A stirring thought
So, after that last post, I thought I should give something a little lighter.
I can't remember where exactly I found this image (somewhere on the NASA site, I think), but it is absolutely phenomenal.
There are a lot of neat things to point out:
That's an estimate of how much chlorophyll (and kind of how much phytoplankton) are present. Based on the colour of the ocean viewed from space, some smart people have come up with ways to estimate the ocean's chlorophyll content.
That's Georges Bank. Due to some very neat physics that I won't get into, the waters there get well mixed and trapped over the bank. This results in a productive hot spot seen in this image.
I'm not positive on that one but I think that's ice! Ice being stirred and sheared. If you zoom in, it looks amazingly similar to those colours in the ocean. (I remember once I got an exam question that said nothing more than "Ice is a metamorphic rock. Explain." I wish I had this picture.)
If I remember correctly, that's from a meteor impact. The middle rebounded but edges were depressed enough to make that lake.
That's a low pressure system. You can tell because the "spinning" is in a counter-clockwise direction which, in the northern hemisphere, means a low pressure system.
Okay, I could keep going here, and maybe I will later on, but that's it for now. I just think this image is very cool.
1 comment:
Spectacular when you zoom in..and fantastic how you can "read" it!!
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