The image above is of my car, as viewed from above the riverbed in which I was searching for the red buffalo.
So, where is the car? you wondered…
Well, first you need to click on the enlargement link—which will open an easier to view enlargement in a new browser tab. For consulting this page will remain open.
Next, in the enlargement you will note that intruding into the frame from right is darker, low-rising mountainous terrain dividing the sky from the ground at the horizon. Follow the darker mountainous terrain to where it tapers to an end at the photograph’s center. Just a smidgen below that—and slightly to the right—are two shiny objects hardly larger than specks. The left-most object is a truck that was there when I arrived and the right-most object is my car.
The original image is a Tagged Image Format File (TIFF) with a file data size of 35.1 megabytes (MB).
For display on this web site the TIFF was duplicated and the duplicate re-formatted as a Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPG/JPEG) image with a file data size of 11.8 MB. To approximate detail visible at the time of capture the image was sharpened as necessary and resampled via the Photoshop Bicubic Sharpen algorithm. The re-sampling increases the image resolution from 300 Dots Per Square Inch (DPI) to 360 DPI.
Unless otherwise noted the image was corrected to offset color shift and balance. This restores black (shadows), white (highlights) and neutral gray (neutral mid-tones).
• An unnumbered image is the only one of the subject matter.
• A number corresponds to the sequential order in a subject-matter-related sequence.
• The letter “B” indicates color correction to approximate what was visible when the image was captured.
• The letter “C” indicates enhancement beyond an approximation of what was visible at the time of capture.