A photographer in Canada has captured remarkable pictures of trees frozen in time by the frigid waters of Lake Ontario.
Timothy Corbin discovered that trees encased in ice after violent winter storms on the lake sent waves crashing after the shore.
The frigid water created shapes and structures that seem to defy gravity and explanation.
Corbin, a native of tropical Trinidad, now lives in snowy of eastern Ontario.
He says he came into photography when he bought a Cannon digital SLR camera just two years ago.
He immediately realized that landscapes and scenery photography interested him most.
Lake Ontario is the smallest of the five Great Lakes. It borders eastern Ontario, Canada, and Upstate New York.
At 7,300 square miles, it is roughly the size of New Jersey.
These incredible ice formations reveal just how
cold the brutal winds from Lake Ontario were in order to allow the water
to freeze in the manner it did
Dusk: The ice and light combine the create a mythical feel on the shores of Lake Ontario
Dripping: The water seemed to freeze in place as it dropped from the branches and trunks of the trees
The photos were captured by Timothy Corbin, who says his passion has always been photographing landscapes
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