View allAll Photos Tagged surface

View through the wet windshield in the rainy night.

 

Multiple reflections between uneven air-water surface and water-glass surface causing a kind of coma and ghost.

 

Upper brighter area: Vehicles' lamps, traffic lights, and other illuminations.

 

Bottom darker area: All those reflected on the wet road surface.

HiRISE has been monitoring steep slopes on Mars because some of them reveal active processes. In some cases, there are many seasonal flows on warm slopes, suggesting some role for water in their activity.

 

The central hills in Hale Crater is one such location, with thousands of seasonal flows on steep slopes below bedrock outcrops. The cutout shows a small sample of this image, with relatively dark and reddish lines extending onto sediment fans.

 

These lines grow slowly over several months time, fade and disappear in the cold season (southern winter), then reform the next warm season (southern spring and summer).

 

Image is less than 1 km (under a mile) top to bottom and is 254 km (158 mi) above the surface. North is to the left. For full images including scale bars, visit the source link.

 

www.uahirise.org/ESP_031203_1440

NASA/JPL/UArizona

 

Discovery consists of looking at the same thing as everyone else and thinking something different.

Albert Szent-Gyorgyi

 

Winter slowly releases it's grip on frozen lake Mývatn, N-Iceland.

The edges of ponds and small lakes provide vegetation that interacts seasonally with the water and its reflections...always a fun subject to meditate on.

and near the ferry

Stern winch on a big old tugboat aground in the marine graveyard. A tiny but steady stream of oil seeps up from below the surface back here.

Whistler, BC

 

Nikon F100

Fuji Velvia 50

Three surfaces - dark, mid and pale - under the same beam.

The dark surface swallows the light, the mid-toned keeps it in balance and the pale one returns it almost entirely, making it clear that the journey of light is shaped by the shades it meets.

These are from a while ago, the rest can be found in my blog. :3

Kingston Inner Harbour | Natural Holidays Ornament

 

A couple of days prior to New Year Day, a gorgeous male Pileated Woodpecker presented itself as I was surveying the Inner Harbour of Kingston for wildlife. The Pileated is non-migrating and the largest woodpecker of North America, here with its striking red crest seemingly adorning a large deciduous snag as it was chipping away at the sapwood and flicking off relatively large wood chips in order to access insects, with carpenter ants being their preference. While using its forward and backward toes to grip the exterior surface of three and gaining additional support from its stiff tail feathers, the woodpecker uses its powerful beak to carve out large rectangular-shaped cavities, often filling the air with echoing rhythmic strikes. Although a resulting cavity may be used by the Pileated for nesting, most cavities become available as nesting sites for up to 40 North American bird and mammal species.

 

via Outdoor Surface Painting ift.tt/1PTQdC6

Cycle Lane Line Markings in Rank's Green #Cycle #Lane #Line #Markings #Rank's #Green

The edges of ponds and small lakes provide vegetation that interacts seasonally with the water and its reflections...always a fun subject to meditate on.

This is my first Classic Space MOC. I wanted to build something for Classic Space, but not the overused color scheme of blue, gray and trans yellow. This color scheme is used in a few vehicles and one cruiser in the beginning of the 80s.

via Tarmacadam Surfaces ift.tt/1LnRoxY

Tarmacadam Colours in Caerphilly | Coloured Tarmacadam #Coloured #Asphalt #Surfaces #Caerphilly t.co/XntNp56bqV

Scifi offroad racer with independent suspension and floating cockpit.

Some photos of my old MOC. I already posted one photo of this vehicle 10 years ago. These I found on my brickshelf (I totally forgot about this site).

 

The old photo: Surface Explorer on flickr

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