Thanks for downloading and commenting on my photos. I am curious about where my pics are used so drop me a line or forward me a link to your project/ website barren cracks soil Barren Land
The man-made mountains are a notorious sight in Johannesburg. These left over materials from the Gold Mining Industry are a mixture of gold, cyanide and dirt Mine dumps dunes Mine Dumps 1
My brother-in-law calls this a "Sooner Cave" it was carved out of the soft sandstone in a hillside by early Oklahoma settlers cave man made Cave
These are my footsteps actually. Took the pic at a local industrial lake desert footsteps erosion Footsteps
Thank you for visiting my gallery on SXC! | | Follow me on Twitter: @BenEarwicker | | Please notify me if you would like to use any of my photos for any public projects, websites, or design work. | | I appreciate credit when possible, but some media productions make credit impossible, and I understand that. Please use your discretion regarding whether or not credit is possible or practical. | | For public use of my photos, please use any of the following for proper credit: | | Ben Earwicker | Garrison Photography, Boise, ID texture textures hill Sculpted Rock 1
The "Cheltenham Badlands" exhibit the reddish hue of the Queenston Shale that forms them; the iron oxide in the shale produces this colour. The narrow greenish bands that can be seen throughout the shale are due to the change of red iron oxide to green iron oxide brought on by the circulating groundwater. The relatively soft shale is essentially clay and is easily eroded by water. This site was acquired by the Ontario Heritage Foundation in 2000 and is under the care of the Bruce Trail Association badlands erosion seabed Cheltenham Badlands 1
Territory sand quarry, which produces raw materials for the production of container glass, near the town of Berehove in Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine. March 2007 berehove ivano-frankivsk region ukraine Territory sand quarry
Dragline excavator in a clay quarry near the town of Polohy in the Zaporizhya region of Ukraine. September 2005 dragline excavator clay quarry Dragline excavator in a clay quarry near the town of Polohy in the Zaporizhya region of Ukraine. Sep
The "Cheltenham Badlands" exhibit the reddish hue of the Queenston Shale that forms them; the iron oxide in the shale produces this colour. The narrow greenish bands that can be seen throughout the shale are due to the change of red iron oxide to green iron oxide brought on by the circulating groundwater. The relatively soft shale is essentially clay and is easily eroded by water. This site was acquired by the Ontario Heritage Foundation in 2000 and is under the care of the Bruce Trail Association badlands erosion seabed Cheltenham Badlands 2