Interesting and well done. Found or a set-up? Either way it's very good.
Paul
On Jun 10, 2007, at 10:55 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>
> I am nearing the end of my project:   The Intersection of Man-Made  
> and Nature
> in Contra Costa County and Surrounds  (meaning just over the border  
> into
> Alameda County basically), and here is what I  have found:
>
> No visible signs of pollution (because there are none),  well- 
> managed and
> clean landfills (which I did not take pictures of because they  were
> uninteresting), garbage by the side of the road only twice, lots of  
> wild  life (except for
> deer who mainly seem to occupy the senior community I live in),   
> lots and
> lots and lots of well managed and kept clean open space, very low  
> level  of
> ugliness, nature and man-made living side by side peacefully, a  
> seemingly  well
> contained and well-run and clean Shell refinery in Martinez (the  
> same might  not
> be said for the Shell refinery in Richmond, but I didn't explore  
> Richmond --
> I kept to central county), other seemingly well-contained and clean  
> industrial
>  plants, too many people, and too many cars, and houses being built  
> up to the
>  edges of Mt. Diablo State Park.
>
> So overall the county is doing very well  considering how rapidly  
> it has
> grown over the last twenty years. That doesn't  mean there isn't  
> pollution in the
> Delta (some maybe from refinery plants, and  it's not visible and  
> there is
> only the tail end of the Delta in CC County) and  it doesn't mean  
> there weren't
> bigger problems in the past.
>
> The main  crunch facing this county and others in the area in the  
> future is
> continued over  population. East Bay Mud has been warning for years  
> that if
> over development  occurs then there may well not be enough water  
> for everyone,
> especially in  drought years. But certain areas now have to have  
> approval for
> new development  and it has been that way for quite a while, partly  
> to avoid
> ugliness and partly  for the water situation.
>
> So I'd say CC County is basically coping with  the environmental  
> problems of
> overpopulation as well as any county in  California, which on the  
> whole, is
> overpopulated and will continue to grow in  population exponentially.
>
> That's my mini-report on what I have seen.  :-)
>
> I just got Lightroom, but have not played with its B&W conversion   
> yet, so
> this is still done in Elements 5.
>
> I also have more shots of this  from slightly different angles and  
> focal
> lengths. So this may not be the best  one.
>
> http://members.aol.com/eactivist/PAWS/pages/room.htm
>
> Comments  welcome.
>
> Marnie aka Doe  :-)
>
> ---------------------------------------------
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>
>
>
>
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