Очередная подборка National Geographic
Indian Beach, Oregon by Vadim Balakin
Luanda, Angola. by Kostadin Luchansky
Секвойя Мендосино (Michael Nichols)
Norge Mountains (Camilla Wejdemar)
Bottlenose Dolphins, Mexico (Garland Sutton)
Следы дипротодона в Австралии. На дне высыхающего озера в Виктории фермер поразил ученых своей находкой в 2007 году: он нашел хорошо сохранившиеся следы дипротодона. Медленный громила переходил эту вулканическую равнину 100 тысяч лет назад. (Amy Toensing)
Долина десяти тысяч потоков на Аляске. В этой долине поток течет по каньону через скалу, образованную извержением вулкана Новарупта в 1912 году. Заснеженные вершины гор Григгс и Катмаи (справа) являются частью системы десяти активных вулканов, окружающих долину, в 160 км к югу от шахты Пеббл. (Michael Melford)
A view across the valley from First Mountain, Grindelwald. Photo and caption by Paul Mulholland
Towards the end of the summer, monsoon season creates spectacular atmospheric conditions in the southwest. Starting around noon, you can watch storm clouds building up, discharging and dissipating. This picture was taken with an infrared converted DSLR, bringing out the contrast in lighting. (Photo and caption Courtesy Dirk Scholvin / National Geographic Your Shot)
Весенние цветы. (Mark Kovacs)
Elmo Hernandez, автор фото: «Я никогда не забуду эти волны, накрывавшие берег, словно скачущий галопом табун. Стояла такая непогода, что сделать снимок было возможно только из автомобиля, открыв дверь. Это была зима 2010 года в провинции Астуриас (Испания)».
Iceberg at sunset in Antarctica. Photo and caption by Michael Leggero
Красота природы - пейзажи Земли фотографии, лесов, рек, гор....
#1396
Отправлено 05 декабря 2012 - 16:49
#1400
Отправлено 06 декабря 2012 - 12:08
И снова Антарктика
The Peltier Channel separates Doumer and Wiencke Islands Antarctica’s Palmer Archipelago. It was named for Jean Peltier, a noted French physicist. Photo taken on May 17, 2012. (National Science Foundation/Janice O’Reilly)
An iceberg near the Antarctic Peninsula, photographed on October 24, 2011. (National Science Foundation/Dave Munroe)
An iceberg near the Antarctic Peninsula, on October 24, 2011. (National Science Foundation/Dave Munroe)
A Pisten-Bully tracked vehicle on frozen McMurdo Sound is dwarfed by the Royal Society Mountains about 40 miles away, on November 27, 2011. Small tracked vehicles are used by science groups to travel short distances away from McMurdo Station to conduct research on the annual sea ice. (National Science Foundation/Peter Rejcek)
A spring sunset at Palmer Station, on March 31, 2011. Torgersen and Litchfield islands are in the distance. (National Science Foundation/Mindy Piuk)
Communications satellite receivers at Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, seen on August 23, 2012. The predawn glow on the horizon indicates the sun will be rising in a few weeks. (National Science Foundation/Sven Lidstrom)
The majestic beauty of the Antarctic Peninsula area, photographed on June 30, 2012. (National Science Foundation/Janice O’Reilly)
The full moon over DeLaca Island, located close to Palmer Station, on April 6, 2012. The island is named for Ted DeLaca, a biologist who worked in the area in the early 1970s. (National Science Foundation/Edward Quintanilla)
What appears to be dirty snow in this aerial photo of Cape Washington are actually groups of emperor penguins, seen on November 2, 2011. Dr. Paul Ponganis and his team (Scripps Institution of Oceanography) have been studying emperor colonies throughout the Ross Sea area for decades. (National Science Foundation/Dr. Paul Ponganis) (для тех кому лень вчитываться в англоязычное описание - это не грязь, это пингвины)
Nacreous clouds, observed on January 6, 2011. These polar stratospheric clouds at 80,000 feet are the highest of all clouds. They only occur in the polar regions when the stratospheric temperature dips below 100 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (-73 C). They are also the site of chemical reactions that break down ozone in the upper atmosphere and contribute to the creation of the ozone hole above Antarctica. (National Science Foundation/Kelly Speelman)
The Peltier Channel separates Doumer and Wiencke Islands Antarctica’s Palmer Archipelago. It was named for Jean Peltier, a noted French physicist. Photo taken on May 17, 2012. (National Science Foundation/Janice O’Reilly)
An iceberg near the Antarctic Peninsula, photographed on October 24, 2011. (National Science Foundation/Dave Munroe)
An iceberg near the Antarctic Peninsula, on October 24, 2011. (National Science Foundation/Dave Munroe)
A Pisten-Bully tracked vehicle on frozen McMurdo Sound is dwarfed by the Royal Society Mountains about 40 miles away, on November 27, 2011. Small tracked vehicles are used by science groups to travel short distances away from McMurdo Station to conduct research on the annual sea ice. (National Science Foundation/Peter Rejcek)
A spring sunset at Palmer Station, on March 31, 2011. Torgersen and Litchfield islands are in the distance. (National Science Foundation/Mindy Piuk)
Communications satellite receivers at Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, seen on August 23, 2012. The predawn glow on the horizon indicates the sun will be rising in a few weeks. (National Science Foundation/Sven Lidstrom)
The majestic beauty of the Antarctic Peninsula area, photographed on June 30, 2012. (National Science Foundation/Janice O’Reilly)
The full moon over DeLaca Island, located close to Palmer Station, on April 6, 2012. The island is named for Ted DeLaca, a biologist who worked in the area in the early 1970s. (National Science Foundation/Edward Quintanilla)
What appears to be dirty snow in this aerial photo of Cape Washington are actually groups of emperor penguins, seen on November 2, 2011. Dr. Paul Ponganis and his team (Scripps Institution of Oceanography) have been studying emperor colonies throughout the Ross Sea area for decades. (National Science Foundation/Dr. Paul Ponganis) (для тех кому лень вчитываться в англоязычное описание - это не грязь, это пингвины)
Nacreous clouds, observed on January 6, 2011. These polar stratospheric clouds at 80,000 feet are the highest of all clouds. They only occur in the polar regions when the stratospheric temperature dips below 100 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (-73 C). They are also the site of chemical reactions that break down ozone in the upper atmosphere and contribute to the creation of the ozone hole above Antarctica. (National Science Foundation/Kelly Speelman)
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