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Marine iguana, underwater, forages for green algae that grows on the lava reef. Lava Photo.
Image ID: 16227
Species: Marine iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus
Location: Bartolome Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Darwins Arch, a dramatic 50-foot tall natural lava arch, rises above the ocean a short distance offshore of Darwin Island. Lava Picture.
Image ID: 16621
Location: Darwin Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Lava tube terminates at shoreline. Stock Photography of Lava.
Image ID: 03683
Location: Guadalupe Island (Isla Guadalupe), Baja California, Mexico |
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Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Photograph of Lava.
Image ID: 23266
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Lava Photos.
Image ID: 23267
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Lava Image.
Image ID: 23285
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA |
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Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Professional stock photos of Lava.
Image ID: 23281
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Pictures of Lava.
Image ID: 23282
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Lava Photo.
Image ID: 23283
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA |
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Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Lava Picture.
Image ID: 23284
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Stock Photography of Lava.
Image ID: 23286
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA | Devil's Postpile, a spectacular example of columnar basalt. Once molten and under great pressure underground, the lava that makes up Devil's Postpile cooled evenly and slowly, contracting and fracturing into polygonal-sided columns. The age of the formation is estimated between 100 and 700 thousand years old. Sometime after the basalt columns formed, a glacier passed over the formation, cutting and polishing the tops of the columns. The columns have from three to seven sides, varying because of differences in how quickly portions of the lava cooled. Photograph of Lava.
Image ID: 23287
Location: Devils Postpile National Monument, California, USA |
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Volcanic debris, small lava rocks scattered about the Eureka Valley. Lava Photos.
Image ID: 25340
Location: Eureka Valley, Death Valley National Park, California, USA | Paulet Island, near the Antarctic Peninsula, is a cinder cone flanks by lava flows on which thousands of Adelie Penguins nest. Lava Image.
Image ID: 26358
Location: Paulet Island, Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica | Paulet Island, near the Antarctic Peninsula, is a cinder cone flanks by lava flows on which thousands of Adelie Penguins nest. Professional stock photos of Lava.
Image ID: 26359
Location: Paulet Island, Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica |
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Paulet Island, near the Antarctic Peninsula, is a cinder cone flanks by lava flows on which thousands of Adelie Penguins nest. Pictures of Lava.
Image ID: 24824
Location: Paulet Island, Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica | Paulet Island, near the Antarctic Peninsula, is a cinder cone flanks by lava flows on which thousands of Adelie Penguins nest. Lava Photo.
Image ID: 26361
Location: Paulet Island, Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica | Paulet Island, near the Antarctic Peninsula, is a cinder cone flanks by lava flows on which thousands of Adelie Penguins nest. Lava Picture.
Image ID: 24891
Location: Paulet Island, Antarctic Peninsula, Antarctica |
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Marine iguana, underwater, forages for green algae that grows on the lava reef. Stock Photography of Lava.
Image ID: 16228
Species: Marine iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus
Location: Bartolome Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Undine Falls, between Mammoth and Tower in Yellowstone National Park, marks where Lava Creek drops 110 feet in two sections. Photograph of Lava.
Image ID: 13304
Location: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA | Undine Falls, between Mammoth and Tower in Yellowstone National Park, marks where Lava Creek drops 110 feet in two sections. Lava Photos.
Image ID: 13305
Location: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA |
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Undine Falls, between Mammoth and Tower in Yellowstone National Park, marks where Lava Creek drops 110 feet in two sections. Lava Image.
Image ID: 13306
Location: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA | Undine Falls, between Mammoth and Tower in Yellowstone National Park, marks where Lava Creek drops 110 feet in two sections. Professional stock photos of Lava.
Image ID: 13307
Location: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA | Undine Falls, between Mammoth and Tower in Yellowstone National Park, marks where Lava Creek drops 110 feet in two sections. Pictures of Lava.
Image ID: 13308
Location: Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA |
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Lava lizard. Lava Photo.
Image ID: 16584
Location: North Seymour Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Lava heron on volcanic rocks at the oceans edge, Punta Albemarle. Lava Picture.
Image ID: 16585
Species: Lava heron, Butorides sundevalli
Location: Isabella Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Lava heron on volcanic rocks at the oceans edge, Punta Albemarle. Stock Photography of Lava.
Image ID: 16586
Species: Lava heron, Butorides sundevalli
Location: Isabella Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador |
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Lava heron on volcanic rocks at the oceans edge, Punta Albemarle. Photograph of Lava.
Image ID: 16587
Species: Lava heron, Butorides sundevalli
Location: Isabella Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Lava heron on volcanic rocks at the oceans edge, Punta Albemarle. Lava Photos.
Image ID: 16588
Species: Lava heron, Butorides sundevalli
Location: Isabella Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador | Lava heron on volcanic rocks at the oceans edge, Punta Albemarle. Lava Image.
Image ID: 16589
Species: Lava heron, Butorides sundevalli
Location: Isabella Island, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador |
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