Dyrhólaey is a small peninsula in the south of Iceland. It is located not far from the village Vík í Mýrdal. The peninsula is well known for its colony of atlantic puffins, but offers also some intersting rock formations like this arch.
Standing at a small waterfall near Kirkjubæjarklaustur (Iceland). This is none of the large and famous icelandic waterfalls, nevertheless it’s a very scenic one.
The church was built in 1884, and was the last turf church built in the old style. It is one of six churches still standing, which are preserved as historical monuments. The church is maintained by the National Museum but also serves as a parish church.
Interior of the St. Sylvester church in Munich.
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The town of Eskifjörður is located in a fjord the very eastern part of Iceland. With 1,043 inhabitants it’s one of the largest towns of the municipality of Fjarðabyggð.
This is a long exposure at Dettifoss. It was taken with a neutral density filter and the 18-55 kit lens at 18 mm. As the exposure time is 4 seconds I also used a tripod. The image is stitched from three images in portrait mode. I used an additional image for the guy standing at the waterfall. The resulting image is 9492 x 6000 pixels.
Dettifoss is a large waterfall in the north of Iceland. In fact it is said that this is the most powerfull waterfall in Europe. The waterfall is 100 meters (330 ft) wide and drop about 45 meters (150 ft) at this location.
Víti (which is icelandic for ‘hell’) is a crater lake in the vulcanic area of the Krafla vulcano. The diameter is about 330 meters. The crater was formed by a steam eruption in 1724.
Hverarönð is a geothermal area east of the mountain Námafjall in the north of Iceland. It is part of the volcanic system of the Krafla volcano which is lokated about 8 km (5 miles) to the north.
This is one of the rare occasions where I can provide an image, which documents the making of the panorama.
I took six images with a fisheye lens. After taking an image the pole was rotated about 60° before I took the next image. As the images were taken with a fisheye lens we were visible in the “nadir” of the final panorama. I retouched “nadir” and “zenith” manually in Photoshop. The real nadir and zenith were left unt(re-)touched as one shot was facing up and one was facing down.
This image shows a hot mud pot in the Hverarönð geothermal area. The area is part of the volcanic system of the Krafla volcano which is lokated about 8 km (5 miles) to the north.