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Another layering of beach boulders with washing waves which with a long exposure gives the feeling of mist.

Today's false color image shows part of Ophir Chasma. The large brownish feature in the lower section of the image is part of the layered deposits on the floor of Ophir and other canyons that are similarly part of Valles Marineris. Scientists think these layers record the Martian past climate history, like pages in a history book. (The wavy edges of the image are a result of elevation variations and a unique period of spacecraft orientation.)

 

The THEMIS VIS camera contains 5 filters. The data from different filters can be combined in multiple ways to create a false color image. These false color images may reveal subtle variations of the surface not easily identified in a single band image.

 

The scene here spans 25 x 73 kilometers (16 x 45 miles). To see where on Mars this area lies, and to download high-resolution versions of the image, see: bit.ly/1TDxVuX

 

See the Red Planet Report at bit.ly/14KXe4O for updates on Mars research and exploration. For more about Mars geology, check out the Mars-ePedia: bit.ly/1fnXbhw

 

For the latest THEMIS Mars images as received by mission scientists, see bit.ly/1d6HA7o . To learn more about the THEMIS camera and its Mars images, see bit.ly/13YOfgm .

 

This image is in the public domain and may be republished free of charge, but if used it should be credited as NASA/JPL-Caltech/Arizona State University.

the brick work on this house has always looked so messy to me, the mortar squishing out everywhere is not really appealing and I would not want to lean on that wall either.

There was an abbey in the valley below the Rock of Cashel that was just in the middle of what now is a cow pasture. Doug was no happy being in such proximity to the cows.

 

Cashel, Co. Tipperary, Ireland

from 2005 26"x19" (about an inch around the piece is cut off by the cropping of the photo including the hand torn edges) This is printed on a full sheet of Rives lightweight paper. It is one of a kind and is the largest piece I have ever made, almost using my press to its maximum size (22"x36")

 

I love this piece but I could never get a good scan or photo of it due to its size, but today I managed to. But it still looks twice as good in person where you can see all the subtle details in the piece. This is one of the first pieces I did using the printing press that I got in November 2005. I was still getting used to using the printing press and getting consistent ink coverage, as a result this piece has some interesting effects that would be hard for me to duplicate. It is one of the few remaining pieces from the series, and the only one this size.

 

© Marissa L. Swinghammer

Collage made by cutting through sheets of watercolour paper previously prepared by monoprinting, then arranging the sheets in layers.

[MRM] Layered Polo Shirt *Navy*

[MRM] Layered Polo Shirt *Brown*

[MRM] Layered Polo Shirt *Black*

 

slurl.com/secondlife/baines/32/120/21

Zoomed in on a rosebud with my macro lens. All the layers made by petals, caught my eye.

Layers of building that i shot from Masjid Usamah Bin Zaid Wangsa Maju Malaysia.

 

Nikon d3300 sigma 18-35

Saturday morning marine layer rolling in while standing out on a jetty in Dana Point, CA.

Taken in western Montana's Swan Valley

© Benjamin Goodacre. All Rights Reserved. Not-for-profit free-use usually granted. Contact me for details.

 

Most interesting pictures: Click!

 

@goodacrephoto | Rebelmouse | www.goodacrephotography.co.uk

Layers of Color Flutterscent art stamp set

Wivenhoe to Colchester path at the end of the period of snow. I was attracted by the different layers in the scene.

I love all the layers of hills and mountains and fog.

 

Press L to view on black.

 

Scavenger Hunter Gatherer photo challenge #95 - shades of grey

The machine room within the topmost tower.

 

I found some "punch out and layer" snowmen images on a recent road trip to outlying scrapbook stores. Each image has four layers. I popped each layer up on thin pop dots to give lots of 3-D dimension. They remind me of the images we used to layer and decoupage back in the 70's. Really fun.

 

November 2018

MRO image of a crater in Nilosyrtis Mensae with a layered structure in it.

A happy explosion of cheese and garnish.

It has potential...these layered balls..

Layers upon layers of rock and mountain.

not bad for a non slr, getting the exposure/iso setup was...tricky

St John the Baptist, Layer de la Haye, Essex

 

The largest of the Layers, and usually referred to as simply Layer. Open. A small, pretty little church beside Abberton reservoir. Inside is homely and warm, late Victorian. Very cosy. There is an Easter Sepulchre tomb from the 1540s, exceptionally late and the liturgy it would have served can only have had months to run when it was installed.

 

Very friendly churchwardens inside doing the books and playing the organ, although they assured me that the church is always open every day. Unfortunately, I was so busy talking that I left my Essex Pevsner beside the visitors book, and had to go back for it the following week.

First attempt for printing on fabric since oh, april 2005! (has it really been that long? wow.) Consensus: not too bad! Printing on fabric is an entirely different beast than on paper. I was pretty foolish and didn't consider the image I was making in relation to the size of the screens I bought, so there was very little room to play with and I was working with a 14" squeegee on a 13.75" wide image, all on a 20x24 screen. Ooops! So that thick outline did not print the way I wanted to, but I will revise that in the design. Fortunately the fabric soaks up ink so even with multiple passes you can't see the lines or anything.

 

Error two: print on the left (well, the middle) was the first print, and I seriously underestimated how much ink to mix. Remixing it, I wound up making the rest a little yellower. This is what happens when we're low-fi, folks! I think it'll be okay though.

 

Layer two tomorrow? Hmm, we'll see!

PS: I need a better drying rack :(

layer of mountains with misty in morning

Coconut Layer Cake with Coconut Buttercream topped with shredded coconut and Coconut Cake Truffles

 

each layer was brushed with a combination of coconut milk and cream of coconut then a hefty dollop of rich buttercream was added and then topped with toasted coconut

The District on Broadway, Nashville

Fossil fish in lacustrine marlstone from the Eocene of Wyoming, USA.

 

The Green River Formation of Utah-Colorado-Wyoming consists of multiple lake deposits of Eocene age. The unit is famous for having vast oil shale deposits and exquisitely-preserved fossils. Fossil Butte National Monument in southwestern Wyoming preserves and displays some of these high-quality fossils. Leaves and fish are the most common large fossils in the Fossil Lake Basin of the Green River Formation.

 

Seen here is a partial Green River fossil fish in fissile marlstone. Marlstone is a "hybrid" lithology between shale and limestone - it is calcareous and bubbles in acid, but it has a high clay content as well.

 

The most common fish in the Green River Formation is Knightia, a fossil herring.

 

Stratigraphy: Split Fish Layer, Fossil Butte Member, Green River Formation, upper Wasatchian Stage (Wa4)/Ypresian Stage/Lostcabinian, Lower Eocene

 

Locality: Ulrich's Fossil Quarry, west of the town of Kemmerer, Fossil Lake Basin, southwestern Wyoming, USA

------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_River_Formation

 

Layers accentuated at dawn. Wellington, New Zealand.

St John the Baptist, Layer de la Haye, Essex

 

The largest of the Layers, and usually referred to as simply Layer. Open. A small, pretty little church beside Abberton reservoir. Inside is homely and warm, late Victorian. Very cosy. There is an Easter Sepulchre tomb from the 1540s, exceptionally late and the liturgy it would have served can only have had months to run when it was installed.

 

Very friendly churchwardens inside doing the books and playing the organ, although they assured me that the church is always open every day. Unfortunately, I was so busy talking that I left my Essex Pevsner beside the visitors book, and had to go back for it the following week.

SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 on 2025-04-07 @ 1505 PDT from Vandenberg SFB.

 

Heavy Marine layer obscured the launch until it got higher.

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