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All the cracks had gathered
Railway
Road kill
Monaro_Merino_Memory
Dalgety_20120720_021 Terra nullius road-2
  Damn.jpg - Dam(n).  The Snowy Scheme entailed the construction of some 16 dams across the mountains, ranging in size from the huge (Eucumbene, with a capacity of nearly five billion cubic metres) to the tiny (Deep Creek, capacity just five thousand cubic metres). Construction took 20 years, with work on the first dam (Guthega) starting in 1950, and the last (Talbingo) not completed until 1970.They now form a prominent, perhaps dominant, feature of the mountain landscape, especially seen when flying over the region. They fill river valleys that were previously home to remote alpine rivers.  Mountain forests, fine farming country (e.g. where the Blowering Dam now sits), whole towns (‘Old’ Adaminaby and ‘Old’ Jindabyne) have been inundated to achieve the goals of the Scheme. The names of the sixteen dams sit on a hillside looking out to the snow-covered Crackenback and Main Ranges, looking a little like monumental masonry. The windmill suggests alternative technologies for generating power and pumping irrigation water.  
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Mt_Townsend_20120719_137 No Message

 Dam(n). The Snowy Scheme entailed the construction of some 16 dams across the mountains, ranging in size from the huge (Eucumbene, with a capacity of nearly five billion cubic metres) to the tiny (Deep Creek, capacity just five thousand cubic metres). Construction took 20 years, with work on the first dam (Guthega) starting in 1950, and the last (Talbingo) not completed until 1970. They now form a prominent, perhaps dominant, feature of the mountain landscape, especially seen when flying over the region. They fill river valleys that were previously home to remote alpine rivers. Mountain forests, fine farming country (e.g. where the Blowering Dam now sits), whole towns (‘Old’ Adaminaby and ‘Old’ Jindabyne) have been inundated to achieve the goals of the Scheme. The names of the sixteen dams sit on a hillside looking out to the snow-covered Crackenback and Main Ranges, looking a little like monumental masonry. The windmill suggests alternative technologies for generating power and pumping irrigation water. | Damn.jpg
Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Date: 20-Jul-12 | Resolution: 5493 x 2969 | ISO: 400 | Exp. Time: 1/200s | Aperture: 11.0 | Focal Length: 130.0mm
Total images: 34 | Help
This image is © John Boyd Macdonald. Enquiries: info@jokar.com.au.