Millions of visitors a year come to Arizona's Grand Canyon National Park, one of the seven natural wonders of the world and the most visited national park in the western United States. However, on extremely rare days when cold air is trapped in the canyon and topped by a layer of warm air, which in combination with moisture and condensation, form the phenomenon referred to as the full cloud inversion. In what resembles something between ocean waves and fast clouds, Grand Canyon is completely obscured by fog, making the visitors feel as if they are walking on clouds.
This video was filmed as part of SKYGLOW (
https://skyglowproject.com/), an ongoing crowdfunded quest to explore the effects and dangers of urban light pollution in contrast with some of the most incredible dark sky areas in North America. This project is being produced in collaboration with International Dark-Sky Association (darksky.org), a non-profit fighting for the preservation of night skies around the globe.
6 Comments
newtboyThat last shot...stunning.
*doublepromote
siftbotDouble-Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued Friday, December 29th, 2017 9:14pm PST - doublepromote requested by newtboy.
FlowersInHisHairWonderful place. Best hole in the ground I've ever visited. Breathtaking photography of great *quality
siftbotBoosting this quality contribution up in the Hot Listing - declared quality by FlowersInHisHair.
oritteropo*length=150
siftbotThe duration of this video has been updated from unknown to 2:30 - length declared by oritteropo.
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