photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Konica Minolta Users | all galleries >> KM Challenges >> KM C40 Repetition: Hosted by Ord >> C40 Repetition: Competition > Chesapecten Jeffersonius by Jean-Louis Ecochard
previous | next
14-AUG-2005

Chesapecten Jeffersonius by Jean-Louis Ecochard

This is the fossilized form of an extinct scallop that lived in the early Pliocene epoch between four and five million years ago on Virginia's coastal plain. In 1687, it became the first fossil to be described from North America. It was named for Thomas Jefferson because of his interest in natural history. The fossil also celebrates the Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the world. It is now the state fossil of Virginia (1993).

Konica-Minolta Maxxum 7 Digital ,Minolta AF Macro Zoom 3X-1X/1.7-2.8
20s f/22.0 at 45.0mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium original auto
comment | share
Guest 19-Aug-2005 04:16
Mike,
The aperture was already f22, the minimum aperture of the lens at this magnification.
I could have given it more DOF by stacking images but decided not to in order to give curvature to the subject. If I made the whole image in focus it would looks like a crop from another image and not a complete subject. It would look flat.

The fossil is about the size of your thumbnail.

JL
Konica Minolta Users18-Aug-2005 21:30
JL,
Lovely texture and natural, muted colours.
I wonder if a smaller aperture would be helpful here to give more in-focus area. Perhaps a case where an A2-sized sensor would win?
Mike.
Dennis Phillips16-Aug-2005 20:57
State fossil? Sounds like a senator I know. LOL The lines get darker and more texturally interesting as they radiate out. I what the image would have looked like if it were rotated so that a single line joined the lower left corner to the upper right. Great capture, Jean-Louis.
Tlaloc
Veronica Fresh16-Aug-2005 01:53
Thanks so much for it's description...I feel like you've let us get an intimate view here, great cropping as well. Hmmm, strong diagonal lines & subtle colors add appeal.
Veronica
Guest 15-Aug-2005 17:07
Another fine entry JL, with good texture and lines in a fan shape and a good variation on the theme.
John