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

10 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 ()...

  • Visitors compare the cone of Mt. St. Helens with an earlier photo of it before the eruptionk. Washington state, USA
    NationalGeographic_516112.jpg
  • Sheep and lambs graze by the Standing Stones of Stenness, one of several Orkney stone circles dating from before the time of Christ. The stones are in the protection of the National Trust for Scotland.  The sheep lend a touch of life and continuity to the ancient setting and are often the most memorable sight to the thousands of visitors who come the sight every year.  The Trust feels that the sheep cause no damage and belong in the landscape.  (But they still have a crew mow the grass regularly.)  Orkney, Scotland
    Orkney-20200514-0484-HDR-Edit.jpg
  • Down at the level of the aquifer Tom Fletcher dives in the Big Well in Greensburg, Kansas and holds up glasses that he found on the bottom.  The annual Big Well Treasure Dive brings Fletcher to the small town tourist attraction where visitors have been throwing in coins for 40 years from a platform just above the water.  The well is said to be the World's Largest Hand Dug well, being some 30 feet across and 109 feet deep.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220262.jpg
  • Keepers from ther Lee Richardson Zoo in Garden City, Kansas take the elephants, Moki and Chana, for a swim in the World's Largest Free Municipal Cement Bottom Swimming Pool.  The pool was just closed for the season and since the zoo does not have a pool for the Elephants this is their one bath of the year.  Keepers in swimming with the elephants were Robin Neff and Nick McDaniel.  Up on the bank were Jeff Bullock and Dave Wade.  The Elephants are 10-year-old Africans and have been at the zoo for 8 years.  The zoo gets some 210,000 visitors a year.  On a previous day they had 3,000 people to see the elephants swimmin g.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220064.jpg
  • View of the little village of O Cebreiro, historically the first village you enter in Galicia, and today the first stop for pilgrims entering Galicia.  A beautiful of Celtic village it has been converted from farming hamlet to accomodation for visitors with the last few decades.  A beautiful place to see the green, mountainous eastern Galicia.
    Galicia 20050726 0516 (2).jpg
  • Down at the level of the aquifer Tom Fletcher dives in the Big Well in Greensburg, Kansas and holds up glasses that he found on the bottom.  The annual Big Well Treasure Dive brings Fletcher to the small town tourist attraction where visitors have been throwing in coins for 40 years from a platform just above the water.  The well is said to be the World's Largest Hand Dug well, being some 30 feet across and 109 feet deep.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220133.jpg
  • For one euro visitors to Santiago can have their picture taken with this "pilgrim" dog on the plaza of the clock tower.
    Galicia 20050731 2230.jpg
  • The ancient Irish hill fort of Dun Aengus, perched 300 feet above the crashing Atlantic waves on the wes, is a great place to see and sense the Celts taking a last stand with their backs to the sea, and no place else to go. The whole island of Inishmoor is hardly anything more that rocks and great sea views, but it was all they had.  <br />
<br />
Dun Aonghasa<br />
<br />
 A 700BC stone fort, the rival of any in Europe. The fort stretches to the cliff edge on the western side of the Island and the fact that it remains is testimony to the skills and determination of ancient Celtic tribesmen who lived, worked and fought here 3000 years ago. The sight of the ancient building, the sound of crashing waves against the cliff face below, and the sweet sea air, guarantee that this site stays in the memory of visitors. There are less people around in the evening if you want a chance to see the area on your own. Be careful on the cliff face. Two other impressive stone forts, Dun Eochla and Dun Duchathair are also worth the visit.<br />
<br />
<br />
Aerial views of the rugged Aran Islands, on the west coast of Ireland. Ancient Celtic fields and forts dominate the landscape.<br />
<br />
The Celtic fort of Dun Aengus sits atop 300 foot cliffs overlooking the Atlantic.<br />
<br />
Contact: Aran Island Tourist Office, Aran Tourist Office, Kilronan, Aran Islands, Ireland Phone: 359 99 61263
    MM7189 20050623 31096.jpg
  • Ogallala formation near the Visitors Center in Ash Hollow State Park in Nebraska.  The long tubelike structures under the overhang are rodent burrows from the time when the fresh sands of the Ogallala, just washed down from the Rockies, were the topsoil of the region.  The smaller stringy formations are insect tunnels.  Beyond the formations can be seen Ash Hollow, the route of the Oregon Trail and beyond that the valley of the Platte River.
    Ogalla Aquifer Camera Scans 20220211.jpg
  • View of the Assynt Mountains, in the Assynt region and parish in the south-west of Sutherland, Scotland.It is famous for its landscape (Inverpolly Nature Reserve) and its remarkable mountains (Quinag, Canisp, Suilven, Cùl Mòr, Stac Pollaidh, Ben More Assynt). Knockan Crag National Nature Reserve, which includes a visitor centre interpreting the geological feature the Moine Thrust, is part of the North West Highlands Geopark.
    MM8321_20150816_3001-Pano.jpg