- Sort:
- Most Popular | Most Recent
-
Sweeping 4 Gigabyte panoramic image of Australia's National Capital Canberra viewed from Mount Ainslie. Mount Ainslie is 842m above sea level and this pano overlook Canberra International Airport (IATA: CBR, ICAO: YSCB), Queanbeyan, New South Wales. It also pans across Department of Defence buildings at Campbell ...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 25
- Total Views
- 4094
- Explore Score
- 7
-
-
CASA DE LAS CIENCIAS DESDE LA ORILLA DEL RIO EBRO.
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 0
- Total Views
- 458
- Explore Score
- 1
-
Another re-do after processing. This was taken from exactly the same position as Yosemite II, but to capture the two waterfalls. Epic 100, E510, 70-300 Olympus lens, 300mm (600mm 35mm equivalent), 1/125th at f11, ISO 100
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 3
- Total Views
- 739
- Explore Score
- 1
-
-
The property and yellow buildings of the Bread Loaf Campus were bequeathed to Middlebury College by Joseph Battell in 1915 (the white buildings are more recent). Since 1920, this campus has been home to the Bread Loaf School of English, which offers summer graduate courses and an MA degree. In 1926, the Bread Loaf Wr...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 9
- Total Views
- 2485
- Explore Score
- 13
-
-
The first sawmill was built on these falls in 1774, and power from Otter Creek has been a cohesive force in Middlebury Village ever since. On the other side of the row of buildings above the falls is a 19th century Main Street which today includes the mix of progressive, utilitarian, and quaint businesses you would ex...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 6
- Total Views
- 1678
- Explore Score
- 1
-
-
In 1861, Joseph Battell remodeled a farmhouse into an inn (in distance left of center) which became a successful summer getaway and was incrementally enlarged during his lifetime. Today the inn and surrounding buildings are part of Middlebury College’s Bread Loaf Campus where the Bread Loaf School of English and Bre...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 8
- Total Views
- 3117
- Explore Score
- 97
-
-
The Crown Point Bridge was abruptly closed on October 16, 2009 after underwater inspection revealed dramatic deterioration of two support piers. Built in 1929 between Chimney Point, Vermont (right) and Crown Point, New York (left), it is one of only two bridges that cross Lake Champlain. The bridge is not expected to...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 2
- Snapshots
- 7
- Total Views
- 4155
- Explore Score
- 47
-
-
White pine, red oak, and paper birch are common in this view today because two centuries of timber removal has reduced the success of the original late successional dominants. According to the "witness trees" noted in the original lot surveys in Salisbury, the most common trees in the late 18th century were ...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 2
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 6
- Total Views
- 2012
- Explore Score
- 40
-
-
From the top of McCardell Bicentennial Hall, the tallest building on campus, looking east to the Green Mountains of Vermont. It is a quiet Friday afternoon, but with much anticipation for the weekend's upcoming Quidditch World Cup. The quidditch pitches can be seen in the largest field in the scene. Some technical n...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 0
- Comments
- 2
- Snapshots
- 9
- Total Views
- 2643
- Explore Score
- 49
-
-
As the Laurentide glacier retreated from the Champlain Valley 13,600 years ago, the ice damned the valley and Glacial Lake Vermont rose to about 170 m (550 feet) above sea level, which is the elevation of the camera. This sand and gravel was carried by an ice-marginal river that built kame terraces until it reached the...
-
-
Stats
- Favorites
- 2
- Comments
- 2
- Snapshots
- 7
- Total Views
- 4955
- Explore Score
- 107
-

