Kevin Palmer

  • Portfolio
  • Time Lapse
  • About
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Links
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 11 of 17
Prev Next
Less

Surfing Brontosaurus

Add to Cart Add to Lightbox Download
twitterlinkedinfacebook

After seeing only about 1 hour of clear skies over 5 nights, I was determined to catch a good aurora display on my last night in Iceland. The southern coast was showing the best weather forecast. So that is where I went, camping in the shadow of the glacier-capped Eyjafjallajökull volcano which was lit up by the moonlight. This is the same volcano that erupted 7 years ago with the giant ash cloud causing the biggest disruption to air travel since WWII. As soon as it got dark the northern lights came out and stayed the entire night. Compared to lower latitudes, the aurora up here is brighter and moves and changes so much faster. It will often appear anywhere in the sky, not just limited to the north. The aurora transformed into all kinds of interesting shapes, to me this shot looked like a surfing brontosaurus.

Copyright
Kevin Palmer
Image Size
6016x4016 / 13.4MB
Keywords
2017, Europe, Eyjafjallajokull, Eyjafjallajökull, Iceland, September, astronomy, astrophotography, aurora, aurora borealis, autumn, big dipper, brontosaurus, color, colorful, dinosaur, fall, farmland, field, gap, glacier, green, hole, kevin palmer, lights, midnight, moonlight, moonlit, mountains, night, nikon d750, north, north star, northern lights, polaris, road, rokinon 14mm f2.8, sky, snow, space, starry, stars, ursa major, volcano, Ásólfsskáli
Contained in galleries
Northern Lights, Iceland, Night Sky
After seeing only about 1 hour of clear skies over 5 nights, I was determined to catch a good aurora display on my last night in Iceland. The southern coast was showing the best weather forecast. So that is where I went, camping in the shadow of the glacier-capped Eyjafjallajökull volcano which was lit up by the moonlight. This is the same volcano that erupted 7 years ago with the giant ash cloud causing the biggest disruption to air travel since WWII. As soon as it got dark the northern lights came out and stayed the entire night. Compared to lower latitudes, the aurora up here is brighter and moves and changes so much faster. It will often appear anywhere in the sky, not just limited to the north. The aurora transformed into all kinds of interesting shapes, to me this shot looked like a surfing brontosaurus.