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Friday, May 13, 2011

20 Most Mysterious Earth Photographs

    Travelling to Europe, USA, Asia and other continents is top on most people’s vacation list. However, outside of the natural elegant places to visit, there are a number of mysterious places, fact or legend, which intrigues scientists to this day. This collection is taken from Patterns in Nature.

    Salt Piles on Shoreline, Senegal

     
    Photograph by Robert Haas
    Salt piles line the shoreline of Lake Retba, Senegal. The high salinity content of the lake provides a livelihood for salt collectors.

    Biplane Over Monomoy Shoals, Massachusetts

     
    Photograph by Michael Melford
    A biplane flies above Monomoy Island, Massachusetts.

    Sand Dunes, Rub al Khali

     
    Photograph by George Steinmetz
    The borders of four nations—Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, and the United Arab Emirates—blur beneath the shifting sands of the Rub al Khali, or Empty Quarter, desert.

    Drying Fronds, Kenya

     
    Photograph by Robert Haas
    Fronds dry in neat lines around a tree in Kenya.

    Cave Dwellings, Turkey

     
    Photograph by Klaus Nigge
    Cavelike dwellings built into soft rock dot the Cappadocia region of Turkey.

    Fairy Circles, Namib Desert

     
    Photograph by Michael Fay
    Fairy circles, or grassless patches, spot the Namib Desert in Namibia, seen here from an airplane.

    Bacteria, New Zealand

     
    Photograph by Peter Essick
    Photosynthesizing bacteria in a New Zealand thermal pool absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen.

    Sunflower Florets

     
    Photograph by Jozsef Szentpeteri
    Beads of dew cling to the florets that spiral inside a sunflower head.

    Lichens

     
    Photograph by Stephen Sharnoff
    Lichens grow on a granite gravestone in Lake Champlain, New York.

    Banksia Flower

     
    Photograph by Jonathan Blair
    The characteristic spikes of a banksia flower are common across Australia. This one was photographed on a farm in Mount Barker.

    Water Reflection, Utah

     
    Photograph by Jonathan Blair
    Reflecting off water, light paints peacock-feather patterns onto a rock wall in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah.

    Giant Clam Mantle

     
    Photograph by Frans Lanting
    Iridescent spots surround the mantle of a giant clam in Palau, Micronesia. The mantle is a fleshy outer layer that secretes the clam’s shell.

    Cactus, Manzanillo, Mexico

     
    Photograph by Raul Touzon
    Bursts of yellow punctuate a cactus in Manzanillo, Mexico.

    Curled Millipede

     
    Photograph by George Grall
    Exhibiting its main defense mechanism, a millipede curls into a tight spiral. In this fashion it protects its legs—on average between 100 and 300, not the thousand its name suggests—inside its body.

    Salmon Scales

     
    Photograph by Paul Nicklen
    The scales of an Atlantic salmon, such as these on a fish in Quebec, Canada, can help biologists determine the fish’s age.

    Diatoms

     
    Photograph by Darlyne A. Murawski
    Seen here 400 times their true size, diatoms are a type of algae found in oceans, fresh water, and soil.

    Basket Sea Star, Cuba

     
    Photograph by Brian J. Skerry
    The complexly branched arms of the basket sea star, or starfish, catch plankton for the echinoderm.

    Cenote, Mexico

     
    Photograph by Stephen Alvarez
    Sunlight radiates through the Xpacay cenote in the Mexican Yucatán. Cenotes are freshwater sinkholes usually found on the Yucatán peninsula.

    Snapping Turtle Shell

     
    Photograph by Darlyne A. Murawski
    The bony plates of a snapping turtle’s carapace protect it from predators. Snappers are freshwater turtles found in much of North America.

    Mammatus Clouds

     
    Photograph by Carsten Peter
    Mammatus clouds roil in the Nebraska sky, identifiable by their sagging, pouch-like shape. The name comes from the Latin word for “breast.”
    Source URL: https://pokbongkoh.blogspot.com/2011/05/travelling-to-europe-usa-asia-and-other.html
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