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Record Crops in India
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Published April 28, 2008
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Saharan Dust Storm
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Cerro Culiacan, Mexico
This astronaut photograph highlights Cerro (Spanish for “hill”) Culiacan, part of the 50,000 km2 Michoacán-Guanajuato volcanic field of west-central Mexico. The volcanic field contains over 1,400 known vents, with cinder cones, steep, cone-shaped hills, being the dominant landform. Cerro Culiacan however, is a shield volcano, a more gently sloping mound formed by basaltic lavas.
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Fires and smoke in eastern Asia
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Published April 27, 2008
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Porto Primavera Reservoir, Brazil
Brazil’s Porto Primavera Dam sits on the Paraná River, 28 kilometers (17 miles) upstream from the confluence of the Paranapanema and Paraná Rivers. Constructed to provide hydroelectricity, this dam created the Porto Primavera Reservoir
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Dust storms in the Sahara Desert
Published April 26, 2008
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Vog from Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
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Flooding on the White River
Meandering across a wide, relatively flat plain, the White River of Arkansas is no stranger to flooding. With regularity, spring rains push the river over its banks, inundating the flood-adapted forest that surrounds it. The river reached its fifth highest crest of 33.78 feet on April 19, 2008.
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Dust Storm over Eastern China
Published April 25, 2008
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Fires in Mexico and Northern Central America
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Dust storm in eastern China
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Coal Sludge Impoundments, West Virginia
Since the mid- to late 1990s, the number and size of coal mines known as mountaintop removal mines increased dramatically in parts of Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky. The final step in processing this coal creates sludge that contains coal dust, sediment, and possibly heavy metals and chemicals. Mine operators contain the coal sludge in nearby valleys, behind huge earthen dams known as valley fills.
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