White Edge 3
Alternative White Edge 4
White Edge grasses 1
White Edge grasses 2
Curbar Edge
Froggatt Edge cross bedding
Froggatt Edge tors 1
Froggatt Edge tors 2
Afternoon larches 1
Afternoon larches 2
It was a grey day at Beacon Tarn, Cumbria
Sunlit fields of Leam
Hay Wood birches
Hay Wood evening sentinels
Hay Wood quarries
Hay Wood quarry cross bedding
Eastern Edges in the spotlight
Sun on Sir William
Cocking Tor, Ashover
Cocking Tor panorama 2
Amber skyscape
Ashover from the north east escarpment
Stone fence
White Edge 2
Guidepost 2
Guidepost 1
Erosion surface
White Edge 1
Columnar jointed sill at Calton Hill quarry, Derby…
Watchers on Froggatt
For Louise and Jim
Cadeby Tunnel interior
Snowy Q-pit
That Old Chestnut?
Chestnuts on the crest
Cadeby Tunnel east portal
Conisbrough and Cadeby Crags viewed from North Cli…
Cadeby Colliery upcast shaft (site of).
The Don valley from the Conisbrough Viaduct
Fields near Garreg Fawr, Lleyn Peninsula, Gwynedd.
Winter resting place
A fine beech
Tree bridges
Mossy wall
Mossy Hallucigenia?
1/160 • f/9.0 • 20.0 mm • ISO 100 •
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Alternative White Edge 2


This is an experimental treatment of the previous photo.
The vertical scale has been exaggerated three-fold and then Photoshop 'watercolour' filter applied. Normally I don't bother much with these filters (too much of a gimmick) but in this case I think it works well and might even be considered artistic?? The resulting image, apart from being interesting in its own right, clearly enhances the geological framework of this area. The incised V-shaped notch of the Derwent Valley cut down through a much earlier (Tertiary?) erosion platform is well seen. In the far distance on the middle-left skyline is the Kinderscout plateau; Win Hill is in the centre distance and Bamford Edge at about 0.7, 0.6.
The brown smoke haze is a result of controlled burning of the heather moorland in the Strines area to the west of Sheffield.
The vertical scale has been exaggerated three-fold and then Photoshop 'watercolour' filter applied. Normally I don't bother much with these filters (too much of a gimmick) but in this case I think it works well and might even be considered artistic?? The resulting image, apart from being interesting in its own right, clearly enhances the geological framework of this area. The incised V-shaped notch of the Derwent Valley cut down through a much earlier (Tertiary?) erosion platform is well seen. In the far distance on the middle-left skyline is the Kinderscout plateau; Win Hill is in the centre distance and Bamford Edge at about 0.7, 0.6.
The brown smoke haze is a result of controlled burning of the heather moorland in the Strines area to the west of Sheffield.
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