File name : | 175 - Bill Eichenlaub |
File size : | 1020915 bytes |
File date : | 2015:01:17 21:52:22 |
Camera make : | Konica Minolta Camera, Inc. |
Camera model : | DiMAGE A2 |
Date/Time : | 2005:08:21 12:16:43 |
Resolution : | 2560 x 1920 |
Flash used : | No |
Focal length : | 25.0mm (35mm equivalent: 101mm) |
Exposure tim : | 0.0025 s (1/400) |
Aperture : | f/8.0 |
ISO equiv. : | 64 |
Exposure bia : | -0.30 |
Whitebalance : | Auto |
Metering Mod : | pattern |
Exposure : | program (auto) |
Focus range : | distant |
JPEG Quality : | 88 |
======= IPTC dat : | ======= |
City : | %G |
Record vers. : | 4 |
Keywords : | Glaciers |
DateCreated : | 20050821 |
Time Created : | 121643-0900 |
Byline : | Bill Eichenlaub |
Headline : | Bill_Eichenlaub |
Credit : | Bill Eichenlaub |
(C)Notice : | Copyright Bill Eichenlaub and shared per http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ |
Caption : | This is it, the end of Glacier Bay – as far as you can go and still sit in a kayak and find ice calving into the ocean. On my first trip in Johns Hopkins Inlet we camped on a tiny flat spot near the mouth of the inlet. Throughout the restless night I couldn't figure out how we could be in a thunderstorm and not have any lightning or rain. The inlet is three miles long, and by the time the booming of the ice calving reverberated down the fjord walls to where I lay in my tent, the 'booms' sounded just like distant thunder. The next day reality dawned with the morning. |
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