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onyxearth:

National Geographic  December  1963
2,922 notes

onyxearth:

National Geographic  December  1963

(Source: forages, via retrojapan)








theabsolution:

“Fingal’s Cave is a sea cave on the uninhabited island of Staff, one of the Inner Hebrides islands which skirt the western coast of Scotland. The immense arch-roofed cave creates a melodic, haunting echo of waves within its cathedral-like atmosphere; something so impressive Romantic Poets John Keats, William Wordsworth, andAlfred, Lord Tennyson all made journeys here; as well as Her Majestic Queen Victoria. The cave’s Gaelic name is Uamh-Binn, meaning “cave of melody.”
750 notes

theabsolution:

Fingal’s Cave is a sea cave on the uninhabited island of Staff, one of the Inner Hebrides islands which skirt the western coast of Scotland. The immense arch-roofed cave creates a melodic, haunting echo of waves within its cathedral-like atmosphere; something so impressive Romantic Poets John KeatsWilliam Wordsworth, andAlfred, Lord Tennyson all made journeys here; as well as Her Majestic Queen Victoria. The cave’s Gaelic name is Uamh-Binn, meaning “cave of melody.

(via thistinyhouse)




Rory MacLean (Bathing on the Tibetan Plain, 1977)
42 notes

Rory MacLean (Bathing on the Tibetan Plain, 1977)

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