A patchwork of autumn colors in a conifer and aspen forest
Bear pond aerial in Wasatch-Cache National Forest of Utah in autumn
Sunrise on Mount Moran at Oxbow Bend, Grand Teton National Park - white Pelican on Snake River.
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A pastoral meadow pasture with a row of cottonwood trees in the background. Taken at Antelope Flats, between Moose and Kelly, Wyoming.
Five starfish exposed at low tide on barnacle covered rock - one is NOT like the other!   The "XLarge" and smaller photo sizes are FREE for any personal use (under a Creative Commons license). Click the "Buy" or shopping cart button (above the image) to purchase prints or downloads. PRICING: 1-megapixel Personal downloads are $4.95; 4-megapixel Personal downloads are $49.95; 1-megapixel Commercial downloads are $49.95, 4-megapixel Commercial downloads are $199.95; NOTE: Free personal use requires a photo credit to my company, ''The Stock Solution'', and link to that Web site if you use the image on a personal Web site.
Hector Falls is a near the town of Burdett, in Schuyler County, New York state, USA.  This beautiful waterfall is on Route 414, 3 miles north of Watkins Glen.
Hector Falls is a near the town of Burdett, in Schuyler County, New York state, USA.  This beautiful waterfall is on Route 414, 3 miles north of Watkins Glen.
The "Bearpaw Bay Fire" was a lightning caused fire in Grand Tetons National Park that started August 30, 2009. It was located approximately two miles northeast of North Jenny Lake Junction on the Teton Park Road, and west of Spalding Bay on Jackson Lake. This photo was taken on September 24th. By September 30, the fire had consumed over 2,800 acres. It eventually died down due to rain and snow. This was the park's largest fire of the season. Park and wildlife official believe the park's wildlife will benefit by new plants that will take the place of the dominant lodgepole pine that were burned.
Hubbard Glacier calving. (To purchase prints or downloads, click on the "Buy" or shopping cart button above the image.) This is the longest tidewater glacier in Alaska, and its open calving face is over ten kilometers (6 miles) wide. The face rises an average of about 200 meters (600 feet) above the water (Disenchantment Bay). The ice chuck that just fell and produced this splash was over 100 meters (300 feet) high, or the height of a 25-story building. The glacier routinely calves off icebergs the size of a ten-story building.
A patchwork of autumn colors in a conifer and aspen forest
A patchwork of autumn colors in a conifer and aspen forest
A patchwork of autumn colors in a conifer and aspen forest
See photo in original gallery.