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A rest stop slong I-40 just east of Tucson, AZ. |
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One of the more "interesting" areas of the FHSU Geology Summer Field Camp Red Wash mapping project in Dinosaur National Monument. Something unusual is going on with the geology in this image. Beyond that I cannot be more specific. ;-) For more information about our field camp see: http://hays.outcrop.org/GSCI454/
My original attempt to stitch this GigaPan ended up with a "twisted" stitch. Following advice on the forum that this might be the result of too much overlap in the original images I trimmed them and ended up with a much better result. I also used the Photoshop RAW format export option so that I could go in and crop out some of the jagged edges (something I haven't done previously with images too large to open as a TIFF file in Photoshop). This upload also marks the first time I've uploaded from a format other than TIFF. I'm pretty pleased with the results so far, though the real satisfaction will only be realized once I've lined it all up properly in Google Earth as a 360 degree embed... |
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The meadow at Moraine Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, with part of the continental divide in the background. There's a nice herd of elk grazing in the meadow, along with an unidentified photographer in the distance, possibly taking a macro shot.
I stitched only 10 rows x 55 columns of a 20R x 91C image - cut out a lot of extraneous stuff, and badly overexposed sky. Even so, banding due to lighting variation is still an issue. |
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The ocean side of the Outer Banks in Kill Devil Hills.
Still trying to capture wave refraction but failing - not getting the image timing quite right. Pretty view though, yes? Cloudy day - the clouds kept blocking the sun on an off (and it rained at some point, too). |
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Right eye view of the anaglyph GigaPan found here: http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/16058/ |
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Left eye view of the anaglyph GigaPan found here: http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/16058/ |
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The Angel of the North by Antony Gormley, is located beside the A1 Great North Road as it enters Tyneside. Now celebrating its 10th birthday, it is seen by some 90,000 drivers a day! By the way - the wings are in fact straight, and this image may be best seen in Google Earth! |
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This one was intended to be focused on the flora in the foreground. See how many species you can identify.
I haven't shot many (any?) self portrait GigaPans previous to this, but since my Jeep was already going to be in the image, I figured, "Why not?" |
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Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum), one of the dominant warm-season prairie grasses, commonly occurs with Big bluestem (Andropogon gerardi) and Indian grass (Sorghastrum nutans) on fertile bottomlands. The displayed plant is approximately 4.25 meters long.
http://www.landinstitute.org |
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Examining volcanic rocks deposited in an alluvial fan. Salar Grande (a large salt deposit) is visible in the distance on the left side of the pan. |
