You know Ninja will post. Until then, here's some that may be a little out of left field. By that I mean they are not bridges or big features.
First I'd like to repent by presenting sins to burners - logs on the outslope. They can work:
A steep seasonal creek crossing is a challenge with our nothing brought in or taken out policy. Sometimes a log can be used as a sightline or mood line, rather than be part of the tread. Here we added stone-fill to catch water, slow flow and prevent "post-trail" damage downslope. Also, the log is hollow and in a fire it may help a critter survive (cross your fingers), but basically it was cut from where it had fallen across the trail line and parts of it had to go somewhere nice. As it is nowhere near the riding line, you can sit on it and check out all the natural beauty!!
My wife saw the next pic and said "That's all wrong"
The log on the downslope is solid hardwood deadfall. It was dug in either end and will rot over time (a long time). It lies on large rocks and in the pic, more water is flowing below the log than over. The sideslope is about what you see in the pic beyond the crossing. The upstream log was added to slow water flow allowing more to run through the ballast than over. 200mm had fallen on the day this pic was taken. In the 2 years since, accumulated silt on pebbles on stones on rocks has created a solid tread, level with the log and the popular trail line is well inslope of the log. One day it will drop, but the trail will remain.
The trail will be alongside this log. It will become an alternate skinny line, but the end cannot be covered as animals will use it in fire. I could survive in this one. The saw is a 1937 double with a hardwood pattern. No large rakers an stuff - we are not permitted to use chainsaws. It is an innocent bystander
Around here, this is the tradition
After the next pic, part of this "bridge" calved off. You can guess where. Someone killed it after that and now there is just a sloping junk pile to ride over
We like to try to keep the traditional style going where possible. Here is the exit of a bouncy bit into creekline that is more often sodden than dry looking from the other side
I can't take credit for the next one. Some people see this as the pinnacle of trail building. Our land manager isn't really one of them. Note the diameter of supporting struts versus wheel and tires, plus parallel tibia and femur breakers adding new and unseen challenge for the average riding bozo
Finally, one we enjoy riding a lot. All these trails are 2 way, by the way
No idea how the attached thumbnail got here, but the tool pictured had turned solid rock into wet sand. It has no place in this thread