Stunned into the

Seven years of passionate pursuit of storms helped American amateur photographer Sean Heavey create incredibly close-up shots of the eye.

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Amateur photographer Sean Heavey has been "hunting storms" for 7 years.Photo: Daily Mail.

Sean Heavey, 34, works as an electrician in Glasgow town, west of Montana state, USA. This year, his close-up photo of a massive storm in Montana in July named "Mother Ship" (because creating the impression of an alien ship) was highly appreciated and determined to win. a prestigious award of prestigious National Geographic magazine.

Heavey confided in the Daily Mail that he had two friends who shared a "storm hunting" interest and that they had been traveling for the past seven years to capture images of a grand and intense landscape of nature.

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This "Mother Ship" photo captures a scene of a storm billowing over the Montana prairie at sunset in July. To create this vivid panoramic picture, Mr. Heavey meticulously paired 3 of 400 images photo of that event. The violent explosion of weather lasted for several hours and caused some minor damage to local communities before moving away. These stormy systems like this focus on mesocyclone central vortices, causing heavy rain and strong winds.

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A great storm crossed a road and continued to land on the Montana plain on July 28.

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A storm "attacked" the calm town of Glasgow, Montana in July 2007.

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The great storm was forming before pouring rain down on a field in Montana.

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The abdomen of the storm swelled as it began to spread the destruction.

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Cloudy billowing when the storm rises high in the sky.

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Rain danced across the grasslands west of Glasgow, Montana in August 2010.

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Like the apocalyptic spectacle, this incredible picture is a great achievement from a Heavey "storm hunting" trip.