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Olympic Gold Medalist Shaun White throws it extreme on his run for X-Games 13 in Aspen Colorado, January 25, 2009.
My mother did not understand when she viewed this, so I will explain, EVERYBODY IN THE PIPE IS SHAUN WHITE. |
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Worlds most detailed image of the Albert Memorial !! 4 GB Shot with the Sony A900 25mp camera. Copyright Henryreichhold. No reproduction without the artist permission. www.reichholdarts.com
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Tama Jewellry by Tamarind tree goldsmiths, thailand
A unique artistic creation of gold. since 1910 more info at tamajewelry.com |
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Hammond Park is a great place to go wether you are with a group of friends or your family for a barbi or just want to sit under a tree and relax. There are lots of wildlife to look at such as emus, kangaroos, peacocks, ducks, and various parrots as well as a miniature Bavarian Castle. |
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The open pit at the top of the Homestake Gold Mine in Lead, South Dakota beautifully exposes a series of Tertiary rhyolite dikes that were the focus of the hydrothermal system that formed this rich gold deposit. The open pit is no longer active, but it is a great opportunity for geologists to get a glimpse into the uppermost crust of the Earth.
Note that when viewing this in Google Earth, I have placed it in a position that corresponds with the shooting location as seen in the current satellite imagery. Unfortunately, the digital elevation model and the satellite imagery are not well registered at this time, so although I took this GigaPan at the edge of the open pit, it appears to be quite a distance from the edge when one compares it with the topography in Google Earth. |
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Kalgoorlie - Boulder Western Australia, looking out over the town from the Mount Charlotte Reservoir
This is my very first Gigapan |
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The Ora Banda pub (as it is know) and a couple of houses are all that is left of a once thriving gold mining town in Western Australia's Eastern Goldfields.It is now a favourite place to go for a feed and a cleansing ale just a leisurely 70 km drive from Kalgoorlie.
http://www.orabanda.com.au/ |
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Boulder town Hall is home to the last surviving example of a Phillip Goatcher curtain. |
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Exclusively for girls and women who enjoy watching jewels. |
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The Peak on the left of the photo is Hesperus Peak. It was named Hesperus not because of the of the town of Hesperus but was so named after the poem The Wreck of the Hesperus. It is the Northeast point of the Navajo four quadrants that enclose their world. It is also the highest peak in the La Plata Mountains.
The basin in between Hesperus and the peak to the right is Owen's Basin. It was named after a geologic miner by the name of Harry Owens. He worked for George Andrew Jackson for whom the ridge to the very right of the photo is named. Jackson killed one of his miner's with a double-barreled shotgun in September 1894 and out of that event I have just completed a book titled Death at Golconda. Golcanda was where Jackson had his camp-where the North and the South Forks of the West Mancos meet. This Photo was taken about a mile from where Golconda was located. During the 1880s and early 1890s, the La Platas were believed to contain fantastic riches -gold in great quantities. Those stories brought Jackson from Ouray in 1891 on the Rio Grande Southern Railroad to try his hand at uncovering some of those riches. He found enough placer and sluice gold to keep his camp going for three years but the he went for big money which seems to have been his calling card years before in Denver and around Ouray. His calling card was to put the placer and sluice gold he recovered in his mine ore samples. It was called salting your ore and when an employee confronted him about it death became a result. When I was 14 my father took me to the remains of Golconda and to the placer location which was large enough to have been named Jackson City. He was a prospector at heart and even though he must have realized he would he would never find enough gold to even pay for the trip into the mountains he persisted year after year. I have climbed Hesperus Peak a number of times and for a thrill of a lifetime you need to climb it. I have always climbed from the west except for one time up the south face. It was early spring and as I climbed up into the gorge rocks began coming down as melting took place that day. Even now it is still a scary memory . So I suggest you go up to Sharks Tooth trail and hike up the talus on the northeast side of Hesperus. It is the shortest and easiest way to climb the peak. The view from the top is stupendous and is like taking a jeep ride into the mountains above Ouray which we did this past weekend. Sorry, I kinda got carried away. Darrel Ellis |
