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Rainbow Room

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Welcome to the mindat.org media viewer. Here is a quick guide to some of the options available to you. Different controls are available depending on the type of media being shown (photo, video, animation, 3d image)

Controls - all media types

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Use the mouse or your finger to drag the image or the view area of the image around the screen.

< and > at the left and right hand side of the screen move forwards and backwards for the other images associated with the media you selected. Usually this is used for previous/next photo in a gallery, in an article or in search results. Keyboard shortcuts: use shift + the left and right arrow keys.

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Other keyboard shortcuts:

1Fit image to screen
2Fill screen with image
5Display at full resolution
<Make background darker
>Make background lighter
spaceHide/dim titles and buttons

Scalebar

If the field of view (FOV) is specified for the photo, the scalebar appears in the left bottom corner of the viewer. The scalebar is draggable and resizeable. Drag the right edge to resize it. Double click will reset the scalebar to it's default size and position. If the scalebar is in default position, double click will make it circular.

Controls - Video

Video files have a standard set of video controls: - Reset to start, - Skip back, - Play, - Pause, - Skip forwards. Keyboard shortcuts: You can stop/start video play with the P key.

Controls - Animation (Spin Rotation)

Animation (usually 360 degree spin rotations) have their own controls: - enable spin mode. Note that while images are loading this option will not be available but will be automatically activated when the animation has loaded. Once active you can spin the image/change the animation by moving your mouse or finger on the image left/right or by pressing the [ or ] keys.

The button switches to move mode so that you can use your mouse/fingers to move the image around the screen as with other media types.

The button, or the P key will start playing the animation directly, you can interrupt this by using the mouse or finger on the image to regain manual movement control.

Controls - 3D Stereoscopic images

If a stereoscopic 3D image is opened in the viewer, the 3D button appears in the bottom right corner giving access to "3D settings" menu. The 3D images can be viewed in several ways:
- without any special equipment using cross-eyed or parallel-eyed method
- with stereoscope
- with anaglyph glasses.
- on a suitable 3D TV or monitor (passive 3D system)

For details about 3D refer to: Mindat manuals: Mindat Media Viewer: 3D

To enable/disable 3D stereo display of a compatible stereo pair image press the 3 key. If the left/right images are reversed on your display (this often happens in full-screen mode) press the 4 key to reverse them.

Controls - photo comparison mode

If a photo with activated comparison mode is opened in the viewer, the button appears in the bottom right corner giving access to "Comparison mode settings" menu.

Several layouts are supported: slider and side by-side comparison with up to 6 photos shown synchronously on the screen. On each of the compared photos a view selector is placed, e.g.:  Longwave UV ▼. It shows the name of currently selected view and allows to select a view for each placeholder.

Summary of all keyboard shortcuts

1Fit image to screen
2Fill screen with image
3Switch to 3D display of stereo pair
4Switch left/right images in 3D mode
5Display at full resolution
<, >Make background darker/lighter
H or ?Show/hide this help page
PPlay/Pause Video or Animation
[, ]Backwards/forwards one frame (Animation only)
spaceHide/dim titles and buttons
up arrowShow information box
down arrowHide information box
left arrowPrevious child photo
right arrowNext child photo
shift + left arrowPrevious image on the page
shift + right arrowNext image on the page


Copyright © 2022 Harold Moritz
 
 
 
 

Rainbow Room

Copyright © 2022 Harold Moritz   - Creative Commons Non-Commercial Share Alike Licence - Some Rights Reserved

The famous Rainbow Room in the Sterling Mine (where a short side tunnel intersects the western ore vein) as seen under SW UV light. Fluorescent colors are: orange-red calcite, green willemite, blue hydrozincite, yellow wollastonite. UV mine tour April 2008.

This photo has been shown 2301 times
Photo added:24th Jan 2011
Dimensions:2754x1617px (4.45 megapixels)

Data Identifiers

Mindat Photo ID:363349 📋 (quote this with any query about this photo)
Long-form Identifier:mindat:1:4:363349:3 📋
GUID:f40fcf61-8a83-42fe-93e2-e51e8c623def 📋

Discuss this Photo

PhotosSterling Mine, Sterling Hill, Ogdensburg, Franklin Mining District, Sussex Co., New Jersey, USA

24th Jan 2011 18:10 UTCClosed Account 🌟

Thank you for uploading all these pictures from Franklin! They are awesome to behold! For the many of us that probably will not have the possibility to see this in real life this is really great! I sincerely hope that one of these pictures makes it POTD!


Branko

24th Jan 2011 20:56 UTCHarold Moritz 🌟 Expert

Branko:

If you are referring to the ones I uploaded in the last two days, you are welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed them. I have more, showing outdoor walls of fluorescing ore at night, but am waiting for Chet to tell me which locality page to assign them to.

Sterling Hill it is not that difficult to get to from Europe. It is only an hour or two drive from the New York City area airports. Much can been seen on regular daily tours. An extended (upper mill) mine tour/UV mine tour and night collecting is scheduled for April 30, 2011. Go to uvworld.org for information on that special event. Also see sterlinghillminingmuseum.org for regular museum tour/event information.

Harold

24th Jan 2011 21:24 UTCClosed Account 🌟

Harold,


yes these are the pictures I am talking about. For reasons that I have touched shortly on another thread http://www.mindat.org/forum.php?read,17,206546,207316#msg-207316 I will not go to the US in the foreseeable future, so your pictures is what I have. Thanks for the links, they give a wealth of information!


I am looking forward for things still to come!


Branko

25th Jan 2011 00:27 UTCStephen Eglinton

Harold,


Your photos brought back some wonderful memories of when i visited the Sterling Mine, back in 2008.

Utterly amazing place! And i feel your pics portray this very well.

I doubt i will ever get the opportunity to do this again.


Many, many thanks.


Steve.

25th Jan 2011 04:06 UTCWarren Cummings Expert

Looking at the photos I'm both amazed and saddened that it never occurred to me, not once that I can recall, to take pictures in and around the Sterling Mine when I worked there 40+ years ago.

26th Jan 2011 14:16 UTCHarold Moritz 🌟 Expert

Thank you all for the nice comments. I try to take pictures of things that are useful and composed in an informative way, and I try to write more info in the caption so that the picture has more context. Sterling Hill is a very diverse and complex place with a LOT of history, and changes still go on today. I was surprised there were not that many locality photos up already considering the number of folks that go there these days. I've been going there a few times a year for 20 years and still learn new things about it. I'd take more photos but I'm usually very busy digging and the dust and sand and, if it rains, water are not friendly to digital cameras! I'd like to take more photos during a UV mine tour, but the exposures require tripod setup and there just isnt time and it is crowded with people all bumping into each other and things in the semi-darkness, I was lucky to get the ones I did. It would be nice to be able to put a Google Earth or other aerial image up that could be annotated to show the various places and things depicted in the locality photos, but I obviously do not have rights to post those images.


Branko, we here all feel your pain, too, though to a lesser degree, and a trip through an airport now could include a state-sanctioned sexual assault. The TSA is out of control and appears to be beholden to no one. I used to enjoy flying, now...well this isn't the place to get into this topic too deeply.

26th Jan 2011 14:57 UTCDavid Bernstein Expert

I'm digging these locality shots of Sterling Hill also. Hard to believe with all the places I've been in this state and around the world- that I've never been collecting there or toured the mine. I've never been to the Statute of Liberty either.
 
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