Trümmelbach Falls
Unbekanntes Kunstwerk in Hamburg,,
Fläche mit sich nicht wiederholendem Muster.
Working in the wineyard.
Nepal – Terraces of Nagarkot
PostFinance
It's not NYC! ;-)
Tief ins Glas geschaut.
Merced River (1988)
NYC – View from the Empire State Building
NYC – Flatiron Building
Sibelius Monument
Hoover Dam #4
Hoover Dam #1 (1994)
Hoover Dam #2
pylon south
pylon south
bottom view
500 m down
Stockhornschatten
neck stiffing – 1988
x x x Ω
folded
Bin auf Streife.
Schirmherrschaft
Tief ins Glas geschaut. (PiP)
Babel #2
Holz ist heimelig,, (3 x PiP)
Creux du Van
avalange protection
falling fog
Inside Dalí
rolling, rolling, rolling ...
Sämtliche 983 IP-ler auf einem Bild. ;-)
Elbbrücken
Die Fassade mit dem gewissen Knick.
Wo sich die Spiralen aalen.
Den Haag – "New Babylon"
Hamburg – Am Strandkai 3
The streets of Berne.
The streets of Berne (Macro)
Gletscher(rest)welten
Prag – sewage system
Prag – National Museum
Prag – National Museum
Location
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
252 visits
Trümmelbachfälle
Trümmelbach Falls
With its 10 glacier waterfalls inside the mountain, made accessible by a tunnel lift, the Trümmelbach Falls are unique in Europe. At a height of 140 m, 10 waterfalls inside the mountain can be viewed up close.
The Trümmelbach alone drains the huge glacier walls of the Eiger (3'970 m), Mönch (4'099 m) and Jungfrau (4'158 m) with up to 20'000 litres of water per second from its catchment area of 24 km2, half of which is covered with snow and ice.
The Jungfrau-Aletsch area has been declared a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site. The Trümmelbach is listed in the "Federal Inventory of Landscapes and Natural Monuments of National Importance", and the Michelin Guide rates this exceptional natural spectacle with three stars.
Watch the video and listen to the noise. :-)
► Homepage
► Wikipedia, English
(46.56876, 07.91549)
With its 10 glacier waterfalls inside the mountain, made accessible by a tunnel lift, the Trümmelbach Falls are unique in Europe. At a height of 140 m, 10 waterfalls inside the mountain can be viewed up close.
The Trümmelbach alone drains the huge glacier walls of the Eiger (3'970 m), Mönch (4'099 m) and Jungfrau (4'158 m) with up to 20'000 litres of water per second from its catchment area of 24 km2, half of which is covered with snow and ice.
The Jungfrau-Aletsch area has been declared a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site. The Trümmelbach is listed in the "Federal Inventory of Landscapes and Natural Monuments of National Importance", and the Michelin Guide rates this exceptional natural spectacle with three stars.
Watch the video and listen to the noise. :-)
► Homepage
► Wikipedia, English
(46.56876, 07.91549)
Frans Schols, Berny, Annemarie, LutzP and 5 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this video
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
polytropos club has replied to Schussentäler clubaber interessant, wie der "Schacht" geformt wurde.
polytropos club has replied to Boarischa Krautmo clubJa, solche "Wassermühlen" sieht man an verschiedenen Stellen. Z.T. sind sie zu riesigen Pools ausgeschliffen worden. Naja, das war vor meiner Zeit. ;-))
polytropos club has replied to Annemarie clubSign-in to write a comment.