Photographer’s Note
If you can't see Mount McKinley on a visit to Denali National Park - make sure you at least see Polychrome Pass. Perched on the side of Polychrome Mountain, this lookout, over looks the Plains of Murie, named after a famous conservationist who studied Caribou at the Park. The Plains of Murie were formed by glaciers and fast running water creating alluvial terraces. In the far distance you can see Mount Pendleton (7,840 ft) and other peaks in the Alaska Range. These are the northeast mountains in the range.
Polychrome gets its name from the colorful hillside. Note the deep reds, yellows, and browns. Next time I visit Denali I would like to go in the fall when this area's land changes to even deeper and richer colors.
I could have spent years just sitting at edge of Polychrome looking at this scene - If I had a window overlooking any scene in the world, this would be it.
samrat_roy1 has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
ben4321
(9809) 2006-07-04 13:22
I think your shot does justice to this beautiful landscape. The composition is excellent with the river acting as a good lead-in line.
Good work.
Ben
samrat_roy1
(683) 2006-07-04 14:19
hi
indeed. i agree to what u say. we can spend years just staring and admiring the scene. to me it looks like chocolate. great light and excellent framing...
smiley
(613) 2006-07-05 16:41
It's an incredible view! Looks like you benefited from spotty lighting to have it light up the hillside. It looks deceivingly close and gorgeous view.
Photo Information
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Copyright: Brian Schwartz (umbrellaphotos)
(1901) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2006-06-09
- Categories: Nature
- Camera: Nikon D70, 18/70 DX Nikkor, Digital ISO 200, Cokin 120 Grad Grey ND2
- Exposure: f/11, 1/180 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2006-07-04 13:12








