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earth

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by National Aeronautics

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  Omulyakhskaya and Khromskaya

  Russia

  Along the northern Siberian coast, near Omulyakhskaya and Khromskaya Bays, the landscape is dotted with lakes. Known as thermokarst lakes, these pools are made from the thawing of frozen soil, or permafrost, and the accumulation of that melt water in low spots in the terrain.

  Although far too cold for a swim, the water is general y warm compared to the surrounding soil, so it can slowly thaw more permafrost and make the lake deepen and expand over time. Occasional y the basins merge or even drain into streams and the bay.

  Dark brown spots in the image are probably locations of former thermokarst lakes.

  Because thawing permafrost and thermokarst lakes release carbon and methane—both greenhouse gases—scientists monitor these landscapes closely because of their implications for future climate.

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  Phytoplankton on Ice

  Antarctica

  It may look like someone dyed the water, but the green hue visible off the coast of Antarctica is entirely natural. Granite Harbor, a cove near Antarctica’s Ross Sea, got its color from phytoplankton at the water’s surface. These microscopic, plant-like organisms typical y flourish here in spring and summer, when the edge of the sea ice recedes and there is ample sunlight. But scientists have noticed that, given the right conditions, they can grow in autumn, too. In March 2017, Landsat 8 captured such an event in this image.

  Sea ice, winds, sunlight, nutrient availability, and predators all factor into whether plankton can grow in large enough quantities to color the slush-ice and make it visible from space. Phytoplankton are important for the ecology of the Southern Ocean, as they are an abundant food source for zooplankton, fish, and other marine species.

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  Heart-Shaped Uummannaq

  Greenland

  It is no mystery how Uummannaq Island got its name. In Greenlandic, the word means “heart-shaped,” an apt description for the multi-peaked mountain that towers over the island.

  Located off the coast of northwestern Greenland, the mountain’s granite and gneiss peak rises sharply from sea level to about 1,170 meters (3,840 feet). The rock that makes up Uummannaq is ancient, likely forming 3.0 to 2.8 bil ion years ago.

  Well north of the Arctic Circle, Uummannaq Island is home to one of the most northerly towns in Greenland. The Earth Observing-1

  satel ite captured this image in May 2012. Sea ice still surrounded the island, but breaks in the ice—cal ed leads—exposed seawater beneath it.

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  Puma Yumco

  China

  Several hundred lakes dot the expansive Tibetan Plateau. With the average elevation exceeding 4,500 meters (14,800 feet) above sea level, these lakes are among the highest in the world.

  Recent research suggests that the number and surface area of lakes on the Tibetan Plateau has increased significantly since the 1990s.

  Puma Yumco is one of the larger lakes in southern Tibet. Tuiwa, a small vil age along the eastern edge of the lake, is reportedly one of the highest settlements in the world. Every winter, Tuiwa vil agers herd thousands of sheep across the lake’s frozen surface to two small islands, where the soil is more fertile and the forage is better.

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  Grounded in the Caspian

  Kazakhstan

  A wide variety of ice forms in the Caspian Sea, which stretches from Kazakhstan to Iran. Brown areas (top left) are part of the Volga River Delta. Just offshore, a wel -developed expanse of consolidated ice appears bright white. Farther offshore, a gray-white field of chunky, hummocked ice has detached and is slowly drifting around a polynya, an area of open water surrounded by sea ice.

  That darker patch is actual y growing young, thin ice and nilas, a term that designates sea ice crust up to 10 centimeters (4 inches) in thickness.

  The close-up shows nilas and a white, diamond-shaped piece of ice. It might look like this chunk is on the move, cutting a path through thinner ice. But it’s more likely that the “diamond” was stuck to the sea bottom and the wind pushed ice around it.

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  Ice-Covered Delta

  Canada

  In the Mackenzie River Delta of far northern Canada, snow- and ice-covered waterways stand out amid green, pine-covered land.

  Those frozen tributaries also become ice roads for trucks carrying supplies between the remote outposts of Inuvik and Tuktoyaktuk.

  The Mackenzie River system is Canada’s largest watershed, and the 10th largest water basin in the world. The river runs 4,200

  kilometers (2,600 miles) from the Columbia Icefield in the Canadian Rockies to the Arctic Ocean.

  Every so often, flooding from the Mackenzie River replenishes the surrounding lakes and ponds, some of which sit atop permafrost.

  This landscape is home to caribou, waterfowl, and a number of fish species. Also, thousands of reindeer travel through this area each year on the way to their calving grounds.

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  Appendix

  Africa

  38 Madagascar

  Lofted Over Land

  Landsat 8

  2015

  16 Mauritania

  Riding the Waves

  Landsat 8

  2016

  74 Namibia

  Plankton and Sulfur

  Aqua

  2014

  114 Namibia

  Linear Dunes Caprivi Strip

  EO-1

  2012

  124 Namibia

  Tsauchab River Bed

  ISS

  2009

  82 Tanzania

  Scarlet Lake Natron

  Landsat 8

  2017

  108 Tanzania

  The Zones of Kilimanjaro

  EO-1

  2017

  Central and East Asia

  80

  Burma (Myanmar)

  ixd

  Mergui Archipelago

  Landsat 5

  2004

  n

  94 China

  ppe

  Colorful Faults of Xinjiang

  Landsat 8

  2013

  A

  120 China

  Cultivating a Border

  Landsat 8

  2013

  THR

  26 China

  A

  Tracing the Coast

  Landsat 8

  2014

  E

  160

  138 Japan

  44 Canada

  Sea Ice at Shikotan

  EO-1

  2011

  Tea-Colored Rupert Bay

  Landsat 8

  2016

  120 Kazakhstan

  58 Canada

  Cultivating a Border

  Landsat 8

  2013

  Teeming Life in the Strait of Georgia

  Landsat 8

  2016

  104 Kazakhstan

  64 Canada

  Fanning Out in Farmland

  Landsat 8

  2013

  A Bay Sculpted by Ice

  Landsat 7

  2000

  156 Kazakhstan

  72 Canada

  Grounded in the Caspian

  Landsat 8

  2017

  Land of Lakes

  T
erra

  2001

  92 Mongolia

  78 Canada

  Megadunes and Desert Lakes

  Landsat 8

  2014

  Crater Lakes with Clear Water

  Landsat 8

  2013

  50 Russia

  136 Canada

  Bay of Whales

  Landsat 8

  2014

  Mackenzie Meets Beaufort

  Aqua

  2012

  138 Russia

  144 Canada

  Sea Ice at Shikotan

  EO-1

  2011

  Manning Island and Foxe Basin

  EO-1

  2012

  148 Russia

  158 Canada

  Omulyakhskaya and Khromskaya

  Landsat 5

  2009

  Ice-Covered Delta

  Landsat 8

  2016

  154 China

  134 Greenland

  Puma Yumco

  Landsat 8

  2017

  No Green in This Land

  Landsat 7

  2000

  Europe and West Asia

  152 Greenland

  Heart-Shaped Uummannaq

  EO-1

  2012

  18 Germany

  Cloud Shadow

  EO-1

  2012

  10

  Pacific Ocean

  A Glorious View

  Terra

  2012

  36 Iceland

  Holuhraun Lava Field

  Landsat 8

  2014

  24

  Pacific Ocean

  Making Tracks

  Aqua

  2012

  102 Iran

  Folds and Curves of the Kavir

  ISS

  2014

  12

  United States

  Punching Holes in the Sky

  Landsat 5

  2009

  76 Finland

  Åland Islands

  Landsat 5

  2011

  88

  United States

  A Curious Ensemble of

  116

  Saudi Arabia

  Wonderful Features

  Landsat 8

  2013

  Harratt Lunayyir Lava Field

  Terra

  2009

  96

  United States

  100 Sweden

  Bowknot Bend

  ISS

  2014

  A Blaze of Color

  Landsat 8

  2016

  98

  United States

  110

  United Arab Emirates

  From Rainforest to Rain Shadow

  Landsat 5

  2011

  Liwa Oasis

  Landsat 8

  2015

  130

  United States

  North America

  Swimming with Ice Cubes

  Landsat 8

  2014

  66 Bahamas

  146

  United States

  Tidal Flats and Channels

  ISS

  2010

  Ice Water

  NASA ER-2

  2014

  52 Bermuda

  Storms Stir Up Sediment

  Landsat 8

  2014

  34 Canada

  Valley Fog

  Terra

  2010

  Oceania

  South America

  42 Australia

  140 Argentina

  Channel Country

  ISS

  2016

  North Patagonia Icefield

  Landsat 8

  2017

  48 Australia

  84 Argentina

  Coral Cocos

  EO-1

  2009

  Swirling Bloom off Patagonia

  Aqua

  2010

  60 Australia

  122 Brazil

  Ephemeral Lake Frome

  EO-1

  2010

  Barrier Islands

  Landsat 5

  2006

  118

  New Zealand

  54 Brazil

  Taranaki and Egmont

  Landsat 8

  2014

  The Meeting of the Waters

  EO-1

  2012

  Oceans Atmosphere and Polar Regions

  4 Bolivia

  Curving Cloud Streets

  Aqua

  2014

  14

  Arctic Ocean

  Bering Streets

  Terra

  2010

  4 Brazil

  Curving Cloud Streets

  Aqua

  2014

  112 Antarctica

  Don Juan Pond

  EO-1

  2014

  140 Chile

  North Patagonia Icefield

  Landsat 8

  2017

  128 Antarctica

  Mertz Loses Part of Its Tongue

  EO-1

  2010

  8 Peru

  Filling the Valleys

  Landsat 8

  2015

  150 Antarctica

  Phytoplankton on Ice

  Landsat 8

  2017

  70 Trinidad

  Waves Beneath the Waves

  ISS

  2013

  132

  Arctic Ocean

  Franz Josef Land

  Terra

  2011

  56

  Atlantic Ocean

  A Lava Lamp Look at the Atlantic

  Landsat 8

  2013

  68

  Baltic Sea

  The Blooming Baltic

  Landsat 8

  2015

  62

  Barents Sea

  Dueling Blooms

  Aqua

  2014

  20

  Pacific Ocean

  Double Trouble

  Suomi NPP

  2016

  32

  South Atlantic Ocean

  Framing an Iceberg

  Suomi NPP

  2016

  6

  South Sandwich Islands

  A Trio of Plumes

  Aqua

  2016

  28

  United States

  Four Mountains Stand Out

  Landsat 8

  2013

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  ppeA

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  Acknowledgments

  Just a few names end up on the title page of a book, but it takes an entire cast of people to bring it from idea to draft to finished product. The cast for Earth begins with Maxine Aldred, Andrew Cooke, Tun Hla, and Lisa Jirousek, who shepherded the words

  and images through design and layout. Thanks are also due to

  Kathryn Hansen, Pola Lem, Rebecca Lindsey, Hol i Riebeek,

  Michon Scott, and Adam Voiland, whose reporting and writing

  contributions gave this book its depth. Joshua Stevens,

  Robert Simmon, Jesse Al en, Jeff Schmaltz, and

  Norman Kuring applied their strong visual sense and

  processing skil s to make each image pop with color and

  texture while remaining scientifical y accurate.

  TSne

  We owe a debt to our scientific and outreach col eagues, who

  MG

  keep the satel ites running, the sensors sensing, and the data

  de

  and imagery flowing. Every one of the images in this book is

  WLO

  publicly available through the Internet, truly making science

  nK

  accessible to every citizen. The Landsat teams at the U.S.

  CA

  Geological Survey and NASA, the LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS

  Rapid Response Team, and the NASA Earth Observatory

  TH

&nbs
p; deserve extra gratitude for making our planet visible to the

  RAE

  scientist and the layman every day.

  164

  Credits

  iSS Crew earth Observations Facility: 42, 66, 70, 96, 102, 124

  LAnCe/eOSdiS MOdiS Rapid Response Team: 4, 6, 10, 14, 24, 32

  MABeL Science Team: 146

  nASA earth Observatory image/LAAdS dAAC: 34, 136

  nASA earth Observatory image/nASA eO-1 data: 18, 48, 54, 60, 108, 112, 114, 128, 138, 144, 152

  nASA earth Observatory image/Suomi npp data: 20

  nASA earth Observatory image/USGS Landsat data: 8, 12, 16, 26, 28, 36, 38, 44, 50, 52, 56, 58, 64, 76, 78, 80, 82, 88, 92, 94, 98, 100, 104, 110, 118, 120, 122, 130, 134, 140, 148, 150, 154, 156, 158

  nASA Ocean Biology processing Group: 62, 68, 74, 84

  nASA/MeTi/eRSdAC/JAROS/Japan ASTeR Science Team: 72, 116, 132

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  About the Authors

  Michael Carlowicz is managing editor of the NASA Earth

  Observatory. He has written about Earth science and

  geophysics since 1991 for several NASA divisions, the

  American Geophysical Union, the Woods Hole Oceanographic

  Institution, and in three popular science books. He is a baseball player and fan, a longtime singer and guitarist, and the proud

 

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