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Beautiful video captures how water, in all of its phases, forms, is the soul and energy of Iceland 5680

13. mar 2023 20:42

It's no accident that Iceland is named after water. Water in all of its phases, frozen in the glaciers and snow covered mountains, steam at geothermal vents or running in the countless waterfalls and streams which run down the mountains, is the very soul of Iceland. Without water there would be no rainbows, waterfalls or hot springs.

Read more: 10 beautiful (and less visited) Icelandic waterfalls

This beautiful video, created by Swiss based photographer Alberto Caneba, captures the countless ways in which water appears in Iceland, juxtaposing the delicate with the dramatic, large and small, calm and powerful. From raging waterfalls and mountain sides to the thousands of tiny little rivulets and streams and geothermal pools, the video reminds us that the beuty of Iceland is not just in the large things, but frequently in the small and the delicate, and that the beauty of the dramatic, large features, is accentuated by tiny.

Iceland water from Alberto Canepa on Vimeo.

 

It's no accident that Iceland is named after water. Water in all of its phases, frozen in the glaciers and snow covered mountains, steam at geothermal vents or running in the countless waterfalls and streams which run down the mountains, is the very soul of Iceland. Without water there would be no rainbows, waterfalls or hot springs.

Read more: 10 beautiful (and less visited) Icelandic waterfalls

This beautiful video, created by Swiss based photographer Alberto Caneba, captures the countless ways in which water appears in Iceland, juxtaposing the delicate with the dramatic, large and small, calm and powerful. From raging waterfalls and mountain sides to the thousands of tiny little rivulets and streams and geothermal pools, the video reminds us that the beuty of Iceland is not just in the large things, but frequently in the small and the delicate, and that the beauty of the dramatic, large features, is accentuated by tiny.

Iceland water from Alberto Canepa on Vimeo.