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Chuck Schneebeck Photography

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Chuck Schneebeck Photography

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  • Silex Spring is a deep, beautiful hot spring in the Lower Geyser Basin.  The blue water in the center is so hot that it is devoid of life.  Mineral deposits are deposited around the edges of the pool where appear to form a lace like edge.
    DSC_1230.jpg
  • Hot water runs out of a hot spring into Iron Spring Creek in the Black Sand Basin.  The orange colors are microorganisms that grow in the hot water.
    DSC_9629.jpg
  • This hot creek exits the region around the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring.  The colors are the result of heat loving microbes.  Different species of microbes live in different temperature zones.  The color of the microbial mats is determined by the pigments within the microbes and on the temperature gradient in the runoff.
    DSC_0530.jpg
  • This colorful hot creek runs toward the Firehole River form an area near the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring in the Midway Geyser Basin.
    DSC_1257.jpg
  • Mineral deposits and microorganisms result in this colorful formation in Silex Spring in the lower geyser basin.
    DSC_9655.jpg
  • This view is looking up the Firehole River from the bridge to the Grand Prismatic Spring.  The steam is caused by a combination of hot water pouring in from upland thermal features and vents or hot springs along the river interacting with cold air..
    DSC_1252.jpg
  • Hot water bubbles out of the top of Chocolate Pots Hot Spring beside the Gibbon river.  Just by looking at the cone you can tell where the hottest water flows (orange) and where the cooler water flows (green).  In the springtime during the snow melt more water escapes from the top and more of the cone is colorful.  It is part of the Gibbon Geyser Basin.
    DSC_1117.jpg
  • One of a number of hot water streams that flows out of the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring.
    DSC_8945.jpg
  • “Somber Yellowstone Park and its colored hot springs, baby geysers, rainbows of bubbling mud - symbols of my passion.” - Vladimir Nabokov
    DSC_9798.jpg
  • The Opalescent Pool is located in a forest that has been killed by thermal activity.  Mineral laden water has wicked up the dead tree trunks, turning them gray.  The pool maintains the beautiful blue color.  Notice where bison have walked along the near side of the pool.
    DSC_1218.Jpg
  • Gas escaping from deep within the earth exits through red mud of low viscosity, blasting the mud into the air, forming interesting shapes that last only seconds.  It takes a camera to freeze these structures in time.  They happen too fast for the human eye to see them clearly.
    DSC_0467.jpg
  • Located in the Upper Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park.  Named for a man from Belgium that fell into it and died.
    DSC_2138.jpg
  • Gas escaping from deep within the earth exits through red mud of low viscosity, blasting the mud into the air, forming interesting shapes that last only seconds. It takes a camera to freeze these structures in time. They happen too fast for the human eye to see them clearly.
    DSC_0602.jpg
  • A wall at Mammoth Hot Springs gives the felling of a watercolor painting.  Taken at a slow shutter speed the water looks silky and the steam being given off by the hot water acts as a filter to soften the look of the rocks.
    DSC_9229.jpg
  • A wall at Mammoth Hot Springs gives the feeling of a watercolor painting.  Taken at a slow shutter speed, the water looks silky and the steam being given off by the hot water acts as a filter to soften the look of the rocks.
    DSC_9229.jpg
  • Fountain Geyser, beside the walkway in the Lower Geyser Basin, goes off frequently.  The early morning light brings out the colors of the water and the rocks.  The dark specks in the photo are bits of debris that are being ejected by the geyser.
    DSC_0105.j.jpg
  • Hot water bubbles out of the top of Chocolate Pots Hot Spring beside the Gibbon river. Just by looking at the cone you can tell where the hottest water flows (yellow) and where the cooler water flows (orange). In the springtime during the snow melt, more water escapes from the top and more of the cone is colorful. It is part of the Gibbon Geyser Basin.
    DSC_0376.jpg
  • Situated above the Firehole River, Beehive Geyser erupts.  Steam can be seen from numerous hot springs and geysers in the lower part of the Upper Geyser Basin.
    DSC_1826.jpg