Portal:Earth sciences/Selected pictures

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Box-header/colours' not found.

Nominations

Kindly follow Portal:Earth sciences/Selected pictures/Layout

1

Etna smoke seen from space
Credit: NASA, with image edits by User:Darkone

A 2002 eruption of Mount Etna, a volcano on the Italian island of Sicily, viewed from the International Space Station

...Archive/Nominations


2

Sihlsee
Credit: Markus Bernet

Northern shore meadows of Sihlsee, an artificial lake near Einsiedeln in the Canton of Schwyz, Switzerland.

...Archive/Nominations


3

Geological exfoliation of Granite rock
Credit: Taken by Wing-Chi Poon on 2nd April 2005

Pressure release of granite in the Enchanted Rock State Natural Area of Texas, USA. The photo shows the geological exfoliation of granite dome rock.

...Archive/Nominations


4

Trillium Lake
Credit: Oregon's Mt. Hood Territory

Mount Hood reflected in Mirror Lake, Oregon.

...Archive/Nominations


5

Top of Atmosphere
Credit: NASA's Earth Observatory

Atmospheric gases scatter blue wavelengths of visible light more than other wavelengths, giving the Earth’s visible edge a blue halo. At higher and higher altitudes, the atmosphere becomes so thin that it essentially ceases to exist. Gradually, the atmospheric halo fades into the blackness of space.

...Archive/Nominations


6

Full Moon partially obscured by the atmosphere of Earth.
Credit: NASA

Astronauts aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery recorded this rarely seen phenomenon of the full Moon partially obscured by the atmosphere of Earth. The image was recorded with an electronic still camera at 15:15:15 GMT, Dec. 21, 1999

...Archive/Nominations


7

Ireland from space
Credit: MODIS

A true-color picture of Ireland, as seen from space, with the Atlantic Ocean to the west and the Irish Sea to the east.

...Archive/Nominations


8

Credit: Landsat 7

The Richat Structure is a depression in the country of Mauritania, almost 50 km (30 mi) across. It was originally thought to be the impact of a meteorite. Now it is thought to be a symmetrical uplift (circular anticline or dome) that has been exposed to erosion. In this false-color photo, bedrock is brown, sand is yellow and white, vegetation is green, and salty sediments are blue.

...Archive/Nominations


9

Edwards Air Force Base
Credit: NASA

The world's largest compass rose, drawn on the desert floor at Edwards Air Force Base in California, United States. Painted on the playa near Dryden Flight Research Center, it is inclined to magnetic north and is used by pilots for calibrating heading indicators.

...Archive/Nominations


10

Oceans
Credit: Alexandre Van de Sande

Oceans cover almost three quarters (71%) of the surface of the Earth, and nearly half of the world's marine waters are over 3000 m deep. This global, interconnected body of salt water, called the World Ocean, is divided by the continents and archipelagos into the following five bodies, from the largest to the smallest: the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean, the Southern Ocean, and the Arctic Ocean. Official boundaries are defined by the International Hydrographic Organization.

...Archive/Nominations


11

Cyclone Gafilo
Credit: Terra satellite, NASA

Satellite image of Cyclone Gafilo, a powerful Category 5 tropical cyclone which struck Madagascar in March 2004, causing devastating damage. This was taken just before landfall, when the system was at its peak intensity about 333 km (207 mi) east of Madagascar, with sustained windspeed of 260 km/h (160 mph). At least 250 people were listed dead, with more missing, and 300,000 people were left homeless due to Gafilo.

...Archive/Nominations


12

Sand dunes of Erg Chebbi, Morocco
Credit: Rosa Cabecinhas and Alcino Cunha

Erg Chebbi (Arabic: عرج شبّي‎‎) is the sole Saharan erg in Morocco. It is 22 km long (North-South) and 5 km wide. Its dunes reach a maximum height of 150 meters. It is located roughly 40 kilometers south-east of Erfoud. The local center for tourists is the village of Merzouga.

...Archive/Nominations


13

A rolling thundercloud over Enschede, The Netherlands
Credit: John Kerstholt

A thunderstorm is a form of severe weather involving lightning and thunder. Thunderstorms have had a lasting and powerful influence on mankind. Romans thought them to be battles waged by Jupiter. Thunderstorms were associated with the Thunderbird, held by Native Americans to be a servant of the Great Spirit.

...Archive/Nominations


14

Tracks of all tropical cyclones, 1985 to 2005
Credit: Nilfanion

This map shows the tracks of all tropical cyclones which formed worldwide from 1985 to 2005. The points show the locations of the storms at six-hourly intervals and use the color scheme shown on the right from the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.

...Archive/Nominations


15

Winter trees covered in snow
Credit: Richard Fabi

Winter is one of the four seasons of temperate zones. Meteorological winter is the season having the shortest days (which vary greatly according to latitude) and the lowest temperatures.

...Archive/Nominations


16

Cirrus cloud
Credit: Piccolo Namek

Cirrus clouds are composed of ice crystals and shaped like hairlike filaments. They are formed at an altitudes above 5000 metres (16,500 feet). The streaks are made of snowflakes that are falling from the cloud and being caught by the high level winds. The streaks point in the direction of the wind and may appear straight giving the clouds the appearance of a comma (cirrus uncinus), or may by seem tangled, an indication of high level turbulence.

...Archive/Nominations


17

The eyewall of Hurricane Katrina
Credit: NOAA

Hurricane Katrina was the third most powerful storm of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. It first made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane just north of Miami, Florida on August 25, 2005, then again on August 29 along the Central Gulf Coast near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana as a Category 4 storm. This photograph of the eye of the hurricane was taken from a NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft on August 28, 2005.

...Archive/Nominations


18

Mount Etna
Credit: Expedition 5 crew

An October 2002 eruption of Mount Etna, a volcano on the Italian island of Sicily, as seen from the International Space Station. Etna is the largest of Italy's three active volcanoes and one of the most active in the world. This eruption, one of Etna's most vigorous in years, was triggered by a series of earthquakes. Ashfall was reported as far away as Libya, 600 km (373 mi) to the south.

...Archive/Nominations


19

Antarctica
Credit: NASA

Antarctica, the continent surrounding the Earth's South Pole, is the coldest place on earth and is almost entirely covered by ice. Antarctica was discovered in late January 1820. Too cold and dry to support virtually any vascular plants, Antarctica's flora presently consists of around 250 lichens, 100 mosses, 25-30 liverworts, and around 700 terrestrial and aquatic algal species.

...Archive/Nominations


20

Glacial lakes, Bhutan
Credit: NASA & USGS

Glacier retreat is a type of glacial motion in which more material ablates from its terminus of the glacier than is replenished by flow into that region. In this region of the Bhutan-Himalaya, glacial lakes have been rapidly forming on the surface of the debris-covered glaciers and researchers have found a strong correlation between increasing temperatures and glacial retreat.

...Archive/Nominations


21

Ant preserved in amber - About 7 mm long.
Credit: Anders L. Damgaard (see www.amber-inclusions.dk).

Amber, a fossilized resin secreted from trees, sometimes catches animals or plant matter as it hardens, and can preserve tissues that are not normally preserved in fossils.

...Archive/Nominations


22

Pahoehoe fountain, approximately 10 meters high
Credit: Jim D. Griggs, HVO (USGS) staff photographer, (Selected Images of the Pu‘u ‘O‘o–Kupaianaha Eruption, 1983–1997)

Puʻu ʻŌʻō, a cinder/spatter cone in the eastern rift zone of the Kīlauea volcano of the Hawaiian Islands, has been erupting continuously since January 3, 1983, making it the longest-lived rift-zone eruption of the last two centuries.

...Archive/Nominations