Fri, Sep 20, 3:34 AM CDT

Lunga è la via ....

Photography Landscape posted on Sep 18, 2010
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Nella foto di oggi la strada ( Via della Bonifica ) che porta al fosso Barra dove sono piazzate le pompe di livellazione delle acque e prosegue poi fino alla strada statale Aurelia vicino a Migliarino Pisano. Foto scattata con Tokina 12-24 per dare la massima profondità alla scena esaltata da un cielo piuttosto minaccioso, nonostante il sole fosse presente. In the picture of today the road (Via della Bonifica) leading to the bar ditch where the pumps are placed in water levels, and continues until the Aurelia highway near Migliarino Pisano. Photos taken with Tokina 12-24 to give the maximum depth to the scene enhanced by a rather threatening sky, although the sun was present. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Via Aurelia is an ancient consular road started halfway through the third century BC Consul Gaius Aurelius Cotta to connect Rome to Cerveteri, then extended to link the new military colonies of Cosa and its Pyrgi founded during the third century BC Tyrrhenian coast, following the final submission of Etruria. The Aurelia (which in the numbering of roads adopted by the numbering of ANAS took Highway 1 or Via Aurelia SS1) connects Rome to France today along the Tyrrhenian Sea and Ligurian Sea. The Roman road [edit] This route, later called the Via Aurelia Vetus (Old Aurelia today) started from Porta San Pancrazio. Initially brought to Volaterrana Vada (Vada), Aurelia was then extended to the fortress of Pisa. Here, the consular road along the Tyrrhenian coast is interrupted because of two fundamental components that prevented the prosecution: on the one hand, the presence of the large wetland area that Fossae Papirianae (see Peutingeriana: Pars IV - Segmentum IV) in ' Current Versilia coast (from the Migliarino Pisano to Luni, Sarzana not far from today) on the other, the awkward and belligerent presence of Apuan, also called Mountain or Ligurian Sengauni. This artery was stopped in Pisa for centuries, while the road towards the western Ligurian and to Marseille (Massilia old) was taken by the Emperor Augustus with the Via Julia Augusta. Good day and good weekend Thanks for the comments and the favourites of previous image

Comments (37)


alanwilliams

12:04PM | Sun, 19 September 2010

road and sky coming together in a superb picture.

)

pspworkshop

1:07PM | Sun, 19 September 2010

Beautiful work Mario.

)

jascorpio

11:20PM | Sun, 19 September 2010

The sky is so beautiful, nice shot!!

)

helanker

4:22AM | Mon, 20 September 2010

Wonderful Depth in this beautiful capture. Gorgeous sky too.

)

erlandpil

8:25AM | Tue, 21 September 2010

Gorgeous photo erland

)

kasalin

4:58PM | Sat, 02 October 2010

Fabulous.... your frames are always perfect and wondferful

)

psyoshida

9:29PM | Sun, 03 October 2010

Excellent POV to view this lovely vista and blue sky. The colors all mix and blend so beautifully for a calming, tranquil scene. Just beautiful. POV eccellente per osservare questi vista e cielo blu belli. I colori tutti si mescolano così in modo bello e si mescolano per calmare, scena tranquilla. Appena bello.

  • 1
  • 2

16 75 0

00
Days
:
20
Hrs
:
25
Mins
:
32
Secs
Premier Release Product
MbM Stephanie for Genesis 8 Female
3D Models
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$16.49 USD 50% Off
$8.25 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.