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one-of-a-kind mask made with Sculptamold
painted with acrylics
35 (height) x 30 (width) x 13 (depth) inches
One of BR's last steam locomotives at Devil's Bridge on the narrow gauge Vale of Rheidol railway. I don't know how this line ended up in BR ownership and remained this way until it was privatised in 1989, but it's interesting nevertheless.
This is the only one of the many pictures I took on that day that turned out OK. A problem with the shutter on my Olympus OM-10 meant that all the others were overexposed and suffered from terrible camera shake. Unfortunately, this affected so many of my photos from around this time before I realised there was something wrong with the camera, not me!
Devils Tower National Monument, September 2003
On our way home from Grand Teton National Park, we planned to stop in Rapid City, SD to visit some friends. Along the way to Rapid City we briefly stopped at Devil's Tower. During our visit we hiked the Tower Trail along the base of the monolith.
Devil's Tower was America's first National Monument, granted that status by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. It is composed of volcanic rock that was once molten and forced upwards between other rock. The molten material did not reach the surface, but instead cooled as it was forced up. Over time the surrounding rock was weathered away by erosion to reveal the Tower's presence.
Devils tower of Wyoming.
They call them the Black Hills of South Dakota, but it’s something of a secret that the Black Hills extend into Wyoming, too. Although 90 percent of the Black Hills are in South Dakota, the timbered mountains of the Black Hills National Forest do continue 10 to 40 miles beyond the South Dakota border, west into Wyoming.
125 foot high Devil's Slide is an unusual cliff rock formation on the side of Cinnabar Mountain, north of Yellowstone National Park. This distinctive formation was created from alternate beds of limestone, sandstone, and quartzites that have been tilted to lie nearly vertical and have eroded at different rates.
Mountain Devils
Lesley-Ann Marriott came with her lucky shirt and it worked just as planned. Well done on the final.
Lesley-Ann Marriott (Vancouver)
Terry Stuart (Bellevue)
The Devils Postpile is an amazing sight. I could attempt to write a description of how this formation was created, but you'd be better off checking out this link.
For a scale, check out the size of the trees. These are huge columns of rock.
Help save the Tasmanian Devil from the devastating effects of the Tasmanian Devil Facial Tumour Disease (DFTD), a unique contagious cancer, spread by biting, which is consistently fatal. The Tasmanian devil is now listed as an Endangered Species.
www.utas.edu.au/foundation/devil.htm
Photo taken at the Tasmanian Devil Park - Taranna
Devils Tower is a butte, possibly laccolithic, composed of igneous rock in the Bear Lodge ... Devils Tower was the first United States National Monument, established on September 24, 1906, by President Theodore Roosevelt. .... a prime example being the columnar “hoodoo” formations at Bryce Canyon National Park.
Lubeck
Sitting on the devil's stone. When the devil saw a new building being erected he thought they were building a pub and gave a hand. The building went on apace, but when he realised they were building a church he decided to throw a great big stone to destroy the building. The architect convinced him not to do this by promising to build a wine bar opposite and so the devil placed the stone outside the church instead.
The Childrens Graveyard on the Island of Royale. Most of the Children died of Childhood diseases. Emilien was 27 months when he died in 1906
Also know as Face Jugs, this southern folk art tradition is becoming quite popular. The green one is a devil jug by the late Bobby Ferguson.
I'm the devil, or I'm wearing a scary hockey mask from Kingdom of Loathing that has horns. The Office Space reference is nice.