate out.
The space of the work is interactively transformed under the influence of the wind, rain, and the behavior of the people in the space, making the environment and the people a part of the work. When the wind is quiet and people are still, the ovoids begin to flicker slowly.
teamLab is experimenting with the concept of color. The ovoids can change into a total of 61 newly-defined Solidified Light Colors.
It is said that mosses were the first terrestrial organisms to appear in a world of rocks and sand, where there was no life on land yet. As mosses and ferns appeared and forests were created, a variety of animals became able to live on land.
Since water inside cells is essential for living things, if the body lacks water, it will die. Mosses, on the other hand, are poikilohydric, meaning the water content in the cells change according to surrounding humidity levels. So moss will not die during long dry periods, and they come back to life when given water. Because mosses are poikilohydric, their color and shape change dramatically when the air is dry versus when it is wet, such as when there is rain or fog.
Tardigrades, which live in moss, also go into a non-metabolic state of dormancy when the surrounding environment becomes dry, but they revive and become active when there is water. The state that tardigrades enter, when they are neither living nor dead, is called cryptobiosis. This may cause us to consider what it means to be alive.
Kodachrome Basin State Park, Utah.
A geologist friend is inspecting one of the geological pipes common to this park. The pipe is a remnant of numerous channels where fluidized material pushed upward through overlaying strata in this region and solidified. As the surrounding strata eroded away, the pipes, being harder, remained.
For my video; youtu.be/87EZyDuDpIY?si=AfqVQbhrPeG6I7Zk,
Four images stitched.
Beerburrum, Queensland, Australia
The Glass House Mountains are a cluster of thirteen hills that rise abruptly from the coastal plain on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia. The highest hill is Mount Beerwah at 556 metres above sea level, but the most identifiable of all the hills is Mount Tibrogargan which from certain angles bears a resemblance to a gorilla facing east towards the ocean. The Glass House Mountains are located near Beerburrum State Forest and Steve Irwin Way. From Brisbane, the mountains can be reached by following the Bruce Highway north and taking the Glass House Mountains tourist drive turn-off onto Steve Irwin Way. The trip is about one hour from Brisbane. The Volcanic peaks of the Glass House Mountains rise dramatically from the surrounding Sunshine Coast landscape. They were formed by intrusive plugs, remnants of volcanic activity that occurred 26–27 million years ago. Molten rock filled small vents or intruded as bodies beneath the surface and solidified into land rocks. Millions of years of erosion have removed the surrounding exteriors of volcanic cores and softer sandstone rock.
Travel-North says: "You hold your breath when you see him!
This raw and great monument looking at Skagen in Vardø.
You see vardo-drakkar-025the remains of a Viking ship, a dinosaur and a whale in the pose of the sky.
He guards Bussesundet and show the way so that people at sea can continue to find their way to Vardø.
In your imagination do you see he comes roaring up from the raging sea. Skim runs while he climbs up the mountain on Skagen then solidify in its awesome splendor.
The population of Vardø he presses to his breast, has made him a landmark. The name is «Drakkar».
Designed and built by young wood craftsmen from Arkhangelsk."
The Valles Caldera (or Jemez Caldera) is a 13.7-mile-wide (22.0 km) volcanic caldera in the Jemez Mountains of northern New Mexico. Hot springs, streams, fumaroles, natural gas seeps, and volcanic domes dot the caldera landscape. The highest point in the caldera is Redondo Peak, an 11,254-foot (3,430 m) resurgent lava dome located entirely within the caldera and surrounded by moat-like flows of rhyolitic solidified lavas.
Wikipedia
The Giant's Causeway (Irish: Clochán an Aifir) is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient volcanic fissure eruption. It is located in County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland, about three miles (4.8 km) northeast of the town of Bushmills.
It was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986 and a national nature reserve by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland in 1987. In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the Giant's Causeway was named the fourth-greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom.
The tops of the columns form stepping stones that lead from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Most of the columns are hexagonal, although some have four, five, seven, or eight sides. The tallest are about 12 metres (39 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs is 28 metres (92 ft) thick in places.
Much of the Giant's Causeway and Causeway Coast World Heritage Site is owned and managed by the National Trust. It is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Northern Ireland, receiving over 998,000 visitors in 2019. Access to the Giant's Causeway is free of charge: it is not necessary to go via the visitor centre, which charges a fee. The remainder of the site is owned by the Crown Estate and several private landowners. Wikipedia
Normally my ramblings never make it here. But today is one of those days where I get to sit back and think, go through my RL stockpiles, only to realize...it's been a while.
I sketch as a hobby iRL, and have done so since I was old enough to hold a pencil without stabbing myself - or indeed, anybody else - in any vital organs. Sometime last year, I realized my sketching preferences apparently translate into my amateur attempts at SL photography, as my 'aesthetic' solidified into...well, whatever it is now. But I also realized it's been a while since I last picked up a pencil and sketched or drew something from scratch, because SL did give me a good alternative for a visual creative outlet. It might not have the same feedback loop - there's a satisfaction to the scrape of pencils against paper. But it compensates for it by exposing me to the artistic eyes of others - their processes, niches, aesthetics, and everything else. The visual is no longer limited to a growing number of sketchbooks on a shelf crealtively-dubbed "Artsy Stuff."
It's been a while, but it's fine. Because while above is a photo of one of my favorite (and last) drawings from a year and a half ago, it's been and continues to be an exciting journey with an exciting creative mind. Who, by the way, draws WAY better than I do, and with a lot more humor (Looking at you here, Linc). And one that scratches every itch I have anyway by violently painting with words even on the days when nothing visual is involved, and it does all the right things to my brain.
Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk. The unsubscribe button is somewhere, should you need to find it.
Germany Wedel, the River Elbe marshland,
“A storm is only when the sheep have run out of woolly curls”,
is a widespread joke by coastal residents about their favourite “lawnmowers”, they are simply a part of the dykes on the marshland, just like the laughing seagulls.
Sheep have characteristics that make them useful, even vital companions for the country & its people. In sustainable agriculture, the dikes grazed by sheep have so far largely withstood storm surges. The reason; because the animals keep the grass very short, the stalks grow thick & firm, which makes the pasture very dense, the strong roots stabilize the soil & the grass becomes a protective layer for the dike.
In addition, the step of the animals solidifies the holes in the dike that were created by moles or voles & pose a risk to dike safety during storm surges. The shepherds call this practical side effect of keeping dykes the “golden step”, a skill that hardly any machine can replace.
👉 One World one Dream,
🙏...Danke, Xièxie 谢谢, Thanks, Gracias, Merci, Grazie, Obrigado, Arigatô, Dhanyavad, Chokrane to you & over
17 million visits in my photostream with countless motivating comments
Squamish, BC Canada
The Stawamus Chief, officially Stawamus Chief Mountain (often referred to as simply The Chief, or less commonly Squamish Chief), is a granitic dome located adjacent to the town of Squamish, British Columbia, Canada. It towers over 2,297 ft above the waters of nearby Howe Sound. It is one of the largest granite monoliths in the world. The Squamish, indigenous people from this area, consider the Chief to be a place of spiritual significance…
The Chief is part of a medium-sized pluton of a granitic rock (granodiorite) that was initially formed in the early Cretaceous (approximately 100 million years ago) by the slow cooling and solidification of molten magma deep below the surface of the Earth.
Mamquam Blind Channel
The dictionary states that a blind channel occurs when a body of water is closed at one end. This occurred in 1921 when the Mamquam River changed course to the west and into the Squamish River at the present site. There is no flow down the original course; hence a blind channel.
The property is on the shared floodplain of the Squamish and Mamquam rivers and is surrounded by a tidal slough and drainage channels. These water sources are key rearing and overwintering habitat for young salmon, and areas for adult salmon to migrate and spawn. Besides the waterways, the upland area of the property includes a marsh meadow but is mostly forested with Sitka Spruce, Red Alder, Western Red Cedar and Black Cottonwood.
The variety of habitats on the site provides refuge for many species, including various species-at-risk and nesting songbirds. The species-at-risk include the endangered Pacific Water Shrew and the threatened Red-Legged Frog.
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Thank-you for your visit, and any faves or comments are always sincerely appreciated.
Sonja
Red Crater is one of the youngest vents of New Zealand’s Tongariro Volcano. It lies within a scoria cone which rests on top of older Tongariro lava flows. It began erupting approximately 3000 years ago. The most recent confirmed volcanic activity from Red Crater was reported between 1855 and 1890.
A prominent feature of Red Crater is the lava dike on the wall of the cone, in the center of the image above.
This feature was formed as molten magma moved to the surface through a vertical channel in the crater wall. Having solidified at its outer surface, the dike was later left partially hollow when the magma drained from below as the eruption ceased. Being more resistant than the surrounding scoria, this structure was left exposed while the surroundings were eroded by wind and rain.
The red colour of the cone is from high temperature oxidation of iron in the rock
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Feeling down, alone, and empty inside,
Decisions to make, but can't decide,
Hurt from pain of a broken heart,
Days go on as if they are dark,
Looking for happiness, the light to return,
My soul feels empty, deceptive, a burn.
~ Vince Milford
Making this photo I had many different meanings in mind. Then I found this poem and it really solidified the connection I saw in both.
I went into the woods one day to location scout and found this tree had fallen. It was large and it took me by surprise. How did I not hear it fall as it tumbled to the ground? What was its cause of death? Something so grand which towered over me now lies broken upon the ground I walk; its limbs which once reached towards Heaven now dig into the earth
It's ironic how this correlates with people - keeping to themselves, not speaking a word, until it is too late.
Germany Wedel, the River Elbe marshland,
…why does the grass always look greener on the other side?
“A storm is only when the sheep have run out of woolly curls,” is a widespread joke by coastal residents about their favourite “lawnmowers”, they are simply a part of the dykes on the marshland, just like the laughing seagulls.
Sheep have characteristics that make them useful, even vital companions for the country & its people. In sustainable agriculture, the dikes grazed by sheep have so far largely withstood storm surges. The reason; because the animals keep the grass very short, the stalks grow thick & firm, which makes the pasture very dense, the strong roots stabilize the soil & the grass becomes a protective layer for the dike.
In addition, the step of the animals solidifies the holes in the dike that were created by moles or voles & pose a risk to dike safety during storm surges. The shepherds call this practical side effect of keeping dykes the “golden step”, a skill that hardly any machine can replace.
👉 One World one Dream,
🙏...Danke, Xièxie 谢谢, Thanks, Gracias, Merci, Grazie, Obrigado, Arigatô, Dhanyavad, Chokrane to you & over
16 million visits in my photostream with countless motivating comments
332/2008
On Explore 15 November '08 # 43
The Giant's Causeway is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns resulting from a volcanic eruption. It is located on the North East coast of Northern Ireland, about 3 kilometres (2 miles) north of the town of Bushmills. It was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986, and a National Nature Reserve in 1987 (by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland). In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the Giant's Causeway was named as the fourth greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom.
The tops of the columns form stepping stones that lead from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Most of the columns are hexagonal, however there are some with four, five, seven and eight sides. The tallest are about 12 metres (36 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs is 28 metres thick in places.
(Wikipedia)
195,564 items / 1,596,234 views
This picture was shot two years back outside my old workplace at Bandra , and if you see Marziya you see the passion of a street photographer even without a camera and I never even now ever considered the camera an instrument that takes pictures , Marziya shot the Awakener without the camera..
The Awakeners are Muslim beggars but during Ramzan they do this additional service of waking people for the Holy Fast..a superlative service for those poor needy living in the slums tenements in narrow dingy lanes and pigeon holed cubicles.
I must also add that it is not necessary all those who do this sublime job are beggars there are those who do it voluntarily as service to Muslim society, they get paid on Thursdays or on the eve of Ramzan Eid .. people give them generously I also give them as their contribution is immense and they are the beauty of Ramzan..
Their greatest enemy are the stray dogs that hate strangers waking them up from their sleep so they charge at these Awakeners , but the stick in their hands keeps evil canine intentions at bay.
Most of the hafiz kazi lower level Koran teachers of kids , are totally occupied during Ramzan , housing societies invite them to lead the namaz and take care of the roza proceedings.
As I am barefeet and not heavily decked I go to town and break fast with the beggar community , it is a moment snatched from a moment in eternity and I am crying as I write this their frugality hits me hard and not to belittle them , I hand them quietly some money after I have broken my fast.. for me this is the poetic life lasting moment in Islam and as Ramzan.
And I have in all humility captured Ramzan through a poets eyes , human eyes shown you places where angels dare to tread and I might if possible go to Lucky Compund at Byculla to break fast with the hijras..
Of late because of the advent of Ramzan and other personal reasons of pain I kept the hijra profile of my blogs on low key, but here I must add my dear friend Khushi the prettiest most beautiful transgender in the world , sends me her Ramzan message , and keeps all the fast she is a Namazi , she does charity and for me she is a devout Muslim..
I am not God to judge anyone for their life's chosen path, I know of hijra prostitutes in the red light area that stop their business for a month to be one with God.. and this is what I try to show with or without pictures as the humanity of a blog.
And those dear Hindu friends who fast along with us..their support solidifies my own faith , and the messages I received from all of them I bow my head and thank them.
And today is my first fast , and it is the first fast of all us Mumbaikars and it is a great start a great dawn of hope harmony brotherhood..
And I add words of my dear friend Hassan Shirazi he just sent them in my inbox at Facebook
Hassan S Shirazi
Firoze bhai - i tell my sons and even posted here - Pehle Insaan ban phir ban jaa Muslamaan - kya pata neik amal tuje Ek Momin banaa de ... we need to be human first - no hindu no muslim - only humanity then later muslim and who know how sinful we are as to become a MOMIN - sirf shia bolne se shia nahi banta hai - aur Imam Ali (AS) is not ameer ul Shia - but Ameer Ul Momineen .... Prophet (PBUH) came as rehmat ul Aleemeem not for sunni nor shia nor for wahabbis - Islam came for sake of Humanity then those who followed it are Muslim - height to reach the peak is MOMIN
Jazakallah.
Россия. Карелия. Гирвас.
Лавовые потоки палеовулкана Гирвас.
Вулкан Гирвас — древний потухший вулкан в Карелии, находящийся в русле реки Суна. Вулкан Гирвас в настоящее время почти полностью разрушен природой и временем. Сохранились лишь около 20 застывших лавовых потоков и следы кратера, который считается одним из древнейших на планете. Возникновение вулканических областей на территории Карелии происходило 2-3 миллиарда лет назад.
Вулканическая активность сменялась периодами затишья более десяти раз.
Высота вулкана составляла около 6000 метров. Активный в далеком прошлом на протяжении миллиарда лет, этот природный источник магмы сегодня является важным геологическим памятником.
Russia. Karelia. Girvas.
Lava flows of the Girvas paleovolcano.
Girvas Volcano is an ancient extinct volcano in Karelia, located in the channel of the Suna River. The Girvas volcano is now almost completely destroyed by nature and time. Only about 20 solidified lava flows and traces of a crater, which is considered one of the oldest on the planet, have survived. The emergence of volcanic regions in the territory of Karelia occurred 2-3 billion years ago.
Volcanic activity was replaced by periods of calm more than ten times.
The height of the volcano was about 6000 meters. Active in the distant past for a billion years, this natural source of magma is today an important geological monument.
Maybe the most famous snorkeling beach in the US. The Hanauma Crater was created about 32,000 years ago during the Honolulu volcanic series, the latest (and perhaps final) round of volcanic activity to occur on Oʻahu.[9] Tens of thousands of years ago, a series of volcanic vents opened along the southeast shoreline of Oʻahu. Unlike the gentle lava flows currently building the island of Hawaiʻi, the late-stage eruptions on Oʻahu were most often short-lived violent explosions. The volcanic vents that formed Hanauma Crater opened on the sea floor. Upwelling magma vaporized the ocean water and steam explosions blew the magma into fine ash. The explosions built cones or rings of ash, which solidified into tuff. The eruptions shattered the sea floor—coral reef and basalt—and scattered pieces that are now embedded in the tuff. Wave erosion eventually cut through the low, southeast wall of the crater, forming the current bay. Due to its popularity, officials in Hawai'i have taken several steps to limit visitors and educate those that do come about conserving the reef and marine life.
Urabandai, Mt.Bandai
裏磐梯・磐梯山
The sharp rock peak is called Tenguiwa, and is said to have been formed when solidified magma emerged to the surface during the Meiji eruption.
鋭い岩峰は天狗岩と呼ばれ、明治の噴火の際、マグマの固まったものが地表に現れて出来たそうです。
Kitashiobara-mura, Fukushima pref, Japan
Dimmuborgir rocks (Kálfastrandavogar)
According to www.edgeofthearctic.is/places-to-see/dimmuborgir/,
"it is believed that during an eruption ~2300 years ago, something blocked the flow of lava causing the formation of a lake of lava. As the lava in the lake had started to solidify the blockage gave way and the molten lava flowed out leaving behind the parts which had solidified. These unique conditions created geological formations which have not been found above water anywhere else in the world."
See my other Iceland images at flic.kr/s/aHsjGvArkL .
This image was shown in Explore on 6-23-15
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El volcán Llaima ocupa gran parte del Parque Nacional Conguillío y en su flanco occidental se ubican dos centros de esquí. Es uno de los volcanes históricamente más activos de Sudamérica y uno de los más voluminosos de los Andes del Sur. La altitud de la montaña se alza hasta los 3.195 msnm, el volcan ha aumentado su altura entre 30 y 50 mts tras las ultimas erupciones desde 1956 a la fecha, siendo la ultima registrada el 2009. Su flanco occidental, suroccidental y oriental presentan más de 29 km2 de glaciares. El más extenso es el occidental y sudoccidental, que alcanza una superficie de 19 km². En el flanco oriental, en tanto, 4 lenguas glaciales cubren un área de 10 km².
El volcán presenta una forma cónica casi perfecta aunque consta de dos cimas y unos 40 conos de escoria, siendo la sima del sector norte más prominente y quedando separada por un portezuelo de aproximadamente 1 km de longitud del Pichillaima, la cumbre sur que alcanza los 2.920 msnm. La cumbre norte exhibe un cráter abierto de 350 m de diámetro y más de 300 m de profundidad que en abril de 2009 fue obstruido con un cono de piroclastos cuya altura supera el borde de su cima más elevada. Este cráter presenta una fumarola activa desde 1994 con emisión de gases y vapor de agua. Una gruesa capa de material piroclástico ha cubierto al hielo, especialmente hacia el sector oriental, lo que ha detenido en parte la ablación de los glaciares.
Los deshielos son drenados por algunos ríos menores y esteros en forma radial a través de las hoyas de los ríos Captrén y Quepe (afluentes del río Cautín) y del Allipén en forma parcial. De estos desagües, destaca el río Trufultruful, el cual forma una serie de lagos represados por lava solidificada como el lago Verde, el Arcoíris y el Conguillío.
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The Llaima volcano occupies a large part of the Conguillío National Park and on its western flank there are two ski centers. It is one of the most active volcanoes in South America and one of the most volcanoes in the Southern Andes. The altitude of the mountain rises to 3,195 meters above sea level, the volcano has increased its height between 30 and 50 meters after the last eruptions since 1956 to date, the last recorded in 2009. Its western, southwestern and eastern flank present more than 29 km2 of glaciers. The most extensive is the western and southwestern, which reaches an area of 19 km². On the eastern flank, meanwhile, 4 glacial languages cover an area of 10 km².
The volcano presents an almost perfect conical shape although it consists of two summits and about 40 slag cones, being the most prominent north sector chasm and being separated by a portezuelo of approximately 1 km length of the Pichillaima, the southern summit that reaches 2,920 msnm. The northern summit features an open crater 350 m in diameter and more than 300 m deep, which in April 2009 was obstructed with a pyroclastic cone whose height exceeds the edge of its highest peak. This crater has an active fumarole since 1994 with emission of gases and water vapor. A thick layer of pyroclastic material has covered the ice, especially towards the eastern sector, which has partly stopped glacial ablation.
The thaws are drained by some minor rivers and streams radially through the holes of the Captrén and Quepe rivers (tributaries of the Cautín River) and the Allipén in partial form. Of these drainages, the Trufultruful River stands out, which forms a series of lakes repressed by solidified lava such as Lake Verde, Arcoíris and Conguillío.
This week's theme is "about you," and a funny thing about me is that I won't wear dress shoes (anymore) or Oxfords or Loafers or however you want to call them.
Yes, I'll still wear a suit and tie as needed, but I'll not match them up with dress shoes. I knew I solidified my stance (see what I did there), when I appeared at a speaking engagement in Washington, DC in a full suit with a pair of leather Adidas.
photo rights reserved by B℮n
It will be k-k-cold this weekend. The temperature can drop to -15 degrees celcius and that means of course only one thing: skating! After a few nights of good frost we could skate on February 12, 2021 at the Gouwsea. Waterland in the winter is a real skater’s paradise. As temperatures plunge across Europe, many are cursing the cold. But not in the Netherlands. Many are hoping for further frigid conditions. Today my daughter Samantha and friend Casper are joying me skating. A historical moment since crossing the Gouwsea by skates is such a rare occurrence. Today we skate 12km from Uitdam, de Nes to Marken and back, such a beautiful sea of ice to enjoy. An infinitely beautiful sight on this icy sea in 2021. It was a pleasure. The meadows here are white, the Gouwzee completely frozen and the breath comes out of my mouth in small gray puffs. Put your hands behind your back. Breathe calmly. I enjoy the sound of the irons over the ice and the beautiful view of the snowy landscape . The ice surface is great here. I stop for a moment to take a photo. Many skaters enjoy the beautiful ice until sunset. It provides a beautiful picture.
Today 12th of February 2021 we got the opportunity to go ice skating on real ice instead of going to an ice rink. A good freeze only comes from a win in the climatic lottery. Thus the chance for our Dutch to be wild adventurers on their own land comes only every few years. We glide across solidified, frosted lakes with fish frozen into the ice. The Gouwsea in the winter are a real skater’s paradise. Portrait of my daughter Samantha and friend Casper on the vast frozen Gouwsea.
Het wordt k-k-koud dit weekend. De temperatuur kan dalen tot wel -15 graden en dat betekent natuurlijk maar één ding: schaatsennn! Na een paar nachten goede vorst konden we op 12 februari 2021 schaatsen op de Gouwzee. Na een extra nacht van vorst ligt het ijs er redelijk goed bij. Eindelijk weer heerlijk ijs om voor schaatsliefhebbers de ijzers onder te binden. Er kan heerlijk kilometers geschaatst worden tussen Uitdam, De Nes en Marken. Vandaag gaat mijn dochter Samantha mij met vriend Casper. Je beleeft de natuur op plekken waar je normaal niet kan komen. De Gouwzee is een paradijs voor schaatsers uit het westen van Nederland, omdat het meestal het eerste grootschalige gebied is waar men goed kan schaatsen op natuurijs. Maar het blijft een historische gebeurtenis. Vele schaatsenrijders zoeken vandaag de bevroren oppervlakte van de Gouwzee op voor een schaatsrit langs de dijk van Uitdam, De Nes naar Marken. Een mooie rit van zo'n 12km. Een oneindig mooi gezicht op deze ijszee anno 2021. Het was genieten. De weilanden zijn hier wit, de Gouwzee totaal bevroren en de adem komt in kleine grijze pufjes uit mijn mond. Handen op de rug. Rustig ademen. Ik geniet van het geluid van de ijzers over het ijs en het prachtige uitzicht over de besneeuwde landschap. Het ijs is geweldig hier. Ik stop nog even voor het maken van foto. Een leuk portret van mijn dochter Samantha met vriend Casper. Vele schaatsers genieten tot zonsondergang hier van het mooie ijs. Het levert een prachtig plaatje op.
‘…the illusion of solidification when possessing ever dynamic ignorance and spacious wisdom…’
5800mm x 1365mm
charcoal on paper
Los Baños de Doña María de Padilla
Los Baños de Doña María de Padilla
The "Baths of Lady María de Padilla" are rainwater tanks beneath the Patio del Crucero. The tanks are named after María de Padilla, the mistress of Peter the Cruel.
As the whole patio was greatly affected by the Lisbon earthquake, the architect also chose to solidify the garden area up to the upper floors and convert the old Almohad cistern into a basement under the Gothic palace, an area still preserved, which is known as "Baños de Doña María" in honor of Doña María de Padilla, noble lover of Peter of Castile who, according to legend, bathed in it. The king obtained authorisation from the Castilian Cortes to proclaim proclaim her queen after death; the archbishop of Toledo considered this marriage valid and annulled the other two that the monarch had contracted, thus legitimizing her children as his successors. Hence her remains rest in the Royal Chapel of the Cathedral of Seville. But the fratricidal struggles during the reign of Peter of Castile ultimately resulted in a change of dynasty in the House of Trastámara in the person of his stepbrother Henry II of Castile, son of King Alfonso XI of Castile and Eleanor de Guzmán.
The baths have a central swimming pool covered with a nave of ten sections of ribbed vault flanked by two side aisles. In the reign of Philip III a Mannerist fountain was added at the end of the central pool of which some remains are conserved and also a cannon vault opened from the Garden of the Dance, but they are closed to the public because they preserve Renaissance wall paintings between 1565 and 1579 by Juan Díaz, Juan de Saucedo, Juan Chacón and Gonzalo Pérez. Although they are restored after their rediscovery in 1997, they are very delicate to preserve and are now being restored again.
photo rights reserved by B℮n
It will be k-k-cold this weekend. The temperature can drop to -15 degrees celcius and that means of course only one thing: skating! After a few nights of good frost we could skate on February 11, 2021 at the Gouwsea. Waterland in the winter is a real skater’s paradise. As temperatures plunge across Europe, many are cursing the cold. But not in the Netherlands. Many are hoping for further frigid conditions. Photo taken of little kid skating till sunset on the vast frozen Gouwsea. A historical moment since crossing the Gouwsea by skates is such a rare occurrence. Today I skate from Uitdam to Marken and back, such a beautiful sea of ice to enjoy. An infinitely beautiful sight on this icy sea in 2021. It was a pleasure. The meadows here are white, the Gouwzee completely frozen and the breath comes out of my mouth in small gray puffs. Put your hands behind your back. Breathe calmly. I enjoy the sound of the irons over the ice and the beautiful view of the snowy landscape . The ice surface is great here. Besides ice skating Dutch also love Ice yachting. This is the sport of sailing and racing iceboats and is very popular in the Netherlands. Ice boats are racing at a speed of 100 km an hour over the ice of the Gouwsea. The centre of ice yachting is in Monnickendam. Many skaters enjoy the beautiful ice until sunset. It provides a beautiful picture.
From the 11th to the 14th of February 2021 we got the opportunity to go ice skating on real ice instead of going to an ice rink. A good freeze only comes from a win in the climatic lottery. Thus the chance for our Dutch to be wild adventurers on their own land comes only every few years. We glide across solidified, frosted lakes with fish frozen into the ice. The Gouwsea in the winter are a real skater’s paradise and for Ice yachting too. People skating here till sunset. This photo was taken after sunset, the last skaters and ice yachting are on the vast frozen Gouwsea.
Het wordt k-k-koud dit weekend. De temperatuur kan dalen tot wel -15 graden en dat betekent natuurlijk maar één ding: schaatsennn! Na een paar nachten goede vorst konden we op 11 februari 2021 schaatsen op de Gouwzee. Na een extra nacht van vorst ligt het ijs er redelijk goed bij. Eindelijk weer heerlijk ijs om voor schaatsliefhebbers de ijzers onder te binden. Er kan heerlijk kilometers geschaatst worden tussen Uitdam en Marken. Je beleeft de natuur op plekken waar je normaal niet kan komen. De Gouwzee is een paradijs voor schaatsers uit het westen van Nederland, omdat het meestal het eerste grootschalige gebied is waar men goed kan schaatsen op natuurijs. Maar het blijft een historische gebeurtenis. Vele schaatsenrijders zoeken vandaag de bevroren oppervlakte van de Gouwzee op voor een schaatsrit langs de dijk van Uitdam naar Marken. Een oneindig mooi gezicht op deze ijszee anno 2021. Het was genieten. De weilanden zijn hier wit, de Gouwzee totaal bevroren en de adem komt in kleine grijze pufjes uit mijn mond. Handen op de rug. Rustig ademen. Ik geniet van het geluid van de ijzers over het ijs en het prachtige uitzicht over de besneeuwde landschap. Het ijs is geweldig hier.
De ijszeilers hebben hun plek in Monnickendam. Vanaf hier steken ze de Gouwzee over naar Marken. Een oneindig mooi gezicht op deze ijszee anno 2021. Het was genieten. Jong en oud staan op het ijs. Met spectaculaire snelheden van wel 80 tot 100 kilometer per uur razen de ijszeilers over bevroren meren en plassen: ijszeilers hebben deze dagen de tijd van hun leven. Vele schaatsers genieten tot zonsondergang hier van het mooie ijs. Het levert een prachtig plaatje op.
Chup (Cambodge) - A une vingtaine de kilomètres de Kampong Cham, sur la commune rurale de Chup, se trouve la «Chup Rubber Plantation». Une manufacture de caoutchouc créée par les Français en 1922. Dans le début des années 1960, cette usine de transformation du latex accueillait encore sur son emprise foncière, la plus grande plantation d’hévéas du monde. Aujourd’hui la forêt artificielle compte encore 20.000 hévéas en âge d’être exploités. La récolte se fait essentiellement la nuit par la scarification manuelle des troncs, afin que la sève s’écoule plus facilement. Dans la journée, il fait trop chaud et le latex se solidifie. La qualité s’en ressent.
La récolte de la sève se fait toujours manuellement et nécessite une abondante main d’œuvre. En revanche, la transformation du caoutchouc se fait dans une usine automatisée à 90 %. Mais le matériel est vieillissant. Sur cette photo, une technicien tente de faire redémarrer une machine. Il y parviendra, mais au prix d’un ingénieux bricolage électrique et en contournant les règles de sécurité.
Latex processing factory
Chup (Cambodia) - About twenty kilometers from Kampong Cham, in the rural commune of Chup, is the “Chup Rubber Plantation”. A rubber factory created by the French in 1922. In the early 1960s, this latex processing factory still hosted the largest rubber plantation in the world on its land. Today the artificial forest still has 20,000 rubber trees old enough to be exploited. Harvesting is mainly done at night by manually scarifying the trunks, so that the sap flows more easily. During the day, it gets too hot and the latex solidifies. The quality suffers.
Sap harvesting is always done manually and requires a large amount of labor. On the other hand, the processing of rubber takes place in a 90% automated factory. But the equipment is aging. In this photo, a technician is trying to restart a machine. He will succeed, but at the cost of ingenious electrical DIY and by circumventing safety rules.
Two PhD students of the Geotechnical & Environmental Group, Claudiane Ouellet-Plamondon and Reginald Kogbara were among seven recipients of the Outstanding Student Paper Awards at the 5th International Conference on Environmental Science and Technology, organised by the American Academy of Sciences, and held in Houston, Texas, USA.
Claudiane and Reginald's PhD studies are part of an extensive research programme led by Dr Abir Al-Tabbaa into cost-effective, efficient and sustainable remediation of contaminated land. The team has been investigating a range of novel materials, processes and technologies, some as part of two large TSB funded projects: Soil Mix Remediation Technology (SMiRT) and Process Envelopes for Cement-Based Stabilisation/Solidification (ProCeSS). Field trials of those developments, the largest associated with any research project in the UK to date, will take place in the new year on a former chemical site in West Yorkshire.
Cappadocia - Turkey
This rocky wonderland in the center of Türkiye was shaped by millions of years of geological phenomena brought about by the eruptions of three volcanoes surrounding the region. Erosions shaped the thick ash, which solidified into a soft rock known as “volcanic tuff.” Wind and water worked on this plateau, leaving only the harder elements to form a fairy-tale landscape.
The region became a refuge for early Christians fleeing Roman persecution who created a handcarved network of underground settlements. Monks excavated extensive dwellings and monasteries and covered them with beautiful Byzantine frescoes.
The Giant's Causeway (Irish: Clochán an Aifir) is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient volcanic fissure eruption. It is located in County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland, about three miles (4.8 km) northeast of the town of Bushmills.
It was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986 and a national nature reserve by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland in 1987. In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the Giant's Causeway was named the fourth-greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom.
The tops of the columns form stepping stones that lead from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Most of the columns are hexagonal, although some have four, five, seven, or eight sides. The tallest are about 12 metres (39 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs is 28 metres (92 ft) thick in places.
Much of the Giant's Causeway and Causeway Coast World Heritage Site is owned and managed by the National Trust. It is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Northern Ireland, receiving over 998,000 visitors in 2019. Access to the Giant's Causeway is free of charge: it is not necessary to go via the visitor centre, which charges a fee. The remainder of the site is owned by the Crown Estate and several private landowners. Wikipedia
The Giant's Causeway (Irish: Clochán an Aifir) is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient volcanic fissure eruption. It is located in County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland, about three miles (4.8 km) northeast of the town of Bushmills.
It was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986 and a national nature reserve by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland in 1987. In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the Giant's Causeway was named the fourth-greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom.
The tops of the columns form stepping stones that lead from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Most of the columns are hexagonal, although some have four, five, seven, or eight sides. The tallest are about 12 metres (39 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs is 28 metres (92 ft) thick in places.
Much of the Giant's Causeway and Causeway Coast World Heritage Site is owned and managed by the National Trust. It is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Northern Ireland, receiving over 998,000 visitors in 2019. Access to the Giant's Causeway is free of charge: it is not necessary to go via the visitor centre, which charges a fee. The remainder of the site is owned by the Crown Estate and several private landowners. Wikipedia
There are decisions we all must eventually make in our lives. Nobody has the right to judge these life-defining decisions. Once made, we must live with the consequences. Sometimes we make the decisions based on fear and our past losses. Other times we face the choices head on with a courage and conviction that we never knew we had.
A week ago, Marynell almost lost Miss Sara, her precious mother. As a nurse, I work with this specific condition, and I perhaps knew better than Marynell how close her mother truly came to death. Nevertheless Marynell, being a Family Nurse Practioner, instantly grasped the severity and the gravity of the situation.
A decision had to be made and quickly. Intervene and accept the associated risks of intervention, which are also grave in the elderly and frail, or place the situation in the hands of God and accept His will. There are those who will say that God gives us nurses and physicians to intervene on His behalf, and there is merit to that. I believe it myself. However, I have also lost people while struggling desperately to save them. Marynell and I spoke at length about the condition, and the risks. Ultimately though, no nurse, no physician, nor any fortuneteller can make the decision for the family. The family must bear the burden of the decision, and health care providers become the instruments of those decisions.
Miss Sara herself made the decision, and Marynell reinforced and solidified it. There would be no intervention. I was frightened at first and talked to Marynell again with trepidation. However, Marynell's resolve was absolute. And this was the decision that was best for them. Marynell began making funeral arrangements. And she asked for prayers.
Over the next few days, Miss Sara had an inexplicable turn around. Not only did she perk up, but she became more lucid than prior to the event. Again, I was frightened. We often see this right before death. But it stuck. A week later Miss Sara continued to improve and stabilize.
These images were taken approximately a week after the original event that jolted us all into a new and intense awareness of the fragility of life around us. Sometimes the right decisions are not the ones everyone agrees on. The right decisions may not be the ones health care professionals advise. Health care professionals have an obligation to lay out the options. It is up to the family to decide which option to take. The right decisions are always the ones you can live with, and the ones that that support life, dignity, faith and your own personal philosophy of the same.
Miss Sara and Marynell were given a second chance to affirm their love and devotion to each other. We usually don't get second chances like this. Go tell those you love how much they mean to you and do it now. Tomorrow may be too late. And talk about these issues so when your time comes you can make the right decision that you can live with.
Das Dreiländereck Deutschland-Österreich-Tschechien liegt auf einem markanten Gebirgsstock, der als langgestreckter Rücken auf gut 6 km Länge mehrere Gipfel in einer Höhenlage von über 1300 m verbindet. Die höchste Erhebung ist der 1378 m hohe Plöckenstein (Plechý), an dessen Nordhang der Plöckensteinsee (Plešné jezero) als südlichster der eiszeitlichen Gletscherseen des Böhmer- / Bayerischen Waldes liegt. Der gesamte Kammbereich ist von zahlreichen bizarren Granitfelsen geprägt, die als sogenannte Nunatakker während der Eiszeit aus dem Gletschereis herausragten.
Die spektakulärsten Felsbildungen befinden sich dabei auf dem Dreisselberg (Třístoličník) und dem Hochstein, die zusammen den westlichen Pfeiler des Kamms bilden. Für die dortigen Felsen kam im 17. Jahrhundert der Name Dreisessel in Gebrauch, wobei eine von Adalbert Stifter widergegebene Sage von einem Versammlungsplatz der Könige zu Böhmen, Bayern und Österreich berichtet.
Der konkrete Grenzverlauf auf dem Bergrücken ist erst 1765 zwischen dem Hochstift Passau und dem Erzherzogtum Österreich festgelegt worden. Heute verläuft genau auf der Grenze ein beliebter Wanderweg, der aufgrund des vollständigen Absterbens des Nadelwaldes in Folge von Borkenkäferschäden derzeit eine großartige Aussicht in alle Richtungen gewährt.
- - -
The granites of the Dreisessel massif were formed in the Upper Carboniferous around 330 to 310 million years ago through the melting of presumably sedimentary rocks. Slight differences in the chemical composition, temperature and cooling conditions of the melts mean that not all granites are the same. Due to different grain sizes and mineral compositions, several granite varieties can be distinguished in the area around the Dreisesselberg, each of which emerged from its own melt.
While the coarse-grained “Dreisessel Granite” in the summit area has relatively uniform grain sizes of minerals, two others show a “porphyry” structure: the “Haidmühle Granite” only contains a few large ones, while the “Steinberg Granite” in the lower part of the Dreisesselstrasse contains numerous large ones Potassium feldspar phenocrysts. Another variety is the fine-grained “Eisgarn Granite”.
Creation of the rock castle
When a molten rock crystallizes, due to a reduction in volume, dividing surfaces, so-called fissures, form in the solidifying rock. Favored by the warm, humid climate, chemical decomposition of the rock occurred, especially in the Tertiary period. Infiltrating water could preferentially penetrate into the rock along fissure surfaces and round off the corners and edges of the cuboid fissure bodies. The granite replacement initially remained lying between these wool-sack-like bodies of solid rock until it was removed and washed away along with the overlying soil cover in the Quaternary, the youngest geological epoch. Only the solid granite bodies remained standing, forming today's Dreisessel summit castle.
"The weight of One Self" by Michael Elmgreen & Ingar Dragset
A visual and philosophical experience, the idea of an order shaken up by a subtle gesture, which is in keeping with the heritage and urban nature of the site.
A man standing upright carrying another lifeless man in his arms. Has he just dragged him from the waves thus saving him from drowning? In details that are unsettling, the faces of the two protagonists turn out to be identical. The man is carrying his double, and in so doing becoming his own saviour but also his own millstone. These philosophical concerns echo the questions of civil and individual responsibilities which are debated every day in the Palais de Justice. Designed by the artists Elmgreen&Dragset, the work follows on from the long tradition of sculpture: the heroic nude and the marble even if here it’s a case of a new technique (solidified marble powder). A formal study in the blink of an eye of the architecture of the venue. Because of its scale being large than life-size, this 2.7m tall sculpture is also a landmark on the landscape.
“The work is very typical of our contemporary culture. It’s not celebrating a hero, nor anyone pursuing a goal, or trying to achieve something. It’s to be the story of someone trying to save himself”
Fageda d'en Jordà - Santa Pau, Girona (Spain).
DigitalZone KDD Fageda d'en Jordà 08/11/2009.
Better seen in Fluidr.
Se ve mejor en Fluidr.
ENGLISH
Fageda d'en Jordà is a unique beech forest because it is at 550m. of altitude and because it grows on a petrified lava flow originated of the last eruption of Croscat volcano, 10,000 years ago. In all the extension of the forest there are small mounds named “tossols”, that are the enormous solidified gas bubbles on the places in which lava covered wetlands and water courses. Some of these mounds can arrive at 20m. of height.
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CASTELLANO
La Fageda d'en Jordà es un hayedo único porque se encuentra a 550m. de altitud y porque crece sobre una colada de lava petrificada proveniente de la última erupción del volcán Croscat hace unos 10.000 años. En toda la extensión del hayedo hay pequeños montículos llamados "tossols", que no son más que las enormes burbujas de gas solidificadas sobre los lugares en que la lava cubrió humedales y cursos de agua. Algunos de estos montículos pueden llegar a 20m. de altura.
wanted 300722
Wanted
Fragility circled, sequestering your sensibility
as I polished the floor and unwished everything
we knew. Of course, someone held our pattern up to the light to look through, droplets of secrecy
solidifying so nothing could be discovered. We’d already baked our truths into pies, the taste cured
from texture and something smouldering. Caring nothing for fruits or the stones that held them
round, your frown got tangled with the orange sun, fear burgundy and smelted across your brow.
I took my eye off the soil. You planted weeds, I picked dandelions and green feathers of leaf we
wound around our wounds. It was too much trouble to drive across the hollows so we followed the
road until a line burnt behind us and swam away despite our attendance to the incline
I watched a television documentary recently that was dealing with Meta-physics and the nature of conscious. (Well it was A LOT more in-depth than that), but it went into the history and highlighted how fluid our knowledge in this area is, by documenting the key paradigm shifts. This program was challenging in many ways, (as it was way over my head and some of the in-depth mathematical equations didn’t interest me) but what did, was the way that our knowledge of we think is “real” is totally and utterly not what it seems.
The thing that totally amazed me, was the way that our known laws of physics seem to change the smaller you went. It was as though the ever-decreeing circles distorted the ‘reality’ of the previous.
It kind of solidified my beliefs that what we think of as real and solid is in fact not the case. In fact it is probably more accurate to say that there is an infinite amount that we ‘do not know’. I see it rather logical to say we know such a small minuscule amount about ‘anything’, that its impossible to even perceives our lack of solid ground.
This statement leaves me with mixed feelings. massive insecurities (fear of the unknown) but wonderful optimism, (massive excitement at the mind blowing possibilities) a paradox. It’s almost true to say that everything your imagination can perceive is in fact possible. WOW just imagine that for a second……parallel universes (were mentioned), sprits, aliens, (I know I'm sounding weird and a tad science fiction, but all possible in an infinite world).
I seem to remember the presenter saying that they only knew that quarks existed because of what they ‘couldn’t’ see. He said that the very act of looking for them, (and my spine is tingling at the thought) changed the very physical reality. WOW…. Now I'm probably not making much sense, and I'm struggling to remember precisely what he was saying, but my mind resonated at the unimaginable possibilities that what he was saying offers us.
I personally find this type of conversation vastly inspirational. a world without the confines of so-called laws of psychics, would be truly creative. No boxes to think outside, no rules! But how does it relate to this photograph?
Now it seems to me that when you look at a scene (especially a moment in time like this), that you aren’t really seeing what is there. yes it ‘looks’ like the place I took the image of, and for the purists amongst us, its not to dissimilar from documenting the colour, lighting conditions, sharpness blar de blarr de blarr. But the very act of capturing this image with a camera, that in a couple of years will be considered redundant, begs the question at the importance of those questions. (I have to get the dig in don’t i). It isn’t ‘real’, it isn’t even close to ‘real’, what the hell is real? Our own perception of reality is distorted by our unique experiences. We all see this differently because we do not only see it, we engage emotionally with it. We feel something which changes our perceptions of it.
So to sum this up before I ramble on too long, what does this mean to you? Is it a collection of pixels? A massive chain of zeros and ones, or is it a dull wet cold winters day? Maybe a beach on a parallel universe. May I leave you with a final thought. Imagine if every grain of sand on this beach was a sun and around each and every one there were 20 or so planets……are we alone?
Germany, Simonsberg, …the idyllic village is located directly on the North Sea & the “Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea National Park”, the endless marshland at the Nordic seashore.
Sheep have characteristics that make them useful, even vital companions for the country & its people. In sustainable agriculture, the dikes grazed by sheep have so far largely withstood storm surges. The reason; because the animals keep the grass very short, the stalks grow thick & firm, which makes the pasture very dense, the strong roots stabilize the soil & the grass becomes a protective layer for the dike.
In addition, the step of the animals solidifies the holes in the dike that were created by moles or voles & pose a risk to dike safety during storm surges. The shepherds call this practical side effect of keeping dykes the “golden step”, a skill that hardly any machine can replace.
📌…The barge is loaded with twigs & is brought there at high tide; at low tide it can then simply be unloaded to be pressed between the long lines of pols. Piles which are driven deep into the sand, so that the waves do not wash away the sand, but instead increased the level with washed-up sand & protected the shore in this natural way, at the same time also offer new habitats.
👉 One World one Dream,
🙏...Danke, Xièxie 谢谢, Thanks, Gracias, Merci, Grazie, Obrigado, Arigatô, Dhanyavad, Chokrane to you & over
17 million visits in my photostream with countless motivating comments
High Force Waterfall. The River Tees drops 21 metres into a deep plunge pool. The water flows over a layer of resistant rock known as the Whin Sill, this formed 295 million years ago from molten rock which solidified underground between older layers of rock. The Whin Sill is now exposed at the surface.
The rocks seen below the Whin Sill were formed 330 million years ago when the North Pennines were at the Equator. The grey rocks are Limestone and the layer above is sandstone.
Force comes from “foss” the Old Norse word for waterfall, this name and other names in the local landscape came with the Viking settlers around 1,100 years ago.
Intrusion is a way on which magna that solidify under the earth´s surface emerges from the underground when the erotion affects the upper rocks over it. These rocks are part of a huge plutonic formation called Batolith that is visible in the coast of my area.
There are decisions we all must eventually make in our lives. Nobody has the right to judge these life-defining decisions. Once made, we must live with the consequences. Sometimes we make the decisions based on fear and our past losses. Other times we face the choices head on with a courage and conviction that we never knew we had.
A week ago, Marynell almost lost Miss Sara, her precious mother. As a nurse, I work with this specific condition, and I perhaps knew better than Marynell how close her mother truly came to death. Nevertheless Marynell, being a Family Nurse Practioner, instantly grasped the severity and the gravity of the situation.
A decision had to be made and quickly. Intervene and accept the associated risks of intervention, which are also grave in the elderly and frail, or place the situation in the hands of God and accept His will. There are those who will say that God gives us nurses and physicians to intervene on His behalf, and there is merit to that. I believe it myself. However, I have also lost people while struggling desperately to save them. Marynell and I spoke at length about the condition, and the risks. Ultimately though, no nurse, no physician, nor any fortuneteller can make the decision for the family. The family must bear the burden of the decision, and health care providers become the instruments of those decisions.
Miss Sara herself made the decision, and Marynell reinforced and solidified it. There would be no intervention. I was frightened at first and talked to Marynell again with trepidation. However, Marynell's resolve was absolute. And this was the decision that was best for them. Marynell began making funeral arrangements. And she asked for prayers.
Over the next few days, Miss Sara had an inexplicable turn around. Not only did she perk up, but she became more lucid than prior to the event. Again, I was frightened. We often see this right before death. But it stuck. A week later Miss Sara continued to improve and stabilize.
These images were taken approximately a week after the original event that jolted us all into a new and intense awareness of the fragility of life around us. Sometimes the right decisions are not the ones everyone agrees on. The right decisions may not be the ones health care professionals advise. Health care professionals have an obligation to lay out the options. It is up to the family to decide which option to take. The right decisions are always the ones you can live with, and the ones that that support life, dignity, faith and your own personal philosophy of the same.
Miss Sara and Marynell were given a second chance to affirm their love and devotion to each other. We usually don't get second chances like this. Go tell those you love how much they mean to you and do it now. Tomorrow may be too late. And talk about these issues so when your time comes you can make the right decision that you can live with.
[Halsey:]
Cross my heart, hope to die
To my lover, I'd never lie
He said "be true," I swear, "I'll try" In the end, it's him and I
He's out his head, I'm out my mind. We got that love; the crazy kind. I am his, and he is mine. In the end, it's him and I
(Him and I)
[G-Eazy & (Halsey):]
My '65 speeding up the PCH, a hell of a ride
They don't want to see us make it, they just want to divide
2017 Bonnie & Clyde
Wouldn't see the point of living on if one of us died, yeah
Got that kind of style everybody try to rip off
YSL dress under when she takes the mink off
Silk on her body, pull it down and watch it slip off
Ever catch me cheating, she would try to cut my (ha-ha-ha)
Crazy, but I love her, I could never run from her
Hit it, no rubber, never would let no one touch her
Swear we drive each other mad, she be so stubborn
But, what the fuck is love with no pain, no suffer
Intense, this shit, it gets dense
She knows when I'm out of it like she could just sense
If I had a million dollars, or was down to ten cents
She'd be down for whatever, never gotta convince, no
[Halsey (G-Eazy):]
Cross my heart, hope to die
To my lover, I'd never lie (I love you baby)
He said "be true," I swear, "I'll try"
In the end, it's him and I
He's out his head, I'm out my mind
We got that love; the crazy kind
I am his, and he is mine
In the end, it's him and I
[Halsey:]
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
[G-Eazy (Halsey):]
We turn up, mobbin' 'til the end of time
Only one who gets me, I'm a crazy fuckin' Gemini
Remember this for when I die
Everybody dressed in all black, suits and a tie
My funeral will be lit if I-
Ever go down or get caught, if they identify
My bitch was the most solid, nothing to solidify
She would never cheat, you'd never see her with a different guy
Ever tell you different, then it's a lie
See, that's my down bitch, see that's my soldier
She keeps that thang-thang, if anyone goes there
Calm and collected, she keeps her composure
And she gon' ride for me until this thing over
We do drugs together (together)
Fuck up clubs together (together)
And we'd both go crazy (crazy)
If we was to sever
You know?
We keep mobbin', it's just me and my bitch
Fuck the world, we just gon' keep getting rich
You know?
[Halsey:]
Cross my heart, hope to die
To my lover, I'd never lie
He said "be true," I swear, "I'll try"
In the end, it's him and I
He's out his head, I'm out my mind
We got that love; the crazy kind
I am his, and he is mine
In the end, it's him and I
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
Cross my heart, hope to die
To you, I've never lied
For you, I'd take a life
It's him and I, and I swear (ayy)
[G-Eazy:]
'Til the end I'm-ma ride wit' you
Mob and get money, get high wit' you, yeah (ayy)
[Halsey:]
Cross my heart, hope to die
This is our ride or die
You can confide in me
There is no hiding, I swear
[G-Eazy:]
Stay solid, never lie to you
Swear, most likely I'm-ma die wit' you, yeah
[Halsey:]
Cross my heart, hope to die
To my lover, I'd never lie
He said "be true," I swear, "I'll try"
In the end, it's him and I
He's out his head, I'm out my mind
We got that love, the crazy kind
I am his, and he is mine
In the end, it's him and I
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
Him and I
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
Woah-oh-oh-oh-oh
In the end, it's him and I
The Giant's Causeway is an area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient volcanic eruption. It is located in County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland, about three miles (4.8 km) northeast of the town of Bushmills.
It was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986, and a national nature reserve in 1987 by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland. In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the Giant's Causeway was named as the fourth greatest natural wonder in the United Kingdom. The tops of the columns form stepping stones that lead from the cliff foot and disappear under the sea. Most of the columns are hexagonal, although there are also some with four, five, seven or eight sides. The tallest are about 12 metres (39 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs is 28 metres (92 ft) thick in places.
Much of the Giant's Causeway and Causeway Coast World Heritage Site is today owned and managed by the National Trust and it is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Northern Ireland. The remainder of the site is owned by the Crown Estate and a number of private landowners.
Located on the northeast corner of New York’s Central Park at Pioneers’ Gate (at 110th Street and Fifth Avenue), the sculpture of Edward Kennedy Ellington is the first monument in New York City dedicated to an African American and the first memorial to Ellington in the U.S. The monument depicts Ellington standing beside a concert grand, on three tall columns. A the top of each column stand three female figures that represent the muses. The sculpture resides within a multi-leveled semi-circular plaza at the gateway to Harlem. Though not a native New Yorker, it was his time spent in Harlem and the Cotton Club that solidified Duke Ellington’s influence as one of the originators of big-band jazz.
Address: E. 110th St. & Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10026
A excellent example of the classic Chevy Deluxe Styleline in a brillant red making it a sure standout. This vehicle participated in the 2024 Rev It Up car show held on Massachusetts Street in downtown Lawrence Kansas.
The 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline holds a special place in the annals of automotive history as an iconic symbol of mid-century American design and engineering. With its sleek lines, innovative features, and timeless appeal, the '51 Deluxe Styleline exemplifies the craftsmanship and attention to detail that defined the era. This article delves into the rich history, design elements, mechanical advancements, and cultural impact of the 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline, celebrating its status as a classic icon.
Historical Context:
The Golden Age of American Automobiles To truly understand the significance of the 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline, it is crucial to explore the historical context in which it was introduced. This section provides an overview of the post-World War II era, characterized by economic prosperity, automotive innovation, and the rise of the American automobile industry. It delves into the competitive landscape, emerging consumer preferences, and Chevrolet's strategic position during this transformative period.
Design and Styling: An Elegant Fusion of Form and Function The '51 Deluxe Styleline boasted a design that seamlessly blended elegance, simplicity, and aerodynamic efficiency. This section analyzes the car's exterior styling, including its distinctive chrome accents, sweeping fender lines, prominent grille, and gracefully arched roofline. It also explores the thoughtful interior design, highlighting features such as comfortable seating, ample legroom, and a well-arranged dashboard that exemplified Chevrolet's commitment to driver and passenger comfort.
Mechanical Advancements:
Power and Performance in Motion Underneath its stylish exterior, the 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline showcased mechanical advancements that improved its performance and driving experience. Engine options available, the inline-six and the powerful "Stovebolt" engine, known for its reliability and efficiency. It also explores the suspension system, braking technology, and handling improvements that contributed to a smoother and more enjoyable ride.
Innovative Features:
Introducing Modern Conveniences The '51 Deluxe Styleline embraced technological advancements of the time, introducing innovative features that catered to the evolving needs and desires of car owners. Notable features like the automatic transmission, power steering, improved heating and ventilation systems, and the introduction of Chevrolet's "Center-Point" steering wheel. These advancements enhanced the driving experience and reflected Chevrolet's commitment to staying ahead of the curve in terms of automotive innovation.
Cultural Impact and Enduring Legacy:
A Symbol of Mid-Century American Excellence The 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline became more than just a means of transportation—it represented the American dream and post-war aspirations. The 51 Deluxe Styleline has an enduring legacy and continues to captivate the hearts of collectors, classic car enthusiasts, and those who appreciate mid-century automotive design.
Ownership and Restoration:
Preserving Automotive History As time has passed, the 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline has become a sought-after classic car, attracting collectors and restoration enthusiasts.
The Chevrolet Legacy: Continuity and Evolution
The 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline played a significant role in the evolution of the Chevrolet brand. This section briefly explores the subsequent generations of Chevrolet vehicles, acknowledging how the design, innovation, and cultural influence of the '51 Deluxe Styleline paved the way for future models. From the classic designs of the 1950s to the modern-day Chevrolet lineup, the legacy of the '51 Deluxe Styleline remains embedded in the brand's DNA.
Conclusion:
The 1951 Chevy Deluxe Styleline stands as a testament to an era of automotive excellence, blending timeless design, mechanical advancements, and cultural impact. Its elegant styling, innovative features, and enduring legacy have solidified its status as a classic icon. Whether appreciated for its aesthetic appeal, historical significance, or driving experience, the '51 Deluxe Styleline continues to evoke a sense of nostalgia and admiration, representing the golden age of American automobiles with grace and sophistication.
Source: racingroots.net