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The sun came out this morning after yesterday's storm. This is a panorama of two images of a local stream.
MTA Chair & CEO Janno Lieber, MTA Chief Construction & Development Officer Jamie Torres-Springer, LIRR President Rob Free, and MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo reveal improvements made to the LIRR Valley Stream station on Friday, Dec 19, 2025.
Conductor.
(Marc A. Hermann / MTA)
In a broken wall the party finds a stream of sulphur that pours poison into the air. A black pudding lives in the stream and attacks the party.
A beautifully contrived 'wild' stream especially given the fact that this is a comparatively newly constructed landscape. The stream extends from the waterfall to the forecourt pond.
Olympic National Park
Long exposure of a stream near Crescent Lake created interesting effects with the water (see the ghost?).
This stream or brook runs across Wheatley Wood from south to north. It is fed from somewhere near the A127 and flows through a culvert under the railway line. I believe it joins the River Crouch north of Rawreth.
late spring/ early summer where the leaves are bright green, but not full enough to block the afternoon sun
"Thy spirit within thee hath been so at war,
And thus hath so bestirred thee in thy sleep,
That beads of sweat have stood upon thy brow
Like bubbles in a late-disturbèd stream,
And in thy face strange motions have appeared,
Such as we see when men restrain their breath
On some great sudden hest. O, what portents are these?"
—Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part One, Act 2, Scene 3
Had a nice little trip down here on this rainy afternoon, I wanted to freeze the splashes and bubbles in this one, the only shot I took with the Sigma 10-20mm! I then changed to my old Pentax 50mm for a different perspective.
Meandering mountain stream, Autumn in the Catskill Mountains, New York
Camera - 4x5 Field Camera with a 90 mm Super Angulon Lens. 1/2 sec. f/32
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The stream pictured is Bear Creek. The location is on the bridge across from Barnett Hall in Kirksville, MO. The picture was taken on November 4, 2019 around 11:30 am. Even a small stream or lotic system contains a complex ecological system within it. There are several layers in the stream: the hyporheic zone, benthic zone, and main channel. Along the stream there are also riffles and pools. Each of these sections has a diverse array of organisms with varying jobs. The hyporheic zone is often home to detritivores and sedentary organisms. The benthic zone and main channel contain the more free moving organisms. Riffles and pools have different flow rates and oxygen levels which provide the proper environmental conditions for different organisms. The stream can also provide an example of a food web or trophic web. Algae or aquatic plants growing on the rocks and in the bottom of the stream are eaten by insects, detritivores, and some macroinvertebrates. These smaller organisms may then be eaten by larger macroinvertebrates and/or fish. The algae and plants represent primary producers while the insects that eat the plants and algae are the primary consumers. The larger macroinvertebrates and fish are the secondary and tertiary consumers respectively.