电脑只显示图标没有字:非常美丽的世界名胜风光摄影作品欣赏

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 非常美丽的世界名胜风光摄影作品欣赏

  风光摄影,是以展现自然风光之美为主要创作题材的原创作品,从摄影术诞生那天起,风光摄影就独占鳌头。风光摄影是广受人们喜爱的题材,它给人带来美的享受最全面,从作者发现美开始到拍摄,直到与读者见面欣赏的全过程,都会给人以感官和心灵的愉悦,一起欣赏。

  Terraced Rice Field, China

  


  Credits: Thierry Bornier

  Namsto Lake, Tibet

  


  Credits: Jeremy Nielsen

  In Tibetan, Namsto means “Heavenly Lake,” and the serene beauty should not be missed by anyone who travels to Tibet. Its purity and solemnity are symbols of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and it is considered one of the three holy lakes in Tibet.

  Giant’s Causeway, Ireland

  


  Credits: Yourane Ung

  People visiting Northern Ireland necessarily go to the Giant’s Causeway. But it is more than interesting to push your curiosity by taking the cliff path at the west of the car park. Beautifully typical Irish landscapes are expecting you!

  Train Trip, Sweden

  


  Credits: Vytautas Serys

  This picture was taken in northern Sweden during a train trip to Abisko. My idea was to capture the warm train going through chilly Lapland’s landscape.

  Serengeti, Tanzania

  


  Credits: Amnon Eichelberg

  Hang Son Doong Cave, Vietnam

  


  Credits: Carsten Peter

  A half-mile block of 40-story buildings could fit inside this lit stretch of Hang Son Doong, which may be the world’s biggest subterranean passage.

  Lagoon, Iceland

  


  Credits: Mark Reimer

  I travelled around Iceland for two weeks with my girlfriend this past August. Jokulsarlon was my most highly anticipated place to photograph. It rained heavily the entire morning, but when we pulled our car up to the lagoon full of icebergs floating out to sea, the rain magically stopped right when I opened the door. I was blessed with the perfect photographic conditions: dead calm and gently overcast. This was my favourite shot of the day. (Mark Reimer)

  Storm Clouds, Utah

  


  Credits: Steven Besserman

  Badwater Basin, Death Valley

  


  Credits: Dan Desroches

  This was taken in Death Valley at a location named Badwater, a dry sea of salt below sea level.

  Point Reyes, California

  


  Credits: Anton Barmettler

  Point Reyes, California, near the top of the cliff, under fog. The windswept trees forming a kind of tunnel, the sun piercing through the upper layer of the fog and the limited visibility provide for a very special effect. It appears quite unreal. Kind of spooky, especially considering that there were very few people around.

  Sand Dunes, Australia

  


  Credits: Nicki Chen

  The east of Lancelin town is bordered by endless snow-white sand dunes, which are heaven for sand boarders. The peaks of these sand dunes give a spectacular panoramic lookout over the township, surrounding sand hills, farmlands, coastline, islands and ocean.

  Santorini, Greece

  


  Credits: C.T. Feng

  Storm Clouds, Nushagak Bay

  


  Credits: Michael Melford

  Storm clouds gather over Nushagak Bay, where a tempest is raging over the proposed Pebble mine. Fishermen say it could ruin salmon runs. Mine owners promise jobs and an infusion of money.

  Brown Bear

  


  Credits: Zahoor Salmi

  The awe-inspiring brown bear lives in the forests and mountains of northern North America, Europe, and Asia. It is the most widely distributed bear in the world.

  Turtles

  


  Credits: Jose Manzanilla

  Sand Dune, Fraser Island

  


  Credits: Peter Essick

  Pioneering plants get a toehold above the tide line on Australia’s Fraser Island.

  West Texas Cowboy

  


  Credits: William Albert Allard

  Lake McKenzie

  


  Credits: Peter Essick

  One of dozens of lakes on the island, Lake McKenzie shimmers in the starlight. During the day the lake’s sugar white beach and windowpane water attract hundreds of visitors. Like the painters and poets who celebrated Fraser’s otherworldly allure, they return home with stories and images of soul-stirring beauty.

  Wind River Roadless Area, Wyoming

  


  Credits: Jack Dykinga

  No signs point the way here, only the arthritic limbs of a pine gesturing to an endless sky. It is the wildest of the wild, a glacier-scoured terrain unmarred by roads, tugged at by wind, on the shoulder of the Continental Divide. This preserve of the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho dates back to 1937, decades before the United States passed the Wilderness Act, in 1964.

  Autumn Leaves, Japan

  


  Credits: Michael Yamashita

  Lions Gate Bridge, Vancouver

  


  Credits: Mathieu Dupuis

  Wood Church, Greenland

  


  Credits: Peter Essick

  Erik the Red killed a man in Iceland over a trifle and worshipped Norse gods until the end, but at Qassiarsuk (above), site of his Greenland farm, there is a replica of the tiny wood church he built for his wife, who converted to Christianity. A wall kept out the livestock.

  Beach Grass, Scotland

  


  Credits: Jim Richardson

  Marram beach grass blowing on the coast of the Isle of Lewis.

  Bamboo Forest, Japan

  


  Credits: Kyle Merriman

  A shot taken from the path while entering the incredible bamboo forest outside of Kyoto, Japan.

  Hengill Mountain, Iceland

  


  Credits: Snorri Gunnarsson

  Hengill mountain is close to Reykjavik and is famous for its geothermal areas and vivid colours.

  Autumn Landscape

  


  Credits: Olegas Kurasovas

  Tundra Landscape, Russia

  


  Credits: Michael Melford

  Rolling off Kronotsky Volcano, an autumn storm billows toward the tundra. This vast tweed of feathery grasses, red bearberries, and green crowberries attracts grazing reindeer, berry-picking bears, and curlews that swoop in by the thousands to strip the bushes of their fruit.

  Big Cypress Reservation, Florida

  


  Credits: Jack Dykinga

  Los Angeles Wildfires

  


  Credits: Steven Riley

  Palouse, Washington

  


  Credits: Anil Sud

  Sunrise lights up the verdant hills of Palouse, Washington, beneath the watchful gaze of a lone early bird.

  Lake of the Moon, India

  


  Credits: Dhurjati Chatterjee

  The azure waters of Chandra Tal—Lake of the Moon—in Himachal Pradesh, India, reflect the vivid hues of a bright Himalayan day.

  Ponies, Mongolia

  


  Credits: Dann Tarmy

  Cornfield, S?o Paulo, Brazil

  


  Credits: Christiano Pessoa

  An old and great example of a Jequitiba tree in a cornfield in Pirassununga city, interior S?o Paulo state.

  Dente del Gigante, Italy

  


  Credits: Davide Necchi

  This is a picture of the “dente del Gigante” a famous peak in the Monte Bianco group; this is taken from Colle del Gigante at 3,400 meters [11,155 feet]. This photo is a single shot with only a correction of curve and contrast. The light came from a half moon at 4 a.m.

  Terraced Rice Field, China

  


  Credits: Thierry Bornier

  Manarola, Italy

  


  Credits: Paul Hogie

  Cliffs of Moher, Ireland

  


  Credits: Jim Richardson

  The craggy Cliffs of Moher wrap around the western coast of County Clare, providing a stunning view of the Atlantic Ocean. The rocky cliffs reach 702 feet (214) meters at their highest point and stretch nearly five miles (eight kilometers) across.

  Rideout Bay, Ontario

  


  Credits: Lee Anne Carver

  This is an image from Rideout Bay in Kenora, Ontario, situated on the Lake of the Woods. The February sun veiled the shoreline as it teased the fog from the open water. There is no reason to believe this point looked any different 500 years ago, and I welcome its haunting invitation to return to innocence.

  Church of the Good Shepherd

  


  Credits: Thomas Young

  An old stone church sits among the placid grasses of New Zealand’s South Island, a land known for its wide expanses of untouched land and vast farming outlets.

  Igua?u Falls

  


  Credits: Frans Lanting

  A wealth of water—up to 1.6 million gallons (6.1 million liters) a second—pours over Igua?u Falls on the border of Brazil and Argentina.

  Meadows Park, Scotland

  


  Credits: Mike Bascombe

  Meadows Park in Edinburgh has its avenues lined with trees. This early morning shot was taken in especially thick fog as people walk through on their way to work.

  San Luis Valley, Colorado

  


  Credits: Jack Dykinga

  Southwestern farmers have long shared community-operated waterways, or acequias, like the 150-year-old People’s Ditch in Colorado’s San Luis Valley.

  Basalt Pinnacles, Scotland

  


  Credits: Jim Richardson

  On Skye’s Trotternish Peninsula, basalt pinnacles loom over the Sound of Raasay. Rising from the debris of an ancient landslide, they bear witness to the geologic upheavals that shaped these lands.

  Sheep, Scotland

  


  Credits: Jim Richardson

  Tangles of seaweed lure a flock of sheep from Iona’s green slopes down to the beach for a mineral-rich graze. In Gaelic this stretch of coast is called Camas Cùil an t-Sàimh, the “bay at the back of the ocean.”

  Puffin, Shiant Islands

  


  Credits: Jim Richardson

  Dapper black-and-white razorbills (at right) and bright-beaked puffins (at left and in air, at center) find a haven on the Shiant Islands, just a few miles southeast of Lewis, Scotland. Nearly 8,000 razorbills and more than 200,000 puffins are estimated to use these islands as their breeding grounds each year.

  Fishing, Celebes Sea

  


  Credits: Liang Huan Chuan

  In Semporna, many Filipinos and Malayu who traditionally fish for a living have erected hundreds of these homes in the Celebes Sea.

  Licancabur Volcano

  


  Credits: Hugo Machado

  Licancabur Volcano is located on the border between Chile and Bolivia.

  Tecopa Hot Springs

  


  Credits: Christine Tuohy

  This was shot in Tecopa Hot Springs south of Death Valley, CA. Middle of nowhere.

  Keoladeo National Park, India

  


  Credits: James P. Blair

  Openbill storks, a bird indigenous to the region, nest in the trees by the marshes of the Keoladeo National Park in the Rajasthan state of India.

  Spitfire Lake Reflection

  


  Credits: Will Forbes

  Santa Monica Shore

  


  Credits: Steve Sieren

  The low tide uncovered this vibrant sea moss in the rocky shores just north of Los Angeles in the Santa Monica Mountains.