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There are 2 major waterfalls on the Yellowstone River. This is the Upper falls . The water continues to flow a quarter mile downstream over the Lower Yellowstone Falls. It then enters the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. The total height of the Upper Falls is 308 feet !!
A black and white version of this impressive Jasper National Park waterfall. The upstream island adds a unique charm and beauty to this scene.
Located along the Icefields Parkway Sunwapta Falls consists of upper and lower waterfalls that are fed by the Athabasca Glacier. The upper falls have an impressive dropoff of about 18m (59 ft).
Thank you for any comments, faves or suggestions!
FR 4663B, located SW in the ridgelines below the Blue Ridge Parkway (elevation 4085) near the intersection of Hwy 215 at Beech Gap, Devil's Courthouse, NC
The view looking downstream as the Palouse river heads for Washington state's official waterfall, Palouse Falls. Taken in the autumn so the flow is nice and low. Really roars in the spring.
Not very high, but an impressive wide waterfall. Taken in the autumn so the flow is nice and low. Really roars in the spring.
More views of this falls and The falls in comments.
Thanks for taking a look. Always appreciated!
Upper West (originally: Atlas Tower) is a high-rise building at Breitscheidplatz in the Berlin district of Charlottenburg. With a height of 119 meters, it´s the fourth highest skysraper in Berlin. Designed by Christoph Langhof and KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten, the building was completed in 2017.
Upper Falls located within Hocking Hills State Park.
Thank you for looking and please do NOT use my images without my written permission.
Scott Betz 2020 - © All Rights Reserved
Aerial photo taken of frozen Lake Mary, near Flagstaff, Arizona. Humphrey’s Peak is in the background.
The Upper Falls in Johnston Canyon. This Canyon is one of the attractions along the Icefields Parkway in Alberta, Canada. It was worthwhile visiting.
Das Gebäude ist mit 119 m Höhe nach dem Park-Inn-Hotel am Alexanderplatz, dem Hochhaus der Treptowers und dem Steglitzer Kreisel, gemeinsam mit dem Zoofenster das vierthöchste Hochhaus Berlins.
With a height of 119 m, the building is the fourth highest skyscraper in Berlin after the Park-Inn-Hotel on Alexanderplatz, the Treptowers skyscraper and the Steglitzer Kreisel, together with the Zoofenster.
In a land of freshwater lakes and rivers as numerous as Canada it can be forgiven that not all of our waterways get the notoriety they deserve though it does give one treasure to hunt for. Not every waterfall needs to be captured as smooth milk and if one does use a slow shutter speed you should also take a picture of the surroundings at a much faster shutter speed to blend into the image to reduce the softness from movement of small things.
East of the town of Rosseau on Highway 141 about ten minutes is the Upper Rosseau Falls located right beside the road where a bridge crosses the Rosseau River and a small picnic area is located. The river travels after hitting one last falls called Lower Rosseau Falls about 1000m downstream from this location and empties into Lake Rosseau. This shot captures the North side of the bridge crossing where a small cascade lives before the 30m drop on the southside of the falls sometimes bigger is not better just different.
I took this on Sept 26, 2021 with my D850 and Tamron 24-70 f2.8 G2 Lens at 24mm, 1/13s, f16 ISO 64 processed in LR, PS +Topaz ,and DXO
Disclaimer: My style is a study of romantic realism as well as a work in progress
The last time we visited the Mount Baker National Recreation Area we hiked from the Artist Point parking lot to over the pass in the upper center of this image and then down around the lake and up to near where I shot this image. It's a marvelous hike I'd like to do again. If you zoom in you might be able to see the people on the trail. There is a single person on the shore of the lake on the left.
Eroding buttresses formed by Entrada sandstone (170 MYA) surround the "cathedral" capped by lighter colored Curtis sandstone (marine sediments 165 MYA), with a weathered juniper snag reaching out to sing its praises. The black rocks next to the juniper were washed down from Thousand Lake Mountain to the west (left), which is capped by lava flows dating back 25-20 MYA.
While approaching this scenic valley from the east (right in the photo) I came upon a herd of at least a thousand elk that ran off en masse, raising a substantial cloud of dust. This was by far the largest herd of elk I've observed in decades of living and traveling throughout western North America. I'm guessing the location, mostly within Capitol Reef NP, provides a good winter habitat and a refuge from hunters with access to forage and mountains nearby for summer habitat.
To celebrate the 1-year anniversary of breaking my right arm, I hiked to the Upper Purgatory Falls. I figured today was a perfect day to risk breaking another limb (or worse) 😄. It had snowed here heavily a few days ago, and the trail to the falls was brutal. It took me almost an hour to go 1 mile, only to find out that the bridge to the good side of the stream (from which the view of the falls is said to be better) had collapsed. I had to slowly struggle down a steep snowy slope, full of jagged boulders, roots and fallen branches (threatening to impale or blind me if I slipped), to get down to the spot where I could take some photos. There I parked myself under a massive overhang from which hung huge, 15-foot-long icicles, any one of which would have surely smashed my skull to pieces had it lost its grip on the granite.
The centerpiece of Tahquamenon Falls State Park's 50,000 acres is the Tahquamenon River with its waterfalls. The Upper Falls, one of the largest waterfalls east of the Mississippi, has a drop of nearly 50 feet, more than 200 feet across and a water flow of more than 50,000 gallons per second.
The photo (without the frame) is Selected as one of the 16 finalists in the Detroit News 'Celebrate Michigan 2018' contest, 2nd category for the summer. ( total entries)
217d 10 - TAC_1930 - lr-ps-wm - frame-text
After a day at the Grand Canyon, Mike and I went to Page where we met up with Brian again and did a tour of the Upper Antelope Canyon. It was beyond spectacular but a bit rushed. You have to have a guide take you and as Brian said he must have been in a hurry to get back and watch Judge Wapner:-))).
We also met up with Rick (not ansel) www.flickr.com/photos/21059999@N08/ who was nice enough to drive up from Flagstaff and he took us on quite a drive into Utah after our tour of the canyon. More on that later. It's a bit challenging trying to get shots without people walking into them at this place. They would just appear around a corner in the middle of an exposure and ruin it!!! After a few of these incidents, Brian was getting rather threatening to people lol.