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Scene notes:
Very sharp Aiguilles and ‘arete’s displayed under Mt Whitney. Low and high-level Cirrus clouds pass overhead at sunset, pinkish and reddened.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
12 seconds and 28 frames.
Very sharp Aiguilles and ‘arete’s displayed under Mt Whitney. Low and high-level Cirrus clouds pass overhead at sunset, pinkish and reddened.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
12 seconds and 28 frames.
An original, recently remastered time-lapse of the sky with clouds.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
7 seconds and 29 frames.
A one second interval is used to capture a geyser venting steam vapor in the cold morning dawn. In a far meadow, other smaller geysers look like a thin fog bank. Resembling a small pine tree, a lone tree in the foreground stands two-thirds of the frame’s height. A small river runs from center to the bottom-right of the frame.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
7 seconds and 1 frame.
A very fast UAS ascends at morning on Mt Shasta. The POV views the south flank of the snow-covered mountain. Pinks shine on the snow from the morning sun, and a few areas of sky have higher level clouds.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
7 seconds and 14 frames.
A majestic mountain, Mt Rainier has a batch of Cumulus clouds on two flanks this sunny morning. Shadows from them moving over the snow. These are their normal altitudes. The dormant volcano rears up above the alpine, snowy meadow of the foreground. The clouds find the mountain insurmountable, and minuscule cars are seen in the middle of the frame, adding slightly to the interest. A three second interval is used.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
38 seconds and 4 frames.
This is the continuation of another clip; The camera’s orientation and position has been adjusted.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
6 seconds and 6 frames.
Changing from day to night on the east flank of Mt Shasta, the clouds rapidly change and darken to the night. The stars seem to spin around as the Earth rotates and the sky brightens to morning, light once again on the snow.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
38 seconds and 24 frames.
Just around sunset when the light is most orange, the lone atlas cedar is midway to the fog, which seems to be rising just behind these trees. There is a wide vista of bright fog stretching miles out, and the hill that spans the valley below creates a shadow on the fog further away, miles out. It’s quite windy, apparent from the speed of the water vapor just beyond.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
23 seconds and 8 frames.