Travel photographer Sarah Bethea captured this breathtaking photo last winter in Iceland of a setting sun’s golden rays entering an ice cave and turning a section of the cave’s ice amber.

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image showing Travel photographer Sarah Bethea captured this breathtaking photo last winter in Iceland of a setting sun’s golden rays entering an ice cave and turning a section of the cave’s ice amber.

Sumit316 on May 6th, 2020 at 16:48 UTC »

Iceland’s glacier ice caves are formed within blocks of ice and are visitable during the winter season. Bethea made two journeys to visit them, with decidedly different experiences. As the ice caves are fairly accessible by car and require just a half hour of walking on the glacier to arrive, they are a popular tourist attraction. Bethea got lucky on her first trip. It was December and she had the caves all to herself. She took advantage of the situation and the lighting produced at that time of the year to take one of her most memorable photographs.

“Although it was mid-day, it was December and the days were short and the sun stayed low on the horizon,” Bethea shares with My Modern Met. “For five minutes or so, the sun lined up just right with the cave entrance, and the ice was lit up to look like amber.”

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TooShiftyForYou on May 6th, 2020 at 16:55 UTC »

It's understandable that early humans would base entire religions on stuff like this.

carloscede2 on May 6th, 2020 at 17:41 UTC »

Alright what episode of Dark is this?