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Aerial photograph of Australian shark bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, like oil painting strokes

Minority
 
[Free Tour]     22 Jul 2018
According to the latest news from Australia, the famous Scottish photographer Simon Butterworth aerial photographed Australia Shark Bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, the scene is fantastic like oil painting strokes, very spectacular. It is reported that Simon Butterworth named this blue wilderness, and won the Global Photography Competition-professional landscape group award.

According to the latest news from Australia, the famous Scottish photographer Simon Butterworth aerial photographed Australia Shark Bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, the scene is fantastic like oil painting strokes, very spectacular. It is reported that Simon Butterworth named this blue wilderness, and won the Global Photography Competition-professional landscape group award.

Simon Butterworth, a photographer from the Scottish border, used aerial photographs to record the salt fields near the port of Seleslup (Useless Loop), the Australian shark bay bird, and named "Blue wilderness" at first glance. Many people mistake it for oil paintings, which is exactly what Simon meant to explore people's perceptions of reality and impressions.

Aerial photograph of Australian shark bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, like oil painting strokes

These stunning photos may look like abstract paintings, but they are aerial photographs of Australia's Yantian. These pan-blue salt fields, separated by roads and sea water, make images of even Dutch painters, Mondrian, the founder of the abstract school of painting, proud of them. British photographer Simon Butterworth photographed a sun-cured field in Ussellup, Western Australia's Shark Bay, at a height of 4000 feet (1219 meters). The color of the salt field is caused by the slow evaporation of concentrated salt water in shallow ponds, leaving behind crystalline salt.

For this set of works, Simon also won the 2018 Sony Global Photography Competition-Professional Landscape Group Award. (source: POCO Photography)

Aerial photograph of Australian shark bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, like oil painting strokes
Aerial photograph of Australian shark bay (Shark Bay) blue salt field, like oil painting strokes


Tips:

Shark Bay is a World Heritage site in Gascoigne, Western Australia, about 800km north of Perth. Shark Bay is also the westernmost point in Australia. Shark Bay was named after William Danpier, one of the first Europeans to come to Australia in July 1699. Shark Bay claims to be the first place in Australia to establish ties with Europe since the Decharto landing in 1616 and the first place to be discovered and officially documented by the outside world. The west arm of Shark Bay is also known as Denham Sound..

Fish Bay also has the largest known area of seaweed, covering an area of about 4000 square kilometers, including Wooramel, the world's largest seaweed sandbank. Shark Bay also has a record of one of the largest species of seagrass, where 12 species of seaweed live, nine of which often grow together in other areas.

The laminated rocks built by microorganisms in Hamelingchi (Hamelin Pool, Western Australia), located in the south of the Gulf, have been built for more than 3, 000 years. Hamelingpool has one of the richest and most diverse types of stromatolites in the world.

Shark Bay was selected as a World Heritage site in 1991, covering an area of about 23000 square kilometers, including a number of protected areas and reserves, including Shark Bay Marine Park, Fran ç ois Pellen National Park, (Francois Peron National Park), Hamelingchi Marine Nature Reserve and many protected islands.

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