View allAll Photos Tagged abstractionism
The conductor on CSX Q028 keeps watch on the grade crossing in downtown Emerson, GA as the train slowly pulls forward. The signalling systems were damaged when a tractor trailer got stuck on the the tracks earlier this evening so all trains had to stop and flag. Posted for those who only think I only take sunny wedge shots.
This image is included in a gallery "Favourite Landscapes" curated by MK Hardy.
This was taken somewhere along the Newcastle Memorial Walk. The late afternoon light was simply enchanting. Looking beyond is South Pacific Ocean. The Walk is located above Memorial Drive The Hill, on Strzelecki Headland (between Bar Beach and King Edward Park).
A little abstraction extraction from a garden pot at Paloma Gardens.
Seemed to resemble where the land meets the sea - to me at least!
© Dominic Scott 2023
Thank you for watching, I wish you have a wonderful week from my heart.
I'm going to visit your stream step by step .. :)
Hanging Rock (also known as Mount Diogenes, Dryden's Rock, and to some of its traditional owners as Ngannelong) is a distinctive geological formation in central Victoria, Australia. A former volcano, it lies 718m above sea level (105m above plain level) on the plain between the two small townships of Newham and Hesket, approximately 70 km north-west of Melbourne and a few kilometres north of Mount Macedon.
Hanging Rock is a mamelon, created 6.25 million years ago by stiff magma pouring from a vent and congealing in place. Often thought to be a volcanic plug, it is not. Two other mamelons exist nearby, created in the same period: Camels Hump, to the south on Mount Macedon and, to the east, Crozier's Rocks. All three mamelons are composed of soda trachyte. As Hanging Rock's magma cooled and contracted it split into rough columns. These weathered over time into the many pinnacles that can be seen today.
This was taken on a fine winter afternoon. Spotted this moss smitten boulder while walking along the base of Hanging Rock.
(explored: Sep 20, 2020 #300)