Photographer’s Note
Mount St. Helens on the north face, the side of the most intense pyroclastic explosion that occurred on May 18, 1980. Nearly thirty years have past and the blast is obviously still evident, although new vegetation tenuously gaining a toehold.
On the day of the blast in 1980, I was in Spokane, over two hundred miles away. When the ash reached my location, the sky became black as night and the city street lights turned on. For many months we were plagued with a "putty" colored fine ash surrounding the entire area. It has never completely vanished. Closer to the mountain, the remaining ash is much more pronounced.
Taken with a Nikon D40x DSLR on a tripod early afternoon in October.
o Exposure: 1/125th second.
o Exposure Bias: 0.
o Apeture: f/5.6.
o Sensitivity: ISO 100.
o White Balance: Automatic
o Filter: Quantary Digital Circular Polarizer 67mm.
o Focal length: 22mm.
o Lens: Nikkor 18-135mm AF-S F3.5-4.5 G ED DX zoom.
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Photo Information
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Copyright: JR Hudson (scenicedge)
(189) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2009-10-11
- Categories: Nature
- Camera: Nikon D40x DSLR, Nikkor 18-135mm AF-S 1:3.5-4.5 G ED DX, Polarizer
- Exposure: f/5.6, 1/125 seconds
- Details: Tripod: Yes
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2009-10-11 20:11








