Photography is the documentation of life, once that shutter has clicked, the moment has passed and history is made. Some may be familiar with project 365, a simple concept, take a photograph everyday for 365 days. This blog is an extension of the project; the goal is to keep photographing every day, who knows how long? It is an excellent archive to look back on, see how things change. Change can be subtle, such as different coloured flowers being planted each year to a changing landscape with buildings being demolished and new ones built. This blog archives life’s diversity and my encounters.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

2014 Week 42 Photos

2014 Week 42 Photos
By Corey Lablans Photography


(20th week, Year 2 – 504 days)

2014 10 13 – Johnathan walks along a small cliff undercut by wave action and the weathering of limestone. Kingston has many excellent places to find Ordovician fossils (488 to 443 million years old).

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f2.8 1/1600th I.S.O. 400)
 
2014 10 14 – Professor Narbonne explains the geological sequencing observed at Isle La Motte, Vermont. The main sequencing observed represents a transition from supratidal to intertidal and finally subtidal.

(Nikon D300 w 17-35 f2.8 @17mm f4 1/2500th I.S.O. 320)
 
2014 10 15 – Queen’s students examine limestone of the Orwell Formation at Crown Point, New York while on a field course. Crown point was a strategic fortification site in the late 1700’s between the British and the French colonists. It also played a major role in the British conquest of Canada.

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f4 1/1250th I.S.O. 250) 

2014 10 16  - A Queen’s student looks out the bus window as water streams down during an intense rainstorm while on a field course in the Adirondacks. It rained for the majority of the day leaving students damp by the end. 

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f2 1/100th I.S.O. 400) 

2014 10 17 – Queen’s University students and a professor make their way up along the highway at Grand Gorge, New York during the Adirondack’s field course. The upward coarsening and features produced by the Catskill “Delta” during the Devonian period are observed alongside this highway. 

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f8 1/800th I.S.O. 200)
 
2014 10 18 – Queen’s students in geological sciences and engineering, as well as biology enjoy lunch near Alexandria Bay, New York on the final day a five day carbonates and paleontology course.

(Nikon D300 w 50 f1.8 @50mm f4 1/640th I.S.O. 400)
 
2014 10 19 – Two ladies examine some mineral specimens at the 45th annual Gemstorm fossil, minerals and jewelry sale at the Portsmouth Olympic Harbour.

(Nikon D7000 w 70-200 f2.8 @105mm f3.2 1/800th I.S.O. 4000) 
THANK YOU
Corey Lablans
cldailyphotos@gmail.com

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