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Clip Details
- Clip ID#:
- 11855955
- Number of Views:
- 0
- Model Released:
- No
- Downloads:
- 0
- Property Released:
- No
- Date Uploaded:
- 27 Aug 2012
- Date Created:
- 2012 Aug -
- Frame Rate:
- 29.97 FPS
- Matte attached:
- No
- Alpha channel:
- No
- Seemless Looping:
- No
- Duration:
- 00:00:18,15
- Audio:
- none
Description
This is a high dynamic range time lapse. Each video frame is three photos taken at different exposures and merged into one HDR frame and sequenced in a video clip with even exposure throughout the frame.
Maui Imagery
Kauai Imagery
Oahu Imagery
Hawaii Everything



































































































Early Hawaiians applied the name Haleakalā ("house of the sun") to the general mountain. Haleakalā is also the name of a peak on the south western edge of Kaupō Gap. In Hawaiian folklore, the depression at the summit of Haleakalā was home to the grandmother of the demigod Māui. According to the legend, Māui's grandmother helped him capture the sun and force it to slow its journey across the sky in order to lengthen the day.
The tallest peak of Haleakalā, at 10,023 feet (3,055 m), is Puʻu ʻUlaʻula (Red Hill). From the summit one looks down into a massive depression some 11.25 km (7 mi) across, 3.2 km (2 mi) wide, and nearly 800 m (2,600 ft) deep. The surrounding walls are steep and the interior mostly barren-looking with a scattering of volcanic cones.
Maui Imagery
Kauai Imagery
Oahu Imagery
Hawaii Everything
Early Hawaiians applied the name Haleakalā ("house of the sun") to the general mountain. Haleakalā is also the name of a peak on the south western edge of Kaupō Gap. In Hawaiian folklore, the depression at the summit of Haleakalā was home to the grandmother of the demigod Māui. According to the legend, Māui's grandmother helped him capture the sun and force it to slow its journey across the sky in order to lengthen the day.
The tallest peak of Haleakalā, at 10,023 feet (3,055 m), is Puʻu ʻUlaʻula (Red Hill). From the summit one looks down into a massive depression some 11.25 km (7 mi) across, 3.2 km (2 mi) wide, and nearly 800 m (2,600 ft) deep. The surrounding walls are steep and the interior mostly barren-looking with a scattering of volcanic cones.
Location: Hawaii, United States
Source: Canon 5d M2


