DESIRE by Hans Jörg Leth
DESIRE by Hans Jörg Leth
www.lethhansjoerg.com
Hans Jörg Leth: Photos
***Namibia Desert*** by Joachi...
***Namibia Desert*** by Joachim Bergauer
www.bergauer.cc
Joachim Bergauer: Photos
Out of Chaos by Daniel Herr
Out of Chaos by Daniel Herr
It turns out that an eerie type of chaos can lurk just behind a facade of order – and yet, deep inside the chaos lurks an even eerier type of order. (Douglas R. Hofstadter)
Daniel Herr: Photos
Little Stream by Mevludin Sejm...
Little Stream by Mevludin Sejmenovic
Nature Impression
Mt. Konjuh, Banovici, Bosnia
Mevludin Sejmenovic: Photos
****Forever*** by Joachim Berg...
****Forever*** by Joachim Bergauer
www.bergauer.cc
Joachim Bergauer: Photos
***Grace Eagle*** by Joachim B...
***Grace Eagle*** by Joachim Bergauer
www.bergauer.cc
Joachim Bergauer: Photos
Grue couronnée by Andre Villen...
Grue couronnée by Andre Villeneuve
Andre Villeneuve: Photos
im Regenwald by Georg Scharf
im Regenwald by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
Otter by Georg Scharf
Otter by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
Flowers, fog, and sunrise. by ...
Flowers, fog, and sunrise. by c1113
물의 정원 일출
c1113: Photos
Country Road by Adnan Bubalo ✅...
Country Road by Adnan Bubalo ✅
Adnan Bubalo ✅: Photos
Testosterone by Timothy Poulto...
Testosterone by Timothy Poulton
If you go down to Koekohe beach in New Zealand, you can be sure of a big surprise. In front of you, scattered like enormous marbles from some long abandoned game between giants, are hundreds of giant spherical rocks. Or are they the eggshells of sea-born dragons? The Moeraki boulders present us with a mystery – what are they and how on earth did they get there? Some are isolated but may occur in clusters. That they are here is the result of three things – erosion, concretion and time. First, the waves, inexorable and patient, have pounded the local bedrock for countless millennia. The mudstone on the beach – rock which was initially mud and clay – is slowly but surely eroded. Underneath are the boulders that the mudstone – in its original wet form, helped to form. However, the boulders were not there, to begin with – that came later. Many of the Moeraki boulders give the impression of being completely spherical – and they almost are. They are septarian concretions – a sedimentary rock that has had the space between its grains filled up by minerals which acted like cement. Concretions form inside the layers of mud and clay and are not, as some think, boulders buried over time. Whatever you believe they certainly make a stunning foreground for landscape photographers.
Timothy Poulton: Photos