Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
B-15A, B-15J, B-15K, and C-16 icebergs in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
720 x 480 JPEG
Published February 25, 2005
Related images:
700 x 900 157 KB - JPEG
2800 x 3600 1 MB Bytes - JPEG
1400 x 1800 568 KB - JPEG
Sulfur Dioxide Plume from Manam Volcano
164 x 120 GIF
540 x 450 GIF
1 MB Bytes - PDF
Floods in Greece and Turkey
164 x 120 JPEG
Published February 24, 2005
540 x 553 JPEG
2420 x 2224 3 MB - JPEG
Five Years of MISR Global Aerosol Observations
540 x 798 JPEG
1548 x 1224 826 KB - JPEG
Eruption of Klyuchevskaya Volcano
Published February 23, 2005
540 x 551 JPEG
2856 x 4448 4 MB - JPEG
Snow in the Hindu Kush
540 x 540 JPEG
3852 x 3336 3 MB - JPEG
Persistent Rains Bring Floods, Mudslides to California
540 x 450 JPEG
1331 x 1022 1 MB Bytes - JPEG
Earthquake Near Zarand, Iran
540 x 583 JPEG
2484 x 2484 3 MB - JPEG
Cyclones in the Pacific
Published February 22, 2005
540 x 720 JPEG
4600 x 6000 5 MB - JPEG
Atmospheric Methane
540 x 633 JPEG
4 MB - PDF
Mt. Damavand, Iran
Published February 21, 2005
Located approximately 50 kilometers northeast of Tehran, Mt. Damavand is an impressive stratovolcano that reaches 5,670 meters (18,598 feet) in elevation. Part of the Alborz Mountain Range that borders the Caspian Sea to the north, Damavand is a young volcano that has formed mostly during the Holocene Epoch (over approximately the last 10,000 years). The western flank of the volcano includes solidified lava flows with flow levees—“walls” formed as the side edges of flowing lava cooled rapidly, forming a chute that channeled the hotter, interior lava. Two such flows with well-defined levees are highlighted by snow on the mountainside.
540 x 405 JPEG
1000 x 661 785 KB - JPEG
342 x 228 JPEG
Heavy Rains Flood Pakistan
Published February 20, 2005