Great Satellite Images .... With Excellent Descriptions
Great Satellite Images .... With Excellent Descriptions
This shows the Niagara River that connects Lake Erie to Lake Ontario, snaking around Goat
Island, in the lower left of the full Image. Most of the river's water plummets over the
Canadian/Horseshoe Falls, but some diverted water spills over American Falls and Bridal Veil
Falls downstream. Every second, more Than two million liters of water plunges over the
Horsehoe Falls Segment of Niagara Falls creating one of the world's largest Waterfalls as well as
eating away as much as two meters of rock per Year. The image was acquired August 2, 2004
Tsunami strikes the coast of Sri Lanka
This IKON OS satellite image of Ayers Rock was collected Jan. 17, 2004. Ayers
Rock is located in Kata Tjuta National Park, 280 miles 450km) southwest of Alice
Springs, Australia. It is the world's largest monolith, an Aboriginal sacred site
and Australia's most famous natural landmark.
Noah's Ark Site?
Is it or isn't it? Satellite
images of Mt. Ararat,
Turkey have pointed to
a possible sighting of
Noah's Ark. Decide for
yourself! Compare this
image taken by Digital
Globe on September 10,
2003 with Shamrock --
The Trinity
Corporation's image
(enlarge). Also, note
their image is flipped.
The Nile
River
This image of the Nile River was captured by the MISR's nadir camera on January 30, 2001.
Against the barren desert of northeastern Africa, the fertile valley of the Nile River runs
northward through Egypt. The city of Cairo can be seen as a gray smudge right where the river
widens into its broad fan-shaped delta. Where the Nile empties into the Mediterranean Sea (top)
the waters are swirling with color, likely a mixture of sediment, organic matter, and possibly
marine plant life. Farther west, the bright blue color of the water is likely less-organically rich
Earth's City Lights
This image of Earth's city lights, captured on October 19, 2000, was created with data from
the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) Operational Linescan System (OLS).
The brightest areas of the Earth are the most urbanized, but not necessarily the most
populated. Cities tend to grow along coastlines and transportation networks. The United
States interstate highway system appears as a lattice connecting the brighter dots of city
centers. In Russia, the Trans-Siberian railroad is a thin line stretching from Moscow
through the center of Asia to Vladivostok. The Nile River, from the Aswan Dam to the
Mediterranean Sea, is another bright thread through an otherwise dark region.
Mount St. Helens, Washington
On a Space Station expedition, astronauts observed and captured this detailed image of the
volcano's summit caldera. In the center of the crater sits a lava dome that is 876 feet above
the crater floor and is about 3,500 feet in diameter. The dome began to form after the May
18, 1980 eruption of Mount Saint Helens. After the eruption, there was not any dome
building eruptions for more than a decade. Afternoon lighting accents the flow features in
the volcanic and debris flows and the steep valleys eroded into the loosely consolidated
material near the summit. This picture was taken on October 25, 2002.