Delimitation

Fence line
Serves to circumscribe
Immediate environ

The ecological footprint of a specific population can exceed the locational carrying capacity. In a socio-economic system, property protection includes distinctively created items and possessions that provide a subsistence benefit.

“Opportunity never sneaks up on those who straddle the fence of indecision.” – Napoleon Hill

Primordial Revelations

Yet more wonders
Hot water release
Fumarole illumination

As with all things and associated appearances, nothing lasts forever. Geothermal features in the Norris Geyser Basin move around as time proceeds.

“Very little water is thrown out, while a large quantity of steam is constantly escaping, producing a peculiar sound.” – A.B. Guptill

Degree of Independence

Primary direction
Reductive theory
Architectural work

Progressive styles and changes in form always become historic with the passage of time. Any opinionated movement towards a refined, improved, or otherwise desired state must reject antecedents.

“Art is higher than reality and has no direct relation to reality.” – Piet Mondrian

Consistent Combination

Once again
Inevitably vital
Leave a mark

Over time, ample evidence appears in the “caldera” indicating stored heat and energy. Chemical elements present in geothermal mud renders the soil relatively acidic due to thermophile bacteria consuming sulfur and creating sulfuric acid, causing even further surrounding rock disaggregation.

“The park delivers big when it comes to providing visitors with views of these strange, mysterious, odd-smelling steaming vents and spouting features.” – Tori Peglar

Trucking

Lately occurs
Shinning lights
Expeditiously mellow

Involving a sufficiently complex and universal time for traveling and discovering correlations, scenes from a highway excursion open up into the future and beyond.

“What a long, strange trip it’s been.” – Robert Hunter

Yellowstone Grand Canyon

High promontory
Infinite volcanic variety
Precipitated into a gorge

Engendering powerful observational sensation, grandeur magnitude exceeding all possible measurement, prognosis, or imitation defines the sublime. The enormity of some visual phenomena is so stunning that complete comprehension is inextricable.

“The walls of the cañon are of gypsum, in some places having an incrustation of lime white as snow, from which the reflected rays of the sun produce a dazzling effect, rendering it painful to look into the gulf.” – Gustavus C. Doane

Simplot Emissions

Sulfur dioxide
Fine particulate matter
Volatile organic compounds

Essential to a modern world economy devoted to supporting an enormous human population, commercial chemical manufacturing still operates as a smokestack industry releasing exhaust gases.

“The system-wide pollution controls Simplot will install will significantly reduce sulfur dioxide emissions, which can cause serious respiratory problems and exacerbate asthma.” – Cynthia Giles

Resplendent Morning

Deeply textured
By all appearances
Splendiferously effulgent

Subjective perspective enlightens the appearance coherence of existential phenomena. The winter’s atmosphere is especially clear, etching light contours into memory plenums facilitating sympathetic awareness promulgation.

“The literature of illumination reveals this above all: although it comes to those who wait for it, it is always, even to the most practiced and adept, a gift and a total surprise.” – Annie Dillard

Plain Storage

Agrarian stockpile facility
Towering grain elevator
Gravity distribution

Besides being aesthetically congenial, silos provide an efficient method of long-term crop storage and on-demand distribution. All grain prices are subject to fluctuation at any time.

“Nobody is qualified to become a statesman who is entirely ignorant of the problem of wheat.” – Socrates

Old Power House

Last stand
Swift water rocky site
Below the dam

A remnant of an earlier settlement incarnation, this old power house persists. Just upstream from the dam, what is left of the old town site of American Falls is under the reservoir water most of the time. Starting in 1925, the Bureau of Reclamation moved the entire municipality to make way for a large dam. The project involved relocating approximately 350 residents and their houses, many businesses, schools, churches, roads, and associated infrastructure to higher ground.

“A dam is monumentally static; it tries to bring a river under control, to regulate its seasonal pattern of floods and low flow.” – Patrick McCully

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