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Rooftop Terrace. Burano, Italy. Digital Pastel artwork by Donna Corless.
Prints and notecards are available for purchase from my site at PhotosAndArt.com from the Digital Pastels Gallery.
Built by Lord Leverhulme between 1905 and 1925 with the help of Thomas Mawson, the spectacular landscaped Japanese style terraced garden set on the side of Rivington Pike are unique. Here is the 3 arch bridge.
The Main Terrace at Yellowstone National Park's Mammoth Hot Springs area. The area contains approximately 50 hot springs. It is subject to continual change as hot water flows to the earth's surface.
Calcium carbonate is also crucial to the terraces' growth. Thick layers of sedimentary limestone lie beneath the Mammoth area. As ground water seeps slowly downward and laterally, it comes in contact with hot gases charged with carbon dioxide rising from the magma chamber. Some carbon dioxide is readily dissolved in the hot water to form a weak carbonic acid solution. This hot, acidic solution dissolves great quantities of limestone as it works up through the rock layers to the surface hot springs. Once exposed to the open air, some of the carbon dioxide escapes from solution. As this happens, limestone can no longer remain in solution. A solid mineral reforms and is deposited as the travertine that forms the terraces--September 4, 2009
© Copyright 2015 Mark Warnes Photography All rights reserved. This image is not free for use <a href="http://www.markwarnes -photography.com
Here we see WAMX 4182 and WAMX 4177 leading an uncommon daylight T005 as they work their way off the Lake Monona causeway and onto Madison's Isthmus for the final few miles to the yard at Johnson Street. At this point, seen from the Monona Terrace, T005 is strung out around the connector at Monona Tower and over the junction with the Prairie Sub at Broom Street.
The area around Monona Tower is the convergence of the Madison, Reedsburg, and Prairie subdivisions. The Madison Sub crosses the Reedsburg Sub at Monona Tower. From there, the Madison Sub continues until the junction with the Prairie Sub at Main Street. The Prairie Sub begins here at Broom Street. Both Broom and Main street switches are radio controlled whose normal positions are lined for the Reedsburg Sub and Prairie Sub respectively. The connecting track between the Reedsburg and Madison subdivisions at Monona Tower has a pair of spring switches whose normal positions are lined for movement from the Madison Sub to the Reedsburg Sub and vise versa.
At one time, there were four tracks and a two-lane road between the buildings and the lake. The two northern tracks were for the Milwaukee and the two southern tracks were for the CNW. This was eventually consolidated to two tracks, and then finally one track during the construction of the Monona Terrace in 1994.
Explored - Feb. 17, 2009 - Reached #470 View On Black
We made our second winter trip to Yellowstone in 2009. Such an incredible place anytime of the year, but even more magical in the winter. Having traveled to the park a total of seven times now, we had never spent any time exploring the geothermal features of the park but decided to take a walk this particular afternoon and see what we could find. Much to my amazement, this was probably one of the biggest highlights of our trip. The contrast between the hot & cold of the terraces & hot springs was incredibly surreal.
Note: Reposting of an old image....one of my favorites, and pressed for time this morning......have a great Tuesday; thanks for stopping by to visit :-)
Half relief terraced houses from the Kingsway Models range of card kits, with Standard Nine car passing by.
Sometimes it's nice to sit at a beautiful terrace, talking to your friends, while waiting for a cup of coffee.
Lucky to have our upstairs terrace blooming in November! Brilliant to have a cafe on in the morning.
Canon AE-1
FD 50mm f1.8 S.C
Kodak Portra 400
Noritsu lab scan (northcoastphoto.com)
others from the same lab
A terraced shelf cloud races across the rolling hills of northeast Colorado - 5 June 2015. Tornado-warned storms that we had chased and photographed earlier in the day were gradually giving way to linear storms adorned by beautiful, wind-lofted structures such as this. The tire tracks on the wet, sandy road show where I started to drive north for a better view—only to find that the road was likely to be too treacherous for safe driving.
Prints available: perezmedia.smugmug.com/Storms/i-qqqV9J3/A
Water flowing over the natural mineral terraces at Baishuitai.
Located at the foothills of the Haba Snow Mountains, this area has views worthy of Shangri-la.
Yunnan; October 2024
I noticed this on yesterday's walk - fits in very well with the many terraced houses in our neighbourhood
virtualspacetravel.blogspot.com/2022/02/more-random-than-...
Bleakstone Terrace, Somewhereville's most austere apartment complex was designed during the 1950's by the Soviet architect, Yevgeny Plosk who was quoted as saying “this structure will survive longer than your optimism.” Reasonably priced, Bleakstone Terrace doesn't offer luxury--only acceptance. Some poor lost soul carved above the peeling entryway, the words: “You’ll Get Used to It.”
Image imagined in MidJourney AI and finished with Topaz Studio and Lightroom Classic.