Wednesday 14 March 2012

Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge

I've been always fascinated by giant buildings. And perhaps the most interesting buildings are bridges. But which is the highest bridge, or the longest bridge? Which bridge has the most interesting structure?

The Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge is the longest bridge in the world. According to Wikipedia it is about 165 kilometers and was open in 2011. Of the top ten, seven are located in China. And I say this is awesome even if China is the third country in the world and also the the largest of all asian countries.
Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge



Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge

Dubai is one of the seven

Dubai is one of the seven emirates of United Arab Emirates (UAE) and also the most populous state component. It is considered both a city and an emirate.

I've never been to Dubai. All these images are taken from the Internet. But for me the architecture of this city seems to be from another planet.
Astonishing!

The architecture of this city is well known. Some of the tallest skyscrapers in the world are in Dubai. Here are some of them and more.

Night in Dubai

Dubai International Airport

Dubai Palm Islands

23 Marina Dubai

building in Dubai

Burj Khalifa Dubai

dubai top pics


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Tuesday 13 March 2012

Haboob, Simum, Black Blizzards

When the air itself turns against you
They are known by many names: Haboob, Simum, Black Blizzards. A solid wall of dust almost a mile high, moving whole sand dunes and bringing Biblical darkness to the huge areas of the world. Scorching hot winds (up to 40 degrees Celsius) blowing the sand around with hurricane speeds… What seems extreme to us is actually a common occurrence in Africa and the Middle East. The similar sand-saturated hurricane-speed storms over Mediterranian are called Sirocco, Yugo and Ghibli. The dust (or desert sand) particles become airborne and held in suspension, creating a moving front. The convection of cold air over the heated ground maintains the storm and keeps the dust rolling.
See one such storm coming into the Israeli Negev desert from Sinai (advancing with the speed of appr. 40 mph). According to the photographer Eviathar ben Zedeff , the sand wall is over 4,000 ft high:
1190564079 b33dd4d128 Sand Storms!
1191430422 a5297e6a35 Sand Storms!
1191425822 c003439026 Sand Storms!
1257073198 83b0910c62 o Sand Storms!
(images credit: TheAugeanStables)
Sand Storm in Khartoum, Sudan:
1256415720 26dc7603c4 Sand Storms!
1328840826 34a60e2278 Sand Storms!
Here is an alarming fact: sand storms now happen ten times more frequently than fifty years ago. For example, Mauritania had only two storms per year in the early Sixties, now it’s more like EIGHTY a year. Sahara’s sand is also being sent into the Atlantic at an accelerated pace (five times growth in one year, since 2006!) – however, this could be a good thing, according to Wikipedia, as it will cool off the ocean enough to slightly ease the ongoing 2007 hurricane season.
The Dust Bowl Ecological Disaster
North America did not escape the arrival of these monsters, either. The “Black Dusters” of the 30s repeatedly swept the Great Plains (nicknamed the Dust Bowl), with dust trail stretching all the way from Texas to Chicago. This agricultural disaster was caused by a combination of factors, most notably by the excessive farming, done without a crop rotation, coupled with severe drought. Here is a historic photograph of a dust storm in Texas, taken in 1935:
1256416024 d631c7dfc0 Sand Storms!
The Dust Bowl disaster caused a major exodus of the Great Plains population, a displacement of up to 2.5 million people. (15% of Oklahoma moved to California, for example)
This is how they described the inside of a “Black Blizzard”: “Nothing was visible without electric light; you could not see five feet in front of you at certain points…. (the storms) came without warning and left everything in their paths with a clinging mantle of black silt.”
The following video shows the similar wall of sand, this time in Iraq, turning day into the darkest night:
(It seems to be the same storm that the pictures showed in our previous post “Atmosphere Goes Nuts”)

Space imagery helps to better understand the scale of such events: For example, this is a dust storm over Burkina Faso, covering almost the whole country -
1256461452 90a263e6d8 Sand Storms!
(image credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center)
Sirocco and other near-hurricane speed winds bring the dust and sand over the ocean… A giant plume of sand is swept off the African coast and Sahara desert, reaching hundreds of miles into the Atlantic:
1256416478 325fa0d6ea Sand Storms!
(image credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center)
Dust covers Astana, the new capital of Kazakhstan:
487051345 3783670631 Sand Storms!
487022734 be0177f76a Sand Storms!
487051619 55ecbe6b26 Sand Storms!
(images credit: ochevidec.net)
The Grime and the Beauty
The awesome scale and a certain atmospheric effects of the sand storms open new possibilities for photographers (just keep your camera tightly packed when a sandstorm hits).
The dust storm in Arizona creeps from the left corner in this spectacular picture. The brilliant sunset paints the skies, all the more colorful because of the fine dust particles suspended in atmosphere. This photo reminds me of the work of Dale Terbush, a talented “painter of light” from Arizona.
1190547777 f60e522bec Sand Storms!
(image credit: Jared Kruger)
a detail:
1191417770 d7217d75f3 Sand Storms!
Phoenix, Arizona – the dust storm coming in:
1287112937 4c759386bd Sand Storms!
Sent in by Chris from higherground4x4.com
The lamps can make all the difference in the pitch-dark of a storm.
“The lamplighters brave the dust storm in Nevada desert” -
1191416948 4f9b82f8ba Sand Storms!
(image credit: Bradford Dallas)
Mystery Picture:
The next picture may look like an incoming dust storm, but it is just a cloud front. Notice the “surfer”, er… glider riding this “Cloud Front Wave”:
(we would like to find out the location of this photo, for its seems to be a relatively common occurrence there)
763896745 5cacffba23 Sand Storms!
This cloud phenomena is The Morning Glory” cloud bank, sweeping over the remote Australian outback of northern Queensland.
1308471491 3f6389c8e1 Sand Storms!

Vegetable




follow The Lines pics

Follow The Lines
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Before The Thunderstorm
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Trinidad Last Light
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Infinity Pool
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Before The Thunderstorm
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Fork In The Road – Walnut Creek, California
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Summer greens in the Duffey lake
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The Matterhorn (German), Cervino (Italian) or Cervin (French), is a mountain in the Pennine Alps. With its 4,478 metres (14,692 ft) high summit, lying on the border between Switzerland and Italy, it is one of the highest peaks in the Alps and its 1,200 metres (3,937 ft) north face is one of the Great north faces of the Alps.
The individual pieces of the chocolate bar Toblerone are claimed by its maker Kraft to be formed in the likeness of the Matterhorn.
Zermatt (French: Praborgne) is a municipality in the district of Visp in the German-speaking section of the canton of Valais in Switzerland.
It is located at the northern base of the Matterhorn in the Pennine Alps, about 10 km from the border with Italy.
Zermatt has a permanent population of around 5,500 people, although the actual population varies considerably through the seasons as tourists come and go. The village is situated at the end of Mattertal, a north-facing valley, at an altitude of 1,620m (5,315ft). The valley is a dead end; although the border with Italy is close, it cannot be crossed by road, as it traverses a glacier at an altitude of over 3,000m. Zermatt is the starting point of the Patrouille des Glaciers and the Haute Route.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matterhorn
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zermatt
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Once in a Blue Moon
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