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Mount St. Helens
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Published March 16, 2005
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B-15A, B-15J, B-15K, and C-16 icebergs in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
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Death Valley
Published March 15, 2005
Cyclone Ingrid
Published March 14, 2005
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Eruption of Klyuchevskaya Volcano
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The rising sun bathes the eastern half of Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula with light, casting long shadows in the west. The shadows highlight the plume of ash that continues to rise from the Klyuchevskaya Volcano. The largest and most active volcano on the peninsula, Klyuchevskaya has erupted regularly since its first recorded eruption in 1697. Its most recent activity began in mid-January 2005, and has not abated.
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Ash Cloud from Shiveluch Settles on Kamchatka
Dust Storm Over Northern Africa
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Fringing Coral Reef, Red Sea
The Sudanese coast of the Red Sea is a well-known destination for diving due to clear water and abundance of coral reefs (or shia’ab in Arabic). Reefs are formed primarily from precipitation of calcium carbonate by corals. (In addition to its commonly used meaning, precipitation can also describe how something dissolved in a solution becomes “undissolved” through chemical or biological processes.) Massive reef structures are built over thousands of years of succeeding generations of coral. In the Red Sea, fringing reefs form on shallow shelves of less than 50 meters depth along the coastline. This astronaut photograph illustrates the intricate morphology of the reef system located along the coast between Port Sudan to the northwest and the Tokar River delta to the southeast.
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White Sands National Monument
Published March 13, 2005
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Published March 12, 2005