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360° panorama by Norbert Rau. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The Andreaskirche is center of the Andreasstift, a building complex in Worms, Germany, now housing Worms City Museum. It was was founded between 1180 and 1200 as a three-aisled Romanesque church. Compare here. Andreaskirche and Andreasstift are, during usual operation, in restoration since 2007.A publication authorization was given from the Museum of Stadt Worms.
360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The medieval fortress Coburg is with an extension of 135 x 260m one of the largest castles in Germany. "Koburgk" was first mentioned in 1056. D5300 | Sigma Fisheye 8mm | Panoramic Tripod Atome 360precision | 5 HDR Pictures | ISO 250 | 1/20 sec. | F9 | 8mm | PTGui | PaintShop Pro
360° panorama by Ackermann Ralf. Click the image to open the interactive version.
The medieval fortress Coburg is with an extension of 135 x 260m one of the largest castles in Germany. "Koburgk" was first mentioned in 1056. D5300 | Sigma Fisheye 8mm | Panoramic Tripod Atome 360precision | 5 HDR Pictures | ISO 250 | 1/20 sec. | F9 | 8mm | PTGui | PaintShop Pro
360° panorama by Lucio Virzi'. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Aerial panorama of Gran Sasso Area, with Corno Grande peak and Campo Pericoli. You can actually spot all the 5 climbers on the mountain
360° panorama by William l. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Crump Geyser was one of two geysers within the Pacific Northwest, located north of Adel, Oregon. Named after Adel rancher Charles Crump, he had this area drilled for water for irrigation & livestock around 1955, but delved deep enough that he hit a geothermal hot spot instead. For awhile, this newly formed geyser shot sprays nearly 200 feet high, reaching as high as 250*F, making it the largest continuously erupting geyser in the United States. That however changed in Spring 1960 when vandals came w/ planks & rocks, plugging it up. The Crump Hot Well & enclosure around it still sits here decades later where one can still hear the geyser making erupting sounds just within the fence down the deep bore hole, however all you see is a trace of steam. The area is still pending research for geothermal energy.