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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty: Expressing the force and beauty of moisture in motion > Cone of a geyser, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, 2006
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27-SEP-2006

Cone of a geyser, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, 2006

Yellowstone has over 300 geysers, two thirds of all the geysers in the world. It is a volcanic area, with superheated magma deep in the earth heating water that seeps into the earth. This forms an underground plumbing system, regularly forcing great gouts of steam through crevices in the rock that erupt as geysers. Castle Geyser has built up a large cone around its crevices, and when it erupts, steam and water gush into view with great force. Using a focal length of almost 400mm, and a relatively slow shutter speed of 1/30th of a second that turns water and steam into a cloudlike curtain, I express the essence of the geyser’s force as an eruption.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ50
1/30s f/3.7 at 79.7mm iso100 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time27-Sep-2006 18:12:20
MakePanasonic
ModelDMC-FZ50
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length79.7 mm
Exposure Time1/30 sec
Aperturef/3.7
ISO Equivalent100
Exposure Bias-0.33
White Balance
Metering Modemulti spot (3)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Programprogram (2)
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Phil Douglis27-Oct-2006 21:01
Water moves in all directions as it erupts from a geyser and then falls back again upon itself. And that is what is happening here. Thanks, Tim, for observing the ups as well as the downs.
Tim May27-Oct-2006 20:35
So often images of water are of water that is still or flowing down - what I like about this image is the fact of the water surging upward AND falling back down - unusual for water shots.
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