610 shoots with a Nikon D3 and a Sigma 8 mm. Very lucky because the time-lapse was started only 7 minutes before a big meteor passes through the sky...
Time lapse sequences of photographs taken with a special low-light 4K-camera by the crew of expedition 28 & 29 onboard the International Space Station from August to October, 2011.
Film en accéléré d'une phénomène naturel étonnant sous la banquise antarctique : la différence de salinité et de température provoque une stalactite de glace qui coule au font de la mer, emprisonnant oursins et étoiles de mer dans une gangue de glace.
A time-lapse taken from the front of the International Space Station as it orbits our planet at night. This movie begins over the Pacific Ocean and continues over North and South America before entering daylight near Antarctica.
Most cosmic phenomena are so far away that we can't see their movement or evolution over the course of a human lifetime. Every once in awhile, when conditions are just right, we get lucky. This is one of those times.
Regular readers know the phenomenal work of Stéphane Guisard: he takes astrophotos showing stunning, deep views of the sky. And he’s done it once again: using a fish-eye (very wide angle) lens, he captured stunning video of the entire sky from Chile.
It all started with Brian Switek (author of the marvelous paleontology book Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature) pointing out on Twitter this YouTube time-lapse video of ants completely dismantling a dead gecko.