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Image compression mode: 4: Exposure bias: 0: Maximum land aperture: 3 APEX (f/2.83) Metering mode: Center weighted average: Light source: Fine weather: Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash suppression: Color space: sRGB: Custom image processing: Normal process: Exposure mode: Auto exposure: White balance: Manual white balance: Digital ...
Five wildflower species occupy less than 1,000 cm 2 in this photo taken on the eastern slope foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains in late July. Pink: Alberta wild rose; white: Western yarrow; blue: Bluebells showing both pink (immature) and blue (mature) stages; yellow: Arnica cordifolia (Heart-leaved arnica); and red: Red paintbrush Wildflowers of Western Australia Wildflowers are ...
Lilium michauxii, commonly known as the Carolina lily, is a wildflower native to the southeastern United States, thriving in dry, sandy soils of upland forests and ridges. It is the only fragrant lily species native east of the Rocky Mountains .
Image Archive of Central Texas Plants; Ajilvsgi, Geyata. Wildflowers of Texas. Shearer Publishing, revised edition 2003. ISBN 0-940672-73-1; Floridata: Gaillardia pulchella; Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture – Indian Blanket Archived 2010-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
Image credits: ben851 Bored Panda also wanted to get the photographer's perspective on what can inspire people to relax and be less stressed about the entire process of photography as a whole.
Great Smoky Mountains Wildflowers: When & Where to Find Them (Paperback)by Carlos C. Campbell, Aaron J. Sharp, Robert W. Hutson, William F. Hutson, Windy Pines Pub,(April 1996),ISBN 0-9643417-3-5 Wildflowers Of Tennessee, The Ohio Valley and the Southern Appalachians (Paperback)by Dennis Horn and Tavia Cathcart, Lone Pine Publishing (2005 ...
Wildflowers of the Canadian Rocky Mountains is an image list of flowering plants found in the Rocky Mountains in Canada.
This "remarkable resemblance" is often noted by both professional botanists and amateur wildflower enthusiasts. [4] [10] The fruit of Pedicularis groenlandica is an asymmetrical capsule that is 6–14 millimeters in size. Within each are several 2.4–4 millimeter brown seeds which have a netted surface and small wings.