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File talk:Hualalai from north.jpg

Nowadays, File talk:Hualalai from north.jpg has become a topic of great relevance and interest in different areas. Its impact is not limited to a single sector, but covers a wide range of areas, from technology to health, culture and politics. The File talk:Hualalai from north.jpg phenomenon has captured the attention of millions of people around the world, generating debates, reflections and actions around its meaning, implications and potential consequences. In this article, we will explore various perspectives on File talk:Hualalai from north.jpg, analyzing its evolution, its relevance in the current context and its possible impact in the future.

Accuracy dispute

This is not a picture of Hualalai. This is a picture of Mauna Kea from Waimea. Macy Wessel

-Agree with above. This is a picture of Mauna Kea, not Hualālai. Doug Morrison

well the green grass does make it look like Waimea, and Mauna Kea is southeast. From most angles Mauna Kea looks like a sharper peak, and the observatories are visible, however. This looks like more of a long ridge. The shape actually looks more like mauna loa, but that is even further away. Must have been a very unusually clear day at any rate. Hualalai would probably have this shape from the northeast, but every time I have seen it from the north the terrain was barren lava rock or dry scrub, as in the other photo. Enough doubts that I wish we had a better photo. W Nowicki (talk) 18:55, 25 January 2010 (UTC)