Abandoned
Autumn colours at JJ Collett Natural Area
Yucca plant in second bloom
Milk Thistle / Silybum marianum
Physcia adscendens lichen
Purple Shamrock / Oxalis triangularis
Little beauty
A real treat on Sunday
Lophocolea minor liverwort
Bold and simple
Fragile rock brake fern / Cryptogramma-stelleri
Psora decipiens lichen
Swainson's Hawk
The blue teapot wall
Oh, so handsome
Happy Thanksgiving weekend, everyone
Candleflame lichen / Candelaria concolor
Harvest time
Happy Thanksgiving!
A beautiful welcome
The split
It's "Button-eyes" again
Forest find
Blue Stain / Chlorociboria aeruginascens
Such a thrill - from my archives
Pinedrops with bokeh
Split personality
A look that needs to be shared : )
Mt. Yamnuska, Kananaskis
Fake but fun
A touch of autumn colour
Creeping Thistle
At least there were cows
Pink for Breast Cancer Awareness month
Common Sargeant / Athyma perius
Coral Fungus sp
A joy to see
Wall decoration
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Erosion at Red Rock Coulee
Strawberry and Rhubarb tart
Seven-spotted Ladybug on Yucca seedpod
Replica of a Chinese warrior
Ominous clouds after the harvest
A bird walk treat
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Concretions at Red Rock Coulee


Another landscape photo taken at Red Rock Coulee in SE Alberta. We left Calgary on Monday morning, 20 September 2013, and had to reach Elkwater in the Cypress Hills (not that far from the Saskatchewan border), several hours' drive away, where we were going to stay in a little rustic cabin for three nights. On the way there, we stopped at Red Rock Coulee, which is just 56 kms (35 mi) southwest of Medicine Hat. Actually, this particular photo was taken on Monday, 23 September 2013, when we called in again, this time walking down the hillside and into one of the coulees. While my friends searched for Lichens, I wandered around, taking photos of the scenery and anything else I came across. While we were down there, the sky had filled with some rather nice clouds, which I appreciated. However, the extremely high winds were not pleasant at all, to say the least! In fact, strong winds were everywhere in many parts of SE Alberta. I was expecting a lot of my photos to be very blurry, as I could barely keep my balance or hold my camera. Amazingly, most seem to be OK to use, from the very quick look I've taken so far. This is Rattlesnake territory, too, but fortunately we didn't come across any, thank goodness! At least, not here, but one was seen (not by me!) at the Pinhorn Grazing Lease, when we were monitoring the Yucca plants.
"The main feature of this natural landscape is the huge red boulders; some measuring 2.5 m across. They are scattered over a relatively small distance. Bedrock is close to the surface in this area, covered by only a thin layer of soil. Water erosion has carved the landscape over time and a badlands topography has formed in places. The bands of colour visible in the exposed bedrock are made of dark gray shales, greenish and gray sandstones, bentonitic clays and thin bands of ironstone.
The most striking features of this landscape are the round reddish boulders. These are sandstone concretions and at up to 2.5 m in diameter, they are among the largest in the world. The boulders were formed in prehistoric seas as layers of sand, calcite and iron oxide collected around a nucleus formed by shells, leaves or bones. The concretions grew larger as the circulating waters deposited more layers. The reddish colour comes from iron oxide." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Rock_Coulee
"The main feature of this natural landscape is the huge red boulders; some measuring 2.5 m across. They are scattered over a relatively small distance. Bedrock is close to the surface in this area, covered by only a thin layer of soil. Water erosion has carved the landscape over time and a badlands topography has formed in places. The bands of colour visible in the exposed bedrock are made of dark gray shales, greenish and gray sandstones, bentonitic clays and thin bands of ironstone.
The most striking features of this landscape are the round reddish boulders. These are sandstone concretions and at up to 2.5 m in diameter, they are among the largest in the world. The boulders were formed in prehistoric seas as layers of sand, calcite and iron oxide collected around a nucleus formed by shells, leaves or bones. The concretions grew larger as the circulating waters deposited more layers. The reddish colour comes from iron oxide." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Rock_Coulee
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