Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Data acquired December 29, 2010 720 x 720 JPEG
Data acquired December 29, 2010 1800 x 2400 563 KB - JPEG
Data acquired December 29, 2010 1800 x 2400 6 MB - GeoTIFF
Data acquired December 29, 2010 2 KB - KML/KMZ
Parallel dust plumes blew off the coast of Morocco in late December 2010. Blowing toward the north-northwest, the plumes just missed Lanzarote, the easternmost of the Canary Islands.
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this natural-color image on December 29, 2010. Camel-colored dust plumes form long, delicate arcs over the Atlantic Ocean. A long, skinny cloud bank runs almost perpendicular to the dust plumes. Parallel to the clouds is a faint, indistinct swath that could be a plume from an earlier dust storm.
Morocco does not have many of the vast sand seas that characterize much of the Sahara Desert. Sediments near the Moroccan shoreline probably gave rise to the dust plumes in this image.
NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Michon Scott.
Published December 29, 2010 Data acquired December 29, 2010