View allAll Photos Tagged Thermal
Found inside an abandoned paper mill somewhere in southern Germany. This huge industrial complex consists of paper fabrication, laboratories and an on-site power plant.
Budapest the famous Gellert Thermal bath.
Project L'Arte della Fuga
My Best on black - My Recent on black
My Books:
My book "Just Walls" (preview)
My book "Just Doors" (preview)
My book "Just Windows" (preview)
My book "Paris, Mon Amour" (preview)
My book Castelli della Loira (preview)
The hot thermal water kills the trees. There are chemicals and fine silt that is in the water that comes from the underground thermal springs.
Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone, Mt.
1/17/2017
the water in this stream tastes quite acidic, the next one nearby tasted alkaline !
whakaari or White Island new zealand
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Previously unpublished archive shot from November 2019 and timely with the first properly cold blast of winter coming in from the East this week. Oh, and the shot got photobombed by a pigeon too! Wishing you all a great weekend of photography - wrap up warm!
Bakreswar Thermal Power Project, under The West Bengal Power Development Corporation Limited, is one of the most reliable and prestigious coal-​fired power plants in West Bengal and in India as well. In two stages the total capacity of the plant is (03 X 210)MW. Funded by the Overseas Economic Co-​Operation Fund(OECF) of Japan Govt. — subsequently costituted as Japan Bank for Internattional Co-​operation (JBIC).
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Newcastle upon Tyne, England.
Previously unpublished archive shot from November 2018. Enjoy.
Peer pressure still happens at any age. As a lover of toy cameras, I finally gave in and purchased a 'Thermal Camera' - takes small pictures on receipt paper - thermal paper. This was taken mid day in the hot sun. Its going to be fun!
Just one harrier hawk catching air rising off the warm hill I was standing on. Multiple exposures combined in a montage. Have a good week and thanks very much if you have time for a comment :)
Tokaanu Thermal Walk (20 minutes)
This short walk provides an interesting glimpse of a natural thermal area. See steaming hot mineral pools set in sinter basins and spluttering mud pools amidst the native bush.
For hundreds of years, Maori have used the geothermal resources of this area for cooking, bathing and leisure. Share in this tradition by having a therapeutic and relaxing swim at the nearby Tokaanu Thermal Pools.
Rainbow trout can often be seen here in the cold Tokaanu stream that flows beside the thermal area
Hot pools range in hues of turquoise blue and rich green to burnt orange and sulphuric yellow, making the steaming waters a must-see!
The vibrant colors are caused by miniral and sillicate interference .....
Yellow - Caused by Sulphur
Orange - Is due to antimony
Green - Sulphuran ferrous Salts
My appreciation and thanks to all of you for your comments awards and faves !!!!
In the geyser basin of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, USA, the nearby trees are reflected in the hot spring water.
Tokaanu Thermal Walk (20 minutes)
This short walk provides an interesting glimpse of a natural thermal area. See steaming hot mineral pools set in sinter basins and spluttering mud pools amidst the native bush.
For hundreds of years, Maori have used the geothermal resources of this area for cooking, bathing and leisure. Share in this tradition by having a therapeutic and relaxing swim at the nearby Tokaanu Thermal Pools.
Rainbow trout can often be seen here in the cold Tokaanu stream that flows beside the thermal area.
Hot pools range in hues of turquoise blue and rich green to burnt orange and sulphuric yellow, making the steaming waters a must-see!
The vibrant colors are caused by miniral and sillicate interference .....
Yellow - Caused by Sulphur
Orange - Is due to antimony
Green - Sulphuran ferrous Salts
My appreciation and thanks to all of you for your comments awards and faves !!!!
Tokaanu Thermal Walk (20 minutes)
This short walk provides an interesting glimpse of a natural thermal area. See steaming hot mineral pools set in sinter basins and spluttering mud pools amidst the native bush.
For hundreds of years, Maori have used the geothermal resources of this area for cooking, bathing and leisure. Share in this tradition by having a therapeutic and relaxing swim at the nearby Tokaanu Thermal Pools.
Rainbow trout can often be seen here in the cold Tokaanu stream that flows beside the thermal area
Hot pools range in hues of turquoise blue and rich green to burnt orange and sulphuric yellow, making the steaming waters a must-see!
The vibrant colors are caused by miniral and sillicate interference .....
Yellow - Caused by Sulphur
Orange - Is due to antimony
Green - Sulphuran ferrous Salts
My appreciation and thanks to all of you for your comments awards and faves !!!!