View allAll Photos Tagged Territory,

Standley Chasm is a magnificent gorge in the West MacDonnell Ranges located 40 minutes drive from Alice Springs, Northern Territory.

 

Known traditionally as Angkerle Atwatye, meaning “Gap of Water”, Standley Chasm is an icon of Central Australia, a cultural treasure amongst the West MacDonnell Ranges.

 

Privately owned and operated by the Western Arrernte people, the traditional custodians welcome all respectful visitors to explore this beautiful and sacred piece of our culture.

//Canon AE-1 + Canon FD 50mm 1.4 + Kodak Portra 160

Every spring for the past several years, a (the same?) pair of Canada Geese has staked out a territory in a small patch of Crescent Lake where it adjoins our backyard. Their devotion has never culminated in the building of a nest, and every year a domineering male Mute Swan has eventually chased them away. But they keep coming back.

Icy: "Stay out of my territory!"

 

(Toy Sunday: Territory)

Cormorants being animated over perching rights.

CSX's Geometry Train finds a sun hole through the tree tunnel at Neck Road South in Lancaster as they work down the Worcester Main towards Worcester. CSX's recent acquisition of Pan Am Railways brought the geometry train out to Pan Am for a tour of the system last summer.

This image from the Aqua satellite's MODIS instrument taken at 11:10 UTC on December 16, 2013 shows areas of snow in Syria, Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territory.

 

Snow storms in the Middle East are not frequent but not uncommon either. However, this one was unusually early in the winter and more intense than normal. The storm paralyzed Jerusalem with 30 to 50 centimeters (12 to 20 inches) of snow, knocking out power for roughly 15,000 households. The snow closed mountain roads leading into the city, effectively cutting Jerusalem off. Amman, Jordan, received about 45 cm (18 inches) of snow, and Lebanon and Syria also were unusually cold and snowy.

 

Lower elevations near the coast received torrential rain during the storm, resulting in flooding. Some 40,000 people were forced to evacuate flooded areas in Gaza, according to the Associated Press. The floods are not visible at this scale, but tan and green plumes of sediment are visible along the Mediterranean Sea coast. Such plumes can be caused by floods and run off, though stormy, turbid waters may also bring sediment to the surface.

 

NASA image use policy.

  

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

  

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Kata Tjuṯa, is a group of large, domed rock formations or bornhardts located about 360 km southwest of Alice Springs, in the southern part of the Northern Territory, central Australia.Copyright © Paul Hollins. All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my explicit written permission.

Three A380 and four A350 in the same photo. For some reason is Airbus territory.

And about the main aircraft in the photo, is performing a touch & go. Now operating at Finnair as OH-LWG

Heron chasing away a Dusky Moorhen - Tannum Sands, Queensland, Australia

CN L546 With CN 2292 Passes Some Old Machinery At Squamish South.

Final shot of Monticello's 2015 Railroad Days event. This was kind of a last second shot, so I think it turned out nicely.

Ring Of Dingle / Country Kerry / Ireland

  

[EXPLORE - 2017-10-22]

 

Album of Ireland: www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157711998...

This is for all those people that say you have to get out of the city to see the aurora. Not true!

 

Aurora over downtown Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.

Commonly known as the "Darwin Woolly-butt" this "Eucalyptus Miniata" was photographed at Litchfield National Park near Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia

Penn Station Newark,NJ 1967. PRR both sides, PATH third rail down the center.

Yellow warblers are a common sight this time of year at Rondeau.

This one was either claiming a territory or calling for a mate.

 

Setophaga petechia

 

Life can be dangerous for a small bird. Yellow Warblers have occasionally been found caught in the strands of an orb weaver spider’s web.

source - Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

Morgan Territory California

Photo taken at a roadhouse south of Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia...best look in the black box

I don't often see the cheetah boys mark their territory or if i do Ihave never been able to capture it. Today I was lucky enough to be in the right spot at the right time. Unfortunately I couldn't capture the whole tail as i had to zoom in to the max to avoid the fence closest to me.

Mary River, Northern Territory, Australia

 

20160718_ANS_1883

 

1 of a set of 3 photos showing the changing colours at sunset. please view all 3

1. Taking pictures a tool (camera), not a photographer.

2. The choice of tool limits the possibilities.

3. Experience allows him (instrument) less and less to limit their capabilities.

4. The ability to see is given only when the observer allows ...

5. The moment of observation is the real find ...

6. Training and mastering it defies. Training leads to poor imitations of the original.

7. Often the result should ripen, like wine. Although time is the understanding of the mind, therefore it is very speculative.

8. The meaning of all this is the process!

9. Let it be!

 

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