Animals Buzz Beautiful and terrifying and just totally alien. (More details on the origin of this amazing photograph here.) (via reddit.com)
This is a photographer living life on the edge.
Amateur photographer Bret Webster snapped these beautiful images in Utah using an ordinary Nikon digital camera.
Along the foothills of the Superstition Mountains in Arizona, one of the most legendary lightning photos was born. (Photo by Robert Quinn)
Sometimes reality is better than imagination. See more at Ivan’s site here.
The internet is full of cute cats and dogs. Why not check out some different creatures, like birds or turtles?
Only the best for these discerning little creatures. The question is: did they ingest THC and get high, or did their rapid metabolism prevent them from feeling any affects? Surely someone knows the answer!
Puzzlewood is an ancient woodland site in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, England. J.R.R. Tolkien used this woodland as inspiration for Lord of the Rings, and it has since become a popular location for filming both movies and television programs. Something extra going on in that last picture.
Nature is awesome. I don't care what anyone says: nature porn is the best porn out there. (via 4chan.org)
Straddling the boarder of Argentina and Brazil, Iguazu Falls is one of the most beautiful places on Earth.
Long exposure photography of a Lightning Strike in Turkey, five times hotter than the sun! (via reddit.com)
The extraordinary sight is a rare cloud formation known as a ‘lenticular cloud’ , or simply a cap cloud. There’s me thinking the aliens had landed. (via dailymail.co.uk)
Science Buzz 15-year-old Marlin Shank photographed this extremely rare albino ruby-throated hummingbird in a park in Staunton, Virginia. See more pictures here, and read an interview with the photographer here.
Storm's rolling in. This is a truly breath-taking photo. (via afternoonsnoozebutton.com)
Geysers are Nature's hadouken. Taken by Tatyana Kildisheva, this shot manages to capture the exact second before the Strokkur geyser on Iceland erupts, showing off the fire inside that causes water to spew up to 131 feet in the air every four to eight minutes.
Science Buzz These series of photographs by artist and photographer Catherine Chalmers are both disturbing and thought-provoking. More information is available on the artist's website.
Stunning. You can also download a ‘wallpaper’ sized version of the final photo here.
Not quite the stuff of Double Rainbow legend, but still awesome. (BOOOOOOOM via Amber Chavez)