Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Whitsunday Islands, Queensland, Australia
4000 x 5000 31 MB - GeoTIFF
Published January 2, 2010
The Whitsunday Islands are a collection of some 74 islands sandwiched between the Australian mainland and the outer atolls of the Great Barrier Reef.
Related images:
720 x 720 JPEG
4000 x 5000 3 MB - JPEG
59 KB - KML/KMZ
JPEG
Lake Vanda, Antarctica
560 x 421 JPEG
Published December 28, 2009
A Landsat 7 image of Lake Vanda, a hypersaline lake in Wright Valley, Antarctica.
8961 x 8401 70 MB - TIFF
Lake Djoudj, Senegal
560 x 305 JPEG
Lake Djoudj during the Sept. 1979 drought (left) and during the Nov. 1999 flood (right).
8141 x 7061 71 MB - TIFF
Houston, Texas
A Landsat 7 image showing Houston, Texas.
3982 x 2640 36 MB - TIFF
Grand Teton National Park
560 x 420 JPEG
A Landsat 7 perspective image of Grand Teton National Park; no vertical exaggeration.
6000 x 6000 106 MB - TIFF
Glacier Bay
Landsat 7 natural-color perspective image of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve.
8641 x 7861 71 MB - TIFF
Galveston, Texas
560 x 385 JPEG
Landsat 7 images of Galveston, Texas before (left, 10/12/07) and after (right, 9/28/08), depicts scarring left after Hurricane Ike.
5760 x 5760 76 MB - TIFF
5760 x 5760 78 MB - TIFF
Abadan, Iran
560 x 560 JPEG
Published December 22, 2009
A Landsat 7 panchromatic image of Abadan, Iran acquired on Jan. 20, 2002.
8241 x 7261 72 MB - TIFF
Erg Iabes, Algeria
720 x 480 JPEG
Published December 3, 2009
This natural-color image from the Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus sensor on the Landsat 7 satellite shows the emptiness of the Erg Iabès in western Algeria’s Adrar province.
5348 x 5348 4 MB - JPEG
Dubai, UAE
560 x 280 JPEG
Published December 2, 2009
Southern Dubai in 1973 and in 2006. The famous manmade Palm Islands are easily discernible on the Landsat 7 2006 image.
4213 x 4213 28 MB - TIFF
Drygalski Ice Tongue
560 x 331 JPEG
The 20-kilometer wide floating slab, known as the Drygalski Ice Tongue, is being pushed into McMurdo Sound, fed by the David Glacier in East Antarctica. Although the sea eats away its ragged sides, the Tongue continues to grow. Drygalski’s 10-kilometer growth over those 14 years is shown in this picture (red line = Tongue in 2002, blue line = Tongue in 1988), and is one measure of how fast some of the Antarctic ice sheet is moving into the sea.
5764 x 5764 59 MB - TIFF