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Great #day3 #walking the #isleofwightcoastalpath #shanklin to #ventnor with a #longdetour around the #landslip at #luccombe and a stop at the #wishingseat #fogeytours #oapsinwaiting but #stillsomelifeintheolddogyet #adventureisoutthere #lovethelifeyoulive #livethelifeyoulove #happilyeverafter (at Shanklin, Isle Of White) https://www.instagram.com/p/CojXZ5PsMkZ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Skyescape by images@twiston
Via Flickr:
Explore #4 28/06/2022 Skyescape - Swathes of rain laden clouds roll over the Trotternish ridge peppering the landscape with sunshine and showers in typical Skye conditions. Heavy rain drenches the landscape from the left of Cleat towards Beinn Edra in the distance; in amongst the mayhem, a crack in the clouds allows a welcome splash of sunlight to fall between Cleat and Dun Dubh highlighting the rugged textures of the ridge. A truly incredible landscape and world-class location, made all the more dramatic by the typical ever changing, moody Skye weather; all viewed from the safety of the Quiraing behind Cnòc a Mhèrlich. Isle of Skye, Scottish Inner Hebrides website | instagram | 500px
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LANDSLIP at MAM TOR
Postcard
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not all the trains getting cancelled and super delayed over a landslip???? you can't make this shit up😭😭
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Record-Breaking Footprint Found on England's ‘Dinosaur Coast’
More than 3 feet long, the footprint was made by a meat-eating theropod dinosaur almost 166 million years ago from the Jurassic Period.
The brooding landscape of the English county of Yorkshire has perhaps been best known as the home of the gothic novels “Wuthering Heights” and “Jane Eyre” by the Brontë sisters.
But long before they put pen to paper, giant carnivorous dinosaurs roamed the area that locals refer to as “God’s own country” and one left a footprint that experts Thursday confirmed was the largest ever discovered in Yorkshire.
More than 3 feet long, the footprint was made by a meat-eating theropod dinosaur almost 166 million years ago from the Jurassic Period, according to the authors of a study published in the Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society journal.
They added that they thought the dinosaur was squatting or resting when it left the three-toed footprint in the Cleveland Basin area, which is now the east coast of Yorkshire.
The footprint was serendipitously discovered in April 2021 by local archaeologist Marie Woods, while she walked along a stretch of coastline known as the Dinosaur Coast.
“As an archaeologist, I know the importance of recording objects and exploring the potential for recovery,” she said via email Thursday. “This was no exception, even though it’s not my field of expertise.”
“I contacted various local people and sent photographs and the location to see if they had come across the print before me, they all said no,” said Woods, who is also a co-author of the study.
Shortly afterward, she contacted her friend Dean Lomax, a paleontologist at The University of Manchester and a fellow author of the study.
“By studying the angle of the footprint, its shape, and the impressions of the claws, the fossil provides insights into the behavior of this individual from around 166 million years ago,” Lomax said in a statement.
“Features of the footprint may even suggest that this large predator was squatting down before standing up,” he added. “It’s fun to think this dinosaur might well have been strolling along a muddy coastal plain one lazy Sunday afternoon in the Jurassic.”
While the area is well-know for dinosaur footprints, few are found in such well preserved condition, the study said. It is one of only six similar footprints to have been recorded in the area, the first being found in 1934, it added.
A popular destination for paleontologists and fossil enthusiasts, it is considered one of the best places in the world to find footprints from the giant creatures.
After it was determined the footprint was at risk of being exposed to extensive damage by the tide or landslips, it was quickly recovered from the shoreline by a team of experienced fossil collectors.
During that time, it emerged that the footprint had been spotted five months earlier in November 2020 by a local fossil hunter and a co-author of the new study, Rob Taylor. Bit it was not fully exposed when he found it.
The footprint has been donated to a local museum for conservation purposes.
By Aina J. Khan.
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News from Dorset...
Following three months of exceptionally heavy rain, there have been several landslips and huge rockfalls along the Jurassic coast,
PLEASE... If you are visiting the area:
Stay away from the cliff edge,
If you are on the beach, stay away from the foot of the cliffs.
Rockfalls can occur at any time, and there is usually no warning. A video I saw of a recent collapse near Burton Bradstock was truly frightening!
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“On the West side of Trotternish at Balnacnoc (which means - the village or township in the hills) above Uig, is the Fairy Glen – a Quirang-like landslip in miniature.
The road winds around small round-topped grassy hills with lochans (ponds) in between which gives the glen an otherworldly feel.”
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Turkey 2009 (2) (3) (4) by d0gwalker
Via Flickr:
(1) Carved decoration featuring a Triton abducting a nymph on the base of a column in the ruined temple of the oracle of Apollo at Didyma, Turkey.
(2) A fallen column capital amongst the ruins of the ancient city of Aphrodisias, Turkey.
(3) Stone tombs that have been disturbed, presumably by landslips, in the ancient ruined city of Hierapolis, adjacent to modern day Pamukkale, Turkey.
(4) Dome-topped tumuli (tombs) in the necropolis - city of the dead - of the ancient ruined city of Hierapolis.
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Speedy Roger (day 48)
The next day would be a walking day and we set our alarm to 6am. The stretch would be quite a special one according to some ladies at the YHA hostel: since a landslip in 1863, the coastal region had been inaccessible and abondoned, which is why a lush rain forest had grown there. The landslip also meant however, that there would be no way from or to the coast path for 12km until the town Lyme Regis. I was a bit nervous about that as it was Rogers first walking day, his backpack had no hip belt, and he had brought no water bottle at all, so in case we had to camp before Lyme Regis it would be a bit tight with the water. My worries were all for nothing, as it turned out, because the walk through the forest was a rather easy one, and if there were any hills at all Roger was up on top of them before I had even gotten halfway. Speedy Gonzales, must be the long Dutch legs or those scouting hikes he has done. We reached Lyme Regis at lunchtime and had an ice cream instead of lunch.
Also, on the way from Beer back to Seaton via the beach we had to climb some rocks because of high tide:
Behind Lyme Regis we kept walking for another 8-9km, had some breaks, and started looking for a wild camping spot in a National Trust area we had spotted on the map. We found one rather quickly, and sat down in the afternoon sun, upon which Roger immediately fell asleep. After his nap he joined the Yoga cooldown and we set up the tent after that. The night was quite cold but when we were awake and looked out the tent we saw a beautiful night sky!:)
In a pub we saw this replica of a Ichthyosaurus paddle that was found in the region:
Roger demonstrating that my spoon can also be used as a peg (after which I could clean it again):
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ok final update on the cyclone situation before i shut up
i have power and everything now, my area doesnt have too much damage besides a few new landslips. was a regular summer day weather today?? so the cyclone seems to be over, but there's a lot of aftereffects that are lingering
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The Fairy Glen, Scotland
This lush landscape in the hills above the village of Uig, on the Isle of Skye in Scotland, has a name to match its fantastical appearance. With its stepped, conical hills, buttes, lochans (ponds) and copses of gnarled trees, the Fairy Glen is an otherworldly valley created by a series of small landslides. Here on Trotternish, the most northerly peninsula on Skye, the whole landscape is a labyrinth of steep slopes, plateaus and dramatic rock formations, thanks to an ancient landslip which runs for more than 30 kilometres.
The Fairy Glen is like a miniature version of the much larger Quiraing landslip further up the peninsula and is a popular spot with photographers. These days, the concentric circles and spirals of stones you see here are a bit controversial. They are considered a nuisance created by tourists, and locals will remove them, preferring to keep the glen as nature intended. The flat basalt-topped hill in the middle of our image is known as Castle Ewan, for reasons unknown. It is not a ruined castle, but does offer great all-round views of this magical place, sculpted by landslides, glacial movement and erosion (or as a bridge between our world and the fairy world, depending on what you believe).
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Start of extensive landslip repairs on Bulli Pass ‘progressing well’
The landslips on the upper section of Bulli Pass
REPAIRS to damage on Bulli Pass are progressing with work starting at all four landslip sites last month.
The work is being carried out to repair damage caused during the record-breaking rainfall across the Illawarra and South Coast in 2022.
An extensive work program began in February 2024 to repair the remaining landslip damage on Bulli Pass.…
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