Nancy Pierce, Documentary Photographer

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Trees - Not Mecklenburg County { 18 images } Created 25 Jan 2016

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  • Roots of a Bald Cypress, normally underwater, are exposed as lake water was drawn down to kill invasive weed during winter frost
    Bald Cypress Trees-01.JPG
  • Misty dawn in a Bald Cypress wetland, Cheraw State Par, Cheraw, South Carolina
    Bald Cypress Trees-02.jpg
  • Bald Cypress trees are a brilliant red in autumn
    Bald Cypress Trees-03.jpg
  • Bald Cypress trees are a brilliant red in autumn
    Bald Cypress Trees-04.jpg
  • Misty dawn in a Bald Cypress wetland,  Cheraw State Par, Cheraw, South Carolina
    Bald Cypress Trees-05.JPG
  • Misty dawn in a Bald Cypress wetland, Cheraw State Par, Cheraw, South Carolina
    Bald Cypress Trees-07.jpg
  • Hemlock trees in the Cataloochee Valley in western North Carolina are becoming diseased because of hte Wooly Adelgid, a non-native insect which is killing the legacy Hemlocks in the southern Appalachian Valleys . This was a several hundred-year-old tree that fell after Adelgid infestation
    Hemlock Trees-01.jpg
  • Hemlock trees in the Cataloochee Valley in western North Carolina are becoming diseased because of the Wooly Adelgid, a non-native insect which is killing the legacy Hemlocks in the southern Appalachian Valleys . This is a fairly young (30-40 years) stand of Hemlocks that have been treated to avoid the insect.
    Hemlock Trees-02.tif
  • A Sycamore Tree frames a paddler on Fishing Creek in Chester County, SC. The Creek, a tributary of the Catawba River, will become a designated paddling trail with landing built by Duke Energy as part of its Catawba-Wateree comprehensive hydro-relicensing agreement, allowing it to operate hydro dams on the River for anbother 50 years.
    Sycamore Tree-01.jpg
  • Exposed and tangled tree roots barely hold back natural erosion at the edge of the Catawba River, Lancaster County, South Carolina
    Tree roots-01.jpg
  • Exposed and tangled tree roots barely hold back natural erosion at the edge of the Catawba River, Lancaster County, South Carolina
    Tree roots-02.jpg
  • Exposed and tangled tree roots barely hold back natural erosion at the edge of the Catawba River, Lancaster County, South Carolina
    Tree roots-03.jpg
  • Exposed roots after a tree fell at the edge of the river
    Tree roots-04.jpg
  • A mix of wetland hardwoods at the edge of a cypress swamp
    Trees-wetland-01.jpg
  • A mix of wetland hardwoods at the edge of a cypress swamp
    Trees-wetland-02.jpg
  • Spanish moss on trees in Pender County, NC
    Spanish Moss_02.jpg
  • Spanish moss on trees in Pender County, NC
    Spanish Moss_01.jpg
  • Spanish moss on trees in Pender County, NC
    Spanish Moss_03.jpg