Show Navigation

JIM RICHARDSON

  • BROWSE THE ARCHIVES
    • Agriculture Collection
    • Great Plains Collection
    • Scotland Collection
    • Celtic Lands Collection
  • FINE ART PRINTS
    • Scotland
    • Kansas & Flint Hills
    • Vintage Kansas B&W
    • Cuba, Kansas
  • BACKGROUND
    • ABOUT
    • SPEAKING
    • FAQ
    • Blog
    • CONTACT ME
  • CLIENT PHOTO SEARCH
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • BODIES OF WORK

JIM RICHARDSON

Search Results

5 images

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)

Loading ()...

  • The All-American Canal takes water from the Colorado River though desert dunes in Southern California.
    ColoradoRiverScan-121030-0011 copy.jpg
  • Two farmers were digging out this center pivot irrigation system just east of Portales, NM that has been burried in the sand for seven years.  In this area of sand hills combined with high spring winds (and no ground cover on fields) sand dunes can form very quickly.  This area still has good water.
    Ogallala_20220118_0001-Edit-2.jpg
  • The dramatic bay at Uig creates a huge beach as the tides drain out every day on the west coast of the Isle of Lewis. Flowers grow profusely the machair, soils formed by blow shell sand from the beaches.  The surrounding dunes are held in place by colonizing grasses.  The dunes are also famous as the site where the Lewis Chessmen were found, thousand year old chess pieces found in the dunes.
    MM7701_20080630_6156.jpg
  • Center Pivot Irrigation System buried in sand dunes, New Mexico.
    Burried Center Pivot (P).jpg
  • Water bubbles and gushes from a "Boiling Spring" on Birdwood Creek near North Platte, Nebraska in the Sandhills.  Water is welling up from the aquifer in the Sandhills.  In the vertical exposure of sand some 50 to 60 feed high above the spring you can see both water born sediments (below) and wind born sand dunes (above.)  In the background is Hydrologist Jim Goeke.<br />
Interstingly, the springs vary in the output depending on atmospheric conditions, dying down with high pressure and going wild with low preasure.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220149.jpg