Erika+Manfred's photos with the keyword: Regen
Der Zaun am Geiranger Fjord
19 Apr 2024 |
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Der Zaun in North Conway
09 Nov 2018 |
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Die Conway Scenic Railroad (CSRR) ist eine Eisenbahngesellschaft in New Hampshire (Vereinigte Staaten).
Nachdem auf der Strecke Ossipee–Conway 1961 der Personen- und am 31. Oktober 1972 der Güterverkehr eingestellt worden war, wurde dieser Streckenabschnitt durch die Boston and Maine Railroad stillgelegt. Die verbleibende Verbindungsstrecke bei Conway zur Maine Central Railroad wurde 1974 von der durch Dwight Smith neu gegründeten Conway Scenic Railroad übernommen und bereits am 2. August 1974 fuhr der erste Museumszug von North Conway nach Conway und zurück. In North Conway errichtete Smith in den noch bestehenden Anlagen, d. h. einem Ringlokschuppen mit Drehscheibe und dem Personenbahnhof, ein Eisenbahnmuseum. Er erwarb zunächst eine Dampflok der Canadian National Railway, 1975 die Lok 15 der Maine Central und 1981 die Lok 1055 der Portland Terminal Company sowie zahlreiche weitere.
In den 1990er Jahren dehnte die CSRR ihren Betrieb auf die Strecke der Maine Central bis Fabyan aus, nachdem auch auf dieser der reguläre Güterverkehr eingestellt worden war. Die Museumszüge durchqueren dabei die White Mountains über den bekannten Crawford Notch und befahren auch den Frankenstein Trestle, das markanteste Brückenbauwerk der Strecke. Einige Züge fahren nur bis Bartlett.
PIP: Mamu Rainforest, Queensland
22 Nov 2015 |
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Tag 18 - 7.9.2013 siehe auch: mamutropicalskywalk.com.au
Rainforest: The geology and terrain of the landscape have created conditions ideally suited to the development of rainforest. Basalt rocks weathered to produce fertile, deep red-brown soils; the surrounding high mountains intercept moist winds from the ocean and more than 4 m of rain falls each year. At this relatively low altitude (330 m) the climate remains warm all year round.
Not all rainforests are the same. The most complex rainforests have developed in areas with the highest rainfall, the richest, most fertile soils and a warm climate. The rainforest in the Palmerston area is one of the most complex, diverse and species-rich in Australia. Known as complex mesophyll vine forest, it has the largest variety of plants, the tallest trees bearing the largest leaves, with the most vines, ferns and epiphytes. The Palmerston rainforest is particularly important as it represents the largest remaining continuous stand of this forest type growing on basalt soils.
The canopy in the Mamu rainforest is about 25 m high with the tallest trees emerging above the canopy to a height of about 30 m. Trees that form the closed canopy are long-lived, relatively slow-growing species known as climax species. The canopy is dominated by Johnstone River hardwoods Backhousia bancrofti, left intact after selective logging early last century. Many other species are also present including satin ashes, silky oaks, tamarinds, figs, mahoganies, walnuts, laurels and beeches.
After a disturbance creates a gap in the canopy, fast-growing short-lived tree species, known as pioneers, appear in the rainforest understorey. Pioneers such as bleeding hearts (Homalanthus novoguineensis), chinky pines Polyscias murrayi and stinging trees Dendrocnide moroides are readily observed competing for space and light around the elevated walkway and tower.
Many rainforest trees produce fruits—some produce year-round while other species produce fruits only in particular months. This means that at any time of the year a wide variety of fallen fruits, in many colours and shapes, can be found scattered along the tracks and walkways.
Several trees along the walking tracks produce their flowers and fruits on their trunks (known as cauliflory). Bumpy satinash Syzygium cormiflorum produce large fluffy white flowers followed by white apple-like fruits from their bumpy trunks. Many Davidson's plums Davidsonia pruriens grow along the walking tracks; some of these are also trunk-fruiting, producing large dark-purple plums from their trunks as well as their branches.
Strangler figs Ficus spp. can be seen from the elevated walkway. Fig trees germinate in the branches of other trees, sending down roots to the ground while growing up towards the light, overshadowing their hosts. A fig's roots grow into a living lattice around their host tree, which eventually dies as a result of being out-competed for life-sustaining resources. Quelle: Wikipedia
Der Zaun im Mamu Tropical Skywalk
Flinders Street, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
19 Oct 2014 |
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2. Melbourne
Der Bahnhof Flinders Street ist der zentrale Nahverkehrsknotenpunkt der Hauptstadt Melbourne des australischen Bundesstaats Victoria. Das Empfangsgebäude liegt im Winkel von Flinders Street und Swanston Street, die Rückseite der Bahnanlagen bildet der Yarra River. Das Empfangsgebäude befindet sich in Straßenhöhe und eine Ebene höher als die Bahnanlagen, die so als Durchgangsbahnhof gestaltet werden konnten.
Flinders Street railway station is a railway station on the corner of Flinders and Swanston Streets in Melbourne, Australia. It serves the entire metropolitan rail network. Backing onto the city reach of the Yarra River in the heart of the city, the complex covers two whole city blocks and extends from Swanston Street to Queen Street. It was the first railway station in an Australian city and the world's busiest passenger station in the late 1920s.
(Quelle: Wikipedia)
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