• ES Picture of the Day 28 2022

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Fri Jan 28 11:01:20 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Venus and the Moon and Lazzaretto at Civitavecchia

    January 28, 2022


    Lazzaretto-congiunzione

    Photographer: Marco Meniero

    Summary Author: Marco Meniero

    The photo above shows the ancient hospital of Lazzaretto at
    Civitavecchia (near Rome, Italy), with the crescent Moon at right
    and Venus at center (in one of the “windows”). Some 2,000 years
    ago, this structure, initially consisting of a turret that also served
    as a lighthouse, was part of a project commissioned by the Emperor
    Trajan for the port of Civitavecchia (Rome). Apollodorus of
    Damascus (107 AD) was the architect. Over the centuries this structure
    underwent a number of restorations. In 1656 a plague epidemic
    rapidly spread, and the fort, which it was at the time, was transformed
    into a shelter for people who were contagious.

    Why is the hospital pink? The main monuments of Italy all turned pink
    in 2021 to raise awareness of the importance of prevention in the fight
    against breast cancer. Photo taken on October, 8, 2021.

    Photo details: Canon Eos 1DXMKII camera; + EF 24-70/2.8L II.
    * Civitavecchia, Sea Port of Rome, Italy Coordinates: 42.0924,
    11.7954
    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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  • From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Mon Feb 28 11:00:26 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Solar Eclipse From the Air Over the South Atlantic Ocean

    February 28, 2022

    2021_12_04_TSE_DR_1500px

    Photographer: Petr Horálek

    Summary Author: Petr Horálek

    Despite reflections through the aircraft window, I could get some
    details of the solar corona during the December 4th solar
    eclipse from the Eclipse Flight. This was the only total solar
    eclipse of 2021, with the only other solar eclipse that year being an
    annular eclipse in June. Of course, some ground-based observations
    made by photographers in Union Glacier will bring real gems from
    this eclipse. Note the halo around the eclipsed sun, which is caused by
    the average of all reflections.

    Photo details: Canon Ra, Tamron 70-200@200mm, f2.8, ISO 800,
    stabilized; Set of exposures 1/4000, 1/2000, 1/1000, 1/500, 1/125,
    1/60, 1/25 - all exposures repeated four times. Stars were digitally
    magnified.
    * South Atlantic Ocean Coordinates: -55.589475, -46.851797

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    Sun Links

    * NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory
    * NASA Solar Eclipse Page
    * NOAA Solar Calculator
    * The Sun-Earth Connection: Heliophysics
    * The Sunspot Cycle
    * Solar System Exploration: The Sun
    * The Sun Now
    * This Week’s Sky

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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  • From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Wed Sep 28 12:01:18 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Fossil Lake’s Legacy at Wyoming’s Fossil Butte

    September 28, 2022

    RayB_fossilbutte329c_01aug22

    RayB_fossilbutte328c_01aug22 (002)

    Photographer: Ray Boren

    Summary Author: Ray Boren

    Over 50 million years ago — during the Eocene Epoch, after the age
    of dinosaurs and as a result of the rise of the Rocky Mountains — a
    freshwater lake formed in western North America, covering an area that
    today is partly in southwestern Wyoming, northern Utah and a bit of
    Idaho. Geologists and paleontologists call the vanished body of water
    Fossil Lake, because its sediments, rich in calcium carbonate,
    excellently preserved the remains of prehistoric fish, birds, mammals,
    reptiles, amphibians, insects and subtropical plants, such as ferns and
    palm trees. The U.S. National Park Service’s Fossil Butte National
    Monument, west of Kemmerer, Wyoming, encompasses just a fraction of
    Fossil Lake’s now-uplifted territory, and the displays in its visitor
    center showcase the rediscovered diversity of life (top photo). Fossil
    displays include lizards, snakes, small extinct mammals, a couple of
    bats, a caiman, and at the bottom left, a typically small early horse
    ( Protorohippus venticolum) of the Eocene — member of a taxonomic
    family that subsequently disappeared from the continent upon which it
    evolved.

    In the 2nd photograph, my great-nephew, Hunter, is standing inside
    Fossil Butte’s visitor center next to a much-fractured 13-foot-long (4
    m) cast of a crocodilian fossil, Borealosuchus wilsoni. A third
    image (bottom), taken along the park’s scenic drive, presents the
    eroded, and sometimes slumping, buttes and slopes of the Green
    River Formation, in which the fossils are quarried.

    The Fossil Butte area also played a part in the fabled “ Bone Wars,”
    or “Dinosaur Wars,” of the late 19th century. Naturalists and
    scientists made note of early fossil finds during the era’s exploratory
    mapping and transcontinental railroad surveys. Rival
    paleontologists Othniel Charles Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope
    were famously among the scientists and professors who vied in
    discovering and describing fossils. They and others often hired
    individuals and teams to dig and gather fossils for them, which were
    sent to universities, laboratories and museums. Fossil Lake specimens
    made their way to scientists and collectors in the Eastern United
    States and around the world, a process that continues today from
    quarries on state and private land. Photos taken on August 1, 2022.

    RayB_fossilbutte349c_01aug22

    Fossil Butte National Monument, Wyoming Coordinates: 41.8563 -110.7625


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    Geology Links

    * Earthquakes
    * Geologic Time
    * Geomagnetism
    * General Dictionary of Geology
    * Mineral and Locality Database
    * Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
    * This Dynamic Earth
    * USGS
    * MyShake - University of California, Berkeley
    * USGS Ask a Geologist
    * USGS/NPS Geologic Glossary
    * USGS Volcano Hazards Program

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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  • From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Mon Nov 28 11:01:04 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Mamattus Observed in Stratus Cloud

    November 28, 2022


    Cesar_mammatus__H3A7829-Edit copy

    Photographer: Cesar Cantu
    Summary Author: Cesar Cantu
    Shown above is a stratus-type cloud with noticeable pouches (mammas or
    mammatus) that I observed near Monterrey, Mexico, on July 7, 2022.
    Mammatus clouds can appear strange and whimsical and often even
    intimidating. Their bulging or drooping is attributable to the
    collision of downward vertical currents that generally occurs when the
    atmosphere is unstable, such as during thunderstorm development
    ( cumulonimbus clouds). However, mammas can also form in cirrus
    and stratus clouds, as long as there’s some downward motion
    ( downdraft) within the cloud. The result may be a cloud base with
    conspicuous lumps.

    Photo details: A single shot with the Canon EOS R camera and a 24 mm
    lens; processed in Photoshop.


    Garcia, Nuevo Leon, Mexico Coordinates: 25.71444, -100.6039


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    Cloud Links

    * Atmospheric Optics
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    * Cloud Atlas
    * Color and Light in Nature

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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  • From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Wed Dec 28 11:00:34 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    The Snake River’s Formidable Hells Canyon

    December 28, 2022

    RayB_HellsCyn245c_07oct22 (003)

    RayB_HellsCyn221c_07oct22 (003)

    Photographer: Ray Boren

    Summary Author: Ray Boren

    The Snake River winds its way 1,036 miles (1,667 kilometers) from
    Yellowstone National Park through western North America before it joins
    the Columbia River, and their shared waters roll on to the Pacific
    Ocean. Along the way, the river’s course forms the wavy border between
    the U.S. states of Idaho and Oregon, where it is a centerpiece of the
    Hells Canyon National Recreation Area and Hells Canyon Wilderness.

    As illustrated in the first photograph, taken on Oct. 7, 2022, from
    near the Hells Canyon Overlook on the river’s west side in Oregon, the
    rumpled landscape plunges from the heights of the Seven Devils
    Mountains in Idaho. High flatlands give way to rocky slopes incised by
    side canyons and ravines. A persistent forest fire is smudging the
    horizon to the right, in Idaho. A second image, taken the same day from
    the west shore, features a placid stretch of the Snake River below
    Oxbow, Oregon, near where the Brownlee, Oxbow and Hells Canyon dams
    impound elongated reservoirs for hydroelectric generation.

    The chasm is considered the deepest gorge in North America, dropping
    8,000 feet (2438 meters) when measured from Idaho’s He Devil Peak
    (9,393 feet/2863 m.) to the river. The northbound Snake is not quite
    visible from this viewpoint. The area is roadless between Hells Canyon
    Dam on the south and Hells Gate to the north, near Clarkston,
    Washington, and Lewiston, Idaho — twin cities named for William Clark
    and Meriwether Lewis, leaders of the exploratory Lewis and Clark
    Expedition of 1804-1806.

    Native tribes have occupied the region for thousands of years, but the
    long, steep-sided Snake River gorge hampered and sometimes thwarted
    early explorers, trappers and westbound pioneers. Nevertheless, the
    name “Hells Canyon” apparently was not applied to the area until late
    in the 19th century. The terrain, however, definitely had “hellish”
    beginnings. The oldest rocks are evidence of underwater volcanoes added
    to the North American continent by tectonic forces about 150
    million years ago. Additional volcanism, as recently as 6 million years
    ago, slathered the landscape during a series of extensive basaltic
    lava flows.


    Hells Canyon, Idaho Coordinates: 45.371389, -116.638333


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    Geography Links

    * Atlapedia Online
    * CountryReports
    * GPS Visualizer
    * Holt Rinehart Winston World Atlas
    * Mapping Our World
    * Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection
    * Types of Land
    * World Mapper

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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