OK, so I officially suck at maintaining an online presence. It must be almost a year since I've posted here, but I've been getting a bit more active with my photography over the past few months so I figure it's time to make a return.
This is a sunrise from Tessellated Pavement in the south east of Tasmania.
Let me know what you think.
Amazing shot mate, that cloud and its reflection really makes the picture. I would crop a bit the left to eliminate that top tree. Hope to see more from Tasmania here, it is a place I plan to visit.
Cheers
Excellent! The foreground is amazing, as well as the sky. The only nit-pick is of course the branch in the top left corner. I think if you cloned it out, no harm would be done and the "honesty" of the photo would be mainained as well, since it's only a minor re-touch/clone.
Brad Williams wrote:
Beautiful photo Wayne. The colors and reflection are really nice!
Just curious if you know what makes the really square shapes?
Thanks Brad. This quote from Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife web site explains the geology of this better than I ever could.
"The Tessellated Pavement is an inter-tidal rock platform - a common enough coastal landform. But here an unusual set of geological circumstances have resulted in a rare landform.
The flat-lying siltstone was cracked by stresses in the Earth’s crust, possibly between 160 million years ago and 60 million years ago. The resulting cracks (joints) are seen as three main sets, one aligned to the north- northeast, a second to the east-northeast and the third to the north-northwest.
This jointing, exaggerated by processes of erosion, has created the ‘tiled’ appearance.
When seawater covers the rock platform, fragments of rock are carried away. Near the seaward edge of the platform, sand is the main cause of the erosion.
When combined with wave action the erosional process causes ‘loaf’ or ‘pan’ formations."