L. L. Wall

L. L. Wall club

Posted: 29 Sep 2021


Taken: 03 Sep 2021

12 favorites     7 comments    244 visits

1/250 f/5.6 77.0 mm ISO 100

Canon EOS Rebel T6i

TAMRON 16-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD B016

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244 visits


Quoddy Cliffs

Quoddy Cliffs
Under gray skies, these cliffs: ponderous, massive, implacable.

Cliff height toward the top right of this shot is over 25 meters.

.. (Suggest Full Screen)

Dimas Sequeira, Sarah O', cammino, Berny and 8 other people have particularly liked this photo


7 comments - The latest ones
 Léopold
Léopold club
Le mur des lamentations salées de ces vagues éternelles....
3 years ago.
 ColRam
ColRam
A great capture !
3 years ago.
 Annemarie
Annemarie club
Wonderful

great to be back to your photos:)
3 years ago.
 Weard Bültena
Weard Bültena
Moin,
das sieht imposant aus.
Klasse Aufnahme.
Weard
3 years ago.
 Malik Raoulda
Malik Raoulda club
Vu et admiré au www.ipernity.com/group/262970
"Nature et Nous"
3 years ago.
 Dimas Sequeira
Dimas Sequeira club
Impressive cliffs! Their leaning tells there was some kind of tectonic loweringunder their edge in a remote past.
3 years ago. Edited 3 years ago.
L. L. Wall club has replied to Dimas Sequeira club
Years ago, Andy Rodker schooled me on how my beloved Maine coastline wasn't as American as I thought ---> Continental Drift, in my words ... All geologic structures east of the Norumbega Fault, in New England and into Canada, were left behind eons ago when Pangea ripped apart and Europe "drifted" away. And all are remnants of a primordial continent called Avalonia that was crushed out of existence between Eurasia and North America as Pangea initially formed. Thus, eastern New England and coastal Maine share predominant European geology with Cornwall England, The Ardennes, and also the Atlas Mountains of northwest Africa.
3 years ago.

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