
These incredible images show a daredevil dance troupe as they perform a dizzying routine while suspended more than 3,000 feet above Yosemite National Park.

High-flying members of Bandaloop appeared to soar through the air after bouncing off the granite cliffs of Mount Watkins.

Suspended from cables, the troupe fearlessly went through a series of choreographed moves to create a mesmerizing vertical display above the stunning scenery of the park.

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High-fliers: Dance troupe Bandaloop perform their incredible choreographed display on Mount Watkins in Yosemite National Park

Off the wall: The dancers are fearless as they push off from the cliff face to abseil down while performing dance moves

Vertical dancing: The six performers were suspended from cables on 8,500-foot Mount Watkins as they took part in a dizzying routine

They make it look easy but the routine requires incredible strength and endurance from the performer,s whose abdominal muscles are often screaming as they fight gravity to hold their bodies perpendicular to the face.

The Yosemite feat was filmed by journalist Lisa Landers and Emmy award-winning cinematographer Michael Graber, who are now reviewing their footage and hope to release a short film next year.

Choreographer Amelia Rudolph said she came up with the idea of the dance troupe when she was clinging to a sheer granite wall in California's Sierra Nevada in 1989.

The group has now performed on numerous rock walls, as well as some of the world' most iconic structures including Seattle's Space Needle and several skyscrapers in South Korea.

The troupe craft the displays in their studio in Oakland, California, then adapt the choreography to the specific location once there.

Supermen and women: The Bandaloop dance troupe soar through the air, arms outstretched, in their carefully crafted performance piece

Cliffhanger: The dance troupe prove the sky isn't the limit as they bounce of the vertical walls of the stunning landscape

Six dancers and a nine-person support crew headed into Yosemite's wilderness for ten days of hiking and pirouetting

The performers make it look easy to fly off the wall, but their abdominal muscles are often screaming as they fight gravity to hold their bodies perpendicular to the face

Rudolph said the moves respond to the 'architecture' of that performance. 'The dance floor is turned sideways,' she explained. 'The work is largely dancing on a wall, but it's also quite physical. Unlike dancing on a stage, divers, surfers and rock climbers operate in a world of three dimensions. 'You get really used to it.'

Six dancers and a nine-person support crew spent ten days hiking through the Yosemite wilderness for ten days for the latest show.

Each carried 40-pound packs holding everything from food-filled bear canisters to toilet paper and sewing kits in case any costumes needed mending.

The performance took place on the face of 8,500-foot Mount Watkins, a stage that offers a rare perspective of Half Dome, in front of an audience of birds, bugs, squirrels, and perhaps a bear or two.

The dancers often worked in pairs as they 'flew' gracefully above the scenery during the abseil down.

The dancers combine modern choreography with rock-climbing technology to create mesmerizing performances on the sides of buildings, bridges, cliffs and other vertical stages

Choreographer Amelia Rudolph said she creates dances in her studio in Oakland, California, for a '3D stage'

The group perform thousands of feet above the ground - keeping a constant eye out for jagged rocks or crumbling sandstone

The troupe held its first show on a climbing wall in 1989 and since then has performed on some of the world's most iconic structures

The California-based troupe has danced on Seattle’s Space Needle, Mumbai’s skyscrapers - and now the cliffs of Yosemite

It takes great strength and endurance from the performers to be able to lift off from the cliff face and 'fly' gracefully

In one graceful move, the performers work as pairs told hold hands as they hang suspended upside down on the side of the mountain

The performers have to adapt the choreography to the specific location once they get there, as they never know what it will exactly be like

The sun sets on the stunning and dramatic scenery of Yosemite national park as the dancers continue to perform their routine

One daredevil dancers performs sideways moves on the granite cliffs while suspended 3,000 feet above Yosemite National Park

The troupe of dancers were tethered together by harnesses and ropes, and then belayed by riggers from above

Wearing costumes of yellow and green, and burnt red and orange, the dancers appear to mimic the scenery around them

Dancers limber up for the choreographed routine which relies on strong abdominal and arm muscles to make it appear as though they are walking on air

Amelia, the group's founder and artistic director, said that for Bandaloop - the dance floor is turned sideways while the moves themselves can be 'quite physical'