Tumbled Rocks
by Stephanie Grant
Title
Tumbled Rocks
Artist
Stephanie Grant
Medium
Photograph - Digital / Photography
Description
A digital abstract from a photograph of different colored gravels amongst the rocky outcrops in Death Valley.
Death Valley is well known for extremes: it is North America's driest and hottest spot (with fewer than two inches/five centimeters of rainfall annually and a record high of 134�F), and has the lowest elevation on the continent�282 feet below sea level.
The valley is a graben, a geological term for a sunken fragment of the earth�s crust .The national park covers an area of about 3.4 million acres and offers many different landscapes, eroded rocks, colorful mudstone hills and canyons, luminous sand dunes, lush oases, and a 200-square-mile salt pan surrounded by mountains. Spring rains can trigger wildflower blooms turning barren wastes to fields of color.
Artifacts and rock art show that the Valley has seen human occupation, for at least parts of the year, for over 9,000 years.
In 1849 emigrants bound for California's gold fields strayed into the 120-mile long basin, enduring a two-month ordeal of "hunger and thirst and an awful silence." One of the last to leave called it Death Valley and the name stuck.
Borax mines were in operation from 1883 to 1889, using the now famous 20 mule wagon teams to haul the mineral. Workers spread the word about the wonders of Death Valley.
As well as over a thousand varieties of plants, Death Valley is home to 51 native species of mammals, 38 reptiles as well as more than 300 species of visiting birds.
Uploaded
March 14th, 2016
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Viewed 733 Times - Last Visitor from Cambridge, MA on 04/23/2024 at 8:03 PM
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Comments (59)
Stephanie Grant
Thanks so much Sergio for the feature in Five Star Artists- sorry for such a late response!
Stephanie Grant
Thank you so much Bob and Nadine for the feature in Art Impressionism to Realism, I really appreciate it!
Stephanie Grant
Thank you so much John for the feature in Images That Excite You, I really appreciate it.
Stephanie Grant
Thank you so much Kim for the feature in Abstracts in photography. I really appreciate it.