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Tomasz Dziubinski - Photography | all galleries >> About Tomasz Dziubinski >> Awards and Honours >> International Photography Awards - IPA 2012 >> MONO LAKE SUNSET > Mono Lake Tufa Rocks
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©2012 Tomasz Dziubinski

Mono Lake Tufa Rocks

Mono Lake, California

International Photography Awards - IPA 2012
2nd place in Nature - Sunset category

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PX3 Prix De La Photographie Paris 2012
A series of 5 images "Mono Lake Sunset"
Gold medal in the subcategory Nature/Sunset
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Mono Lake is a large, shallow saline lake in Mono County, California.
The lake has been formed at least 760,000 years ago as a terminal lake in a basin that has no outlet to the ocean. Because it lacks an outlet, dissolved salts make the lake very alkaline and saline.

Perhaps the most intriguing of Mono Lake's phenomena are the tufa (pronounced "toofah") towers visible along much of the shoreline. Tufa are made from calcium carbonate which makes its way into the lake from underground springs. The calcium and carbonate combine to form limestone which builds up over time around the lake bottom spring openings. Declining lake levels have exposed the tufa towers we see today. Some of these tufa towers are up to 30 feet high.

This desert lake has an unusually productive ecosystem based on brine shrimp that thrive in its waters, and provides critical nesting habitat for two million annual migratory birds that feed on the shrimp. Mono Lake is also notable for containing GFAJ-1, a rod-shaped extremophilic species of bacteria that may be capable of metabolizing the usually poisonous element arsenic.

The human history of Mono Lake is associated with its productive ecosystem. The native Kutzadika'a people derived nutrition from the larvae of the alkaline flies that live in the lake. When the city of Los Angeles diverted water from flowing into the lake, it lowered the lake level, which imperiled the migratory birds. The Mono Lake Committee formed in response, winning a legal battle that forced Los Angeles to partially restore the lake level.

Mono Lake is a geologist's paradise. Currently, Mono Lake is in a geologically active area at the north end of the Mono–Inyo Craters volcanic chain and is close to Long Valley Caldera. Volcanic activity continues in the Mono Lake vicinity: the most recent eruption occurred 350 years ago, resulting in the formation of Paoha Island. Panum Crater (on the south shore of the lake) is an excellent example of a combined rhyolite dome and cinder cone.


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waterfalls man03-Mar-2012 12:52
Excellent Shot V!!
Graeme02-Mar-2012 23:25
Oh, what a fabulous scenic this is Tomasz. Im sure it would grace the best of walls. Outstanding work.VVV
Frank Kavanagh Photography02-Mar-2012 22:40
Fabulous shot and reflection.V.
Michel Girardet02-Mar-2012 22:23
Magnifique!
Kinga Chwalkowska Zadlak02-Mar-2012 21:31
GREAT! ~V~
Guest 02-Mar-2012 17:06
Ethereal and magical, a fairyland to be sure
Walter Otto Koenig02-Mar-2012 16:32
Amazing clarity and colors. Great composition too. "V"
Paco López02-Mar-2012 15:24
Spectacular! V!
Chris Morton02-Mar-2012 14:33
a sort of primeval and chilling look; rather different from the sunrise/set versions on sees and again from John Muir's description when it first came to the attention of westernised man
Guest 02-Mar-2012 13:38
wonder, wonder, wonderful Tomasz.
Jola Dziubinska02-Mar-2012 12:38
Amzing light and reflections, outstanding panorama. V.