View allAll Photos Tagged devil,
Lower Devils Punch Bowl with the upper falls visible at the top of the frame. It's a good thing that there is little to no flow most of the time due to the bank on the left is only clay. You can also see the overhang on the lower falls with a clay layer under it as well.
The Devil's Punch Bowl is a large natural amphitheatre and beauty spot near Hindhead, Surrey, in England, and is the source of many stories about the area. The London to Portsmouth road (the A3) skirted the centre of the site before the long Hindhead Tunnel was built in 2011.
The land is now owned and maintained by the National Trust as part of the "Hindhead Commons and the Devil's Punch Bowl" property. Hindhead Youth Hostel is located inside the bowl. The highest point is Gibbet Hill at 282m AOD.
Jérôme Devillers (2TID1).
La Médiathèque.
Visual communication course, Bachelor 2 (2TID1), HEAJ (Haute Ecole Albert Jacquard, Namur), 2010.
This little devil was pretty pooped by the end of the night. No wonder, an hour and half of trekking back and forth.
1020-318-21
Devil's Den
A rock formation on the battlefield at Gettysburg. The rock formation and its name pre-date the battle however heavy fighting and loses at Devil's Den secured its name in history.
I don't know the potographer, but this depicts the Marine Corp's "Devil Dog" better than ole "Spike"
Devil's Tower rises 1267 feet over the Belle Fourche River Valley in northeast Wyoming, and is the remains of an igneous intrusion that's been exposed at the surface by erosion of the surrounding sedimentary rock.