Visitors walk among the blowing sand, the dead camel thorn trees, and beneath Namibia's dunes at Deadvlei.
Photo ID: _DSC8111_Photodeck_Full_Rez_Export_deadvlei-survivors
Estado de la publicación: Final
Photo tamaño: 28.1 Mpixels (80,3 MB no comprimido) - 9178x3059 pixels (77.7x25.9 cm / 30.6x10.2 in a 300 ppp)
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Dos personas caminan entre la niebla del salar de arcilla de Deadvlei, en Namibia, rodeadas de árboles muertos y con una duna de arena naranja iluminada por el amanecer al fondo.

The camelthorn trees of Deadvlei died approximately 900 years ago when the Tsauchab River shifted course and cut off their water supply, and the extreme aridity of the Namib has preserved them perfectly ever since — black skeletons against a white cracked clay pan under a sky so blue it photographs as color-corrected. These trees are not fossils: they are simply dry. The pan itself is a former lake bed, the clay so alkaline that nothing grows in it, the surface cracking in the sun into polygons that could have come from a geometry textbook. The image holds the blackened wood, the blinding white clay, and the saturated sky in a single frame — a palette that requires no enhancement because the Namib provides its own.

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