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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
Alex Smith
- Explore score
- 22
- Size
- 0.05 Gigapixels
- Views
- 1899
- Date added
- July 29, 2009
- Date taken
- July 13, 2009
- Categories
- Galleries
- Competitions
- Tags
- national, morne, gros, newfoundland, biobus, biodiversity22, fofs, park
- Description
-
13-Jul-09
Behind the group camping area, Berry Hill, Gros Morne National Park, where we stashed the BioBus, there was a dry-ish bog where we set the Malaise trap and the pitfall traps.
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3864 (Windows)
Panorama size: 51 megapixels (18012 x 2836 pixels)
Input images: 12 (12 columns by 1 rows)
Field of view: 176.4 degrees wide by 27.8 degrees high (top=19.5, bottom=-8.3)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: Canon
Camera model: Canon PowerShot SD880 IS
Image size: 3648x2736 (10.0 megapixels)
Capture time: 2009-07-13 08:50:26 - 2009-07-13 08:51:45
Aperture: f/3.2 - f/6.3
Exposure time: 0.002 - 0.003125
ISO: 80
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 39.2 mm
Digital zoom: off
White balance: Fixed
Exposure mode: Manual
Horizontal overlap: 39.3 to 76.2 percent
Computer stats: 1975.95 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 7:36 (0:38 per picture)
Alignment: 0:36, Projection: 1:52, Blending: 5:07

fetching snapshots...
Alex Smith (July 31, 2009, 01:11PM )
A very sad trap for the flying insects it collects! Rene Malaise was a Swedish entomologist who designed these passive traps (like a tent fly) that immediately produced many species never before seen by science! (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/René_Malaise
)
Tom Nelson (July 29, 2009, 07:05PM )
What were you trapping? What's a Malaise trap? Sounds very sad.