A compendium of interesting places, hidden wonders, Beautiful Places, strange travel destination, tourist attractions.
Saturday 19 April 2014
Friday 18 April 2014
The Sawtooth Valley United States
The Sawtooth Valley is a scenic valley
in the western United States, in Blaine and Custer counties in central Idaho
between the Sawtooth National Recreation Area (SNRA) on its west and the White
Cloud Mountains on its east, with the Smoky and Boulder Mountains on the south.
About 50 kilometers long, it is beautifully surrounded by the Sawtooth
Mountains to the west, White Cloud Mountains to the east, Salmon River
Mountains to the north, and Boulder and Smoky mountains to the south. It is the
largest high mountain valley in Idaho and it has been inhabited by one or more
wolf packs ever since 1998. The beautiful valley contains the headwaters of the
Salmon River, the city of Stanley, and community of Sawtooth City. It is an
awesome place that begs you to pull over, lock the car, and put some ground
under your feet or a trout stream around your knees. At its picturesque heart
stands the splintering crest of the Sawtooth Range, a chaos of crags, razorback
ridges, and small alpine lakes and tremendous view of its jagged northern edge
rising over a wetland meadow, stop at the Park Creek Overlook.
The SNRA offers many attractions
i.e. biking, camping, hiking, horseback riding, hunting, fishing, and
remarkable wildflower viewing. The best time to see the wildflower is in the
late spring when the snow melts and the ground gets warms. There’re three sensitive
plant species that are endemic to the Stanley Basin: Stanley Whitlow Grass,
Guardian Buckwheat and Stanley Thalaspi. Furthermore; the endemic species, the
SNRA is also home to an insectivorous species, Spoon-leaved Sundew.
Therefore; in order to assure the
preservation and protection of the natural, historic, scenic, pastoral, fish
& wildlife values and to provide for the enhancement of the recreational
values associated there with the SNRA includes four mountain ranges: the
Sawtooths, the Boulders, the White Clouds, and the Smokies. This region has
more than 1,000 high mountain lakes and is the headwaters of 4 of Idaho’s major
rivers: the Salmon, the South Fork of the Payette, the Boise, and the Big Wood.
The complete length of the valley is
traversed by State Highway 75, which is also recognized as the Sawtooth Scenic
Byway. Highway 75 enters the valley from the south at Galena Summit and exits
to the north near Stanley. Moreover; highway 75 was formerly United States 93,
which is now routed through Arco. Sawtooth Valley encompasses several large
lakes in the SNRA, including Redfish, Stanley lakes, Alturas, and Pettit. The
valley floor elevations range from just under 6,300 feet near Stanley to over
7,500 feet below Galena Summit. Elevations along the valley's borders reach
11,815 feet at Castle Peak in the White Cloud Mountains to the east and 10,715
feet at Thompson Peak in the Sawtooth Mountains to the west. Travelers
are treated to a scenic drive en route to the SNRA from any starting point. There
are a variety of ways to reach the SNRA. Consulting a map source would be the
best way to determine the easiest route.
Sivash Salt Lagoons in the Crimean Peninsula
There’s a place lies in between Black
sea and Sea of Azov is called “Crimean Peninsula” actually located just south
of the Ukrainian mainland, and is almost entirely surrounded by water. It is
linked with the Ukrainian mainland by the Isthmus of Perekop a strip of land
about five to seven kilometers wide, and is separated from the Russian region
of Kuban on the east by the Strait of Kerch. On the other side of northeast is
located the Arabat Spit, a thin strip of land that splits a system of shallow
salt-water lagoons named Sivash, from the Sea of Azov.
These lagoons almost cut the Crimean
Peninsula off from the mainland, and works as a natural border between the
Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the Kherson Oblast that passes through
Sivash. To the north side, the Isthmus of Perekop splits Sivash from the Black
Sea and at the same time, links the Crimean Peninsula to the mainland. The
Sivash lagoons are very shallow with a mean depth of about 50 cm to 1 meter,
while the deepest place is mere about 3 meters. Although bottom is covered with
silt about to 5 meters thick. However; the lagoons are so shallow, so water
entering Sivash from the algae-ridden Sea of Azov and evaporates rapidly in
summer, therefore; producing a terrible stench which has received the lagoon
name is "Rotten Sea".
It is estimated that more than 200
million tonnes of salt is exist in Sivash. In consequence the salt harvesting
has converted into a big business in Crimea. In summer when water levels
recede, plentiful pinkish-white salt pans are uncovered and covering dozens of
square kilometers in the region. The eye-catching pink color is the result of
microalgae that flourish in salty conditions and yield high levels of
beta-carotene, a reddish pigment that protects it from the region's penetrating
sunlight. The salt is gathered by traders and exported to European Union
countries, Russia, and to Japan, where it is prized for its purported value in
fighting the effects of radiation. This below picture shows the diversity of
colors the lagoons yield owing to its varied chemical composition. Hence you
can view different colors, such as peach, mustard, and lime green, blue,
blue-green, beige, and brown. Moreover; thick layers of silt coat the bottoms
of the shallow marshes, which are abundant in mineral salts to supply a local
chemical plant.
Wednesday 16 April 2014
The Volcano “Kawah Ijen” That Spews Blue Lava
At first look you might consider the
otherworldly light in these pictures comes from a nebula or another planet deep
in outer space or probably you have heard of "red hot lava" or
"white hot" to describe searing temperatures, so but what about
"blue hot lava"? Kawah Ijen is one of several volcanoes located
within the 20 kilometers wide Ijen Caldera in East Java, Indonesia. The caldera
of Kawah Ijen harbors a kilometer-wide, turquoise colored, acidic crater lake
that leaks sulphurous gases constantly. That's the surreal hue of Indonesia's
Kawah Ijen Volcano, which glows with an otherworldly "blue lava".
Normally at night the hot gases burn to
emit an eerie blue glow that is distinctive to Kawah Ijen. These gases emerge
from the cracks in the volcano at high pressure and temperature, up to 600°C,
and when they come in contact with the air, they ignite, sending flames up to
16 feet high. Specific gases condense into liquid sulfur, and continues to burn
as it flows down the slopes giving the feeling of blue lava flowing. Kawah
Ijen’s sulphuric gases are also mined for sulphur. The volcanic gases are
trapped by the native miners and channeled through a network of ceramic pipes,
which in result of condensation of molten sulfur.
The sulfur, normally red in color when
molten, pours gradually from the ends of these pipes and pools on the ground,
turning bright yellow as it cools.The expert miners break the cooled
material into big pieces and carry it away in baskets to an adjacent refinery.
In this way an expert worker can earn up to $13 dollars a day. Therefore you
can’t imagine the intense heat and extremely hazardous condition with
insufficient protection. Many workers suffer various respiratory problems due
to breathing toxic fumes day in and out. So they’d prefer to work at night to
escape the heat of the sun, and to earn extra income as well. These astonishing
images are captured by photographer Olivier Grunewald, who lost two lenses and
a camera to sulphuric corrosion while trying to capture the mysterious pictures.
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