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Sea Stacks, South Hams Devon UK

The sun breaking through the rain clouds combined with a polarising filter really brought the colours out on the amazing rock strata at Sandymouth Beach.

The church of St. Bartholomew was built in 1600, and then over the centuries it was altered and restored a number of times.

 

The log church is oriented towards the East, and comprises a post-and-frame tower, a post-and-beam vestibule as well as a brick sacristy, which was added later. The nave is covered with a double-pitched roof and the chancel with a slightly lower three-pitched roof. The roof over the nave features a neo-Baroque turret. The tower with tapered walls, comprises a top chamber, and is clad with wood boards, and topped with a bulbous cupola.

 

Inside there is a coved ceiling, and barrel vault in the sacristy. The gallery is supported by four pillars. The entrance from the chancel to the sacristy is framed with ogee arch. The doors to the side of the nave feature the reinstalled Gothic fittings and a hammered lock from ca. 1600.

 

The Baroque and late Baroque furnishings inside include the high altar from the 1700s, two side altars at the entrance to the chancel from the 1600s, a unique pomegranate-shaped pulpit from the 1700s, as well as a Baroque chalice-shaped baptismal font made from black marble from the 1700s. The benches from 1756 are embellished with painted representations of the Apostles, representatives of various social strata, and scenes from the New Testament. The late-Baroque confessional, dating from the same time, is also decorated with paintings.

 

In Rogi, there once was a fortified castle, and relics of the ramparts can still be seen here. A reference to the castle, dating from 1462, can be found in a document related to the division of the estate between Czarnocki brothers. According to the document, the stronghold had two towers.

 

sad.podkarpackie.travel/en/trail-points/krosno-brzozow-tr...

Clouds hang against the strata exposed on the cliffs above the Going-To-The-Sun Highway in Glacier National Park, Montana. Theses sedimentary rocks were deposited in a shallow sea during the Proterozoic Eon between 1.6 to 1.8 billion years ago. The youngest of these rocks are the limestones and dolomites of the Shepard Formation which make up the massive beds at the top of the cliff. The next set of strata are partially hidden by the clouds and vegetation. If you look close at the right side, in the middle of the photo, you can make out the reddish to buff argillites (slightly metamorphosed shale), siltites (slightly metamorphosed siltstones) and quartzites (slightly metamorphosed sandstones) of the Snowslip Formation. These sediments were deposited on land in streams and mudflats adjacent to the ancient sea. The cliffs at the bottom of the photo are composed of thinly bedded limestones and dolomites with minor beds of argillite that composed the Helena or Siyeh Formation. These beds formed on the floor of the shallow sea. Some of the limestone beds are composed of beds formed of calcium carbonate precipitated by beds of cyanobacteria. The fossil cyanobacteria (called stromatolites) can be seen in the limestone. Glacier National Park has fascinating geology.

Side view on the Department of Geotechnology at TU Delft, Netherlands, an extension from 2008 to the existing Civil Engineering building. Architect was Jeanne Dekker.

 

The glass facade is imprinted with a pattern of stone slices (and not an x-ray image of some odd teeth as was my first thought :-)

 

E-architect: Geotechnology Delft

Snow in Abbots Langley, Herts, England on 24 January 2021. Photo by Andrew Waller.

Nature has endowed the relief of this vast rock formation with incredible colors. In Spanish, the Valle del Arcoiris means "Valley of the Rainbow", a name worthy of this grandiose landscape of red, white, yellow and brown cliffs standing out against the blue sky. This emblematic site of San Pedro de Atacama attracts visitors from all over the world to admire its splendid colors.

Geology at work, various strata exposed as a mountain has grown.

 

Okay, not really. Just a big pile of various dirts and gravels piled up and waiting for loading onto a ship at the Port of Redwood City, California. Told ya my mind was in a weird place today.

From pastel to bold, order to disorder, the sunset is reflected over the darkening foothills of the border ranges.

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Colorful Strata. © Copyright 2022 G Dan Mitchell.

 

Colorful badlands strata in morning light, Death Valley National Park.

 

This subject may look familiar if you have been following my posts recently. It is a portrait-orientation composition of a feature that I also photographed in landscape orientation. (You might also think it looks a lot like a somewhat iconic feature in Death Valley — it does, a bit, but it is not the thing you may be thinking of.) This is a sort of photograph that I make frequently, a small “excerpt” of a much larger landscape scene, photographed with a long focal length lens. The just-arrived early morning light warmed the colors a bit and brought out the pink and blue tones of the layers.

 

These particular sorts of colors in the desert landscape have often challenged me as a photographer. They are geologically fascinating, but they are also often quite subtle, at least to my eye. In all but the best light they seem almost too faint to come through in a photograph. Some photographers compensate by significantly enhancing the intensity of the colors, but the result of that rarely satisfies me. Some particular qualities of the light made it work this time. Because it was shortly after dawn the light retained a warmer coloration. Some high, thin clouds muted and softened the light a bit. The band of darker material at the bottom contrasts with the lighter tones and with the colors.

 

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.

Created for TMI's July contest TEXTURAL LANDSCAPES.

Fossil Butte area. Lincoln County, Wyoming.

using UE5 techniques in Blender and only 2 assets, very low memory usage

I was standing sheltering from the rain, this is Scotland after all, looking out to sea and watching the boats in the distance. I was struck by the shapes of the rocks, the movement of the tidal flow and the winds pushing the clouds and that they all seemed to line up in horizontal bands. It made me think of the striations in a rock formation, hence the title.

 

This was captured in a single long exposure frame and processed twice from the raw file to produce a foreground and a background image. I hadn’t realised at the time that the larger boat was moving as much or I’d have captured another normal shot to clone it in. Unfortunately that little screen on the back of the camera isn't always enough to check everything.

 

Bryce Canyon National Park

Aerial view Late afternoon in the Grand Canyon Arizona. Taken with a Nikon D300 nd 28-105mm Nikkor lens. All my published books, available world wide, can be viewed here:

www.amazon.com/stores/Paul-Moore/author/B0075LNIO2?ref=ap...

Artwork placed around Silver Beach in St. Joseph.

The Strata Tower in Oklahoma City casts its reflection upon the façade of the adjacent 101 Park Avenue building. This interaction of modern architecture creates a visual dialogue between the two structures, showcasing the city's blend of historical and contemporary design elements.

Walsh county sunset.

Strata is a layer of sedimentary rock or soil with internally consistent characteristics that distinguish it from other layers.

From moving car ( again :)) near Balmaceda, south east of Coyhaique in Aysén Region, Chile

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

... incoming rainfall ...

The Portuguese island of Madeira is a paradise for geologists… Approximately 5 million years ago, the fiery birth of Madeira began deep beneath the Atlantic Ocean. As volcanic eruptions occurred, molten lava, ash, and rocks were expelled, gradually building up the islands' foundations.

A Sierra moment that I will forever remember, as if it were yesterday.

 

This spot is about 20 miles into the backcountry and a half day's trek from the nearest maintained trail. My initial plan was to drop down the other side of the pass for the night, but high altitude and a heavy pack slowed me down and sapped my energy, forcing me to plop down and set up camp on the summit of the pass. Then this happened.

 

As always, comments and real critiques are welcome, as are Sierra buffs who want to name some of the peaks in the background :)

 

If you really want the full experience here, make sure to view on black right next to its sister shot, Ride the Lightning!

 

- Jeff

  

p.s. I have moved to San Francisco! If you are in the Bay Area, hit me up!

  

www.landESCAPEphotography.com

  

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Sony A7rii Sigma 50mm ART

Firecrest ND4.0 (16stop) and 5stop Grad

Foot of Takakkaw Falls. Yoho National Park, British Columbia, Canada

Capitol Reef National Park

Utah

Layers of rock spotted at Palo Duro Canyon, Texas.

Canyon and Strata. © Copyright 2022 G Dan Mitchell.

 

A desert wash in a winding badlands canyon leads toward contrasting strata, Death Valley National Park.

 

This juxtaposition of very dark and very light layers in this badlands terrain has long fascinated me. Often the contrasts among the various layers are relatively subtle, even where obvious colors are involved — but here we see nearly the darkest forms right next to some of the lightest. The material in the foreground is perhaps closer to the typical coloration.

 

There is a lot to look at in terrain like this, especially when viewed from a slight elevation. In some ways the largest forms mimic and expand on the smallest. Tiny irregularities combine to produce larger versions of themselves, and then these combine to produce larger gullies, which themselves collect together to form that great washes that drain the landscape.

 

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.

Grand Mere sand dunes

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