RHH's photos with the keyword: paint pots
West Thumb Geyser Basin
07 Dec 2019 |
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This is part of the West Thumb Geyser Basin, the photo taken from the upper end of the boardwalk and looking across the Thumb Paint Pots to Yellowstone Lake. The geyser basin is on the shore of the lake just north of the junction with the south entrance road.
Paint Pots
22 Jun 2018 |
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We stopped along the Kootenay River in Kootenay National Park to hike the short trail to the Paint Pots, an area of ochre beds described in the park brochure as "an area of unusual physical and chemical activity" that has "a history of use by both Aboriginal groups and Europeans." We hiked up to several ponds, the springs where the ochre deposits accumulate and from which they flow down into the valley covering the area with red ochre.
Paint Pots
22 Jun 2018 |
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We stopped along the Kootenay River in Kootenay National Park to hike the short trail to the Paint Pots, an area of ochre beds described in the park brochure as "an area of unusual physical and chemical activity" that has "a history of use by both Aboriginal groups and Europeans." We hiked up to several ponds, the springs where the ochre deposits accumulate and from which they flow down into the valley covering the area with red ochre.
Paint Pots
22 Jun 2018 |
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We stopped along the Kootenay River in Kootenay National Park to hike the short trail to the Paint Pots, an area of ochre beds described in the park brochure as "an area of unusual physical and chemical activity" that has "a history of use by both Aboriginal groups and Europeans." We hiked up to several ponds, the springs where the ochre deposits accumulate and from which they flow down into the valley covering the area with red ochre. This is one of the ponds, the greenish color due to fresh water flowing into the pond.
Paint Pots
05 Jul 2018 |
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We stopped along the Kootenay River in Kootenay National Park to hike the short trail to the Paint Pots, an area of ochre beds described in the park brochure as "an area of unusual physical and chemical activity" that has "a history of use by both Aboriginal groups and Europeans." We hiked up to several ponds, the springs where the ochre deposits accumulate and from which they flow down into the valley covering the area with red ochre (see insets).
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