Dust and ash plumes off California - related image preview

700 x 550
109 KB Bytes - JPEG

Dust and ash plumes off California - related image preview

1400 x 1100
387 KB Bytes - JPEG

Dust and ash plumes off California - related image preview

2800 x 2200
1 MB Bytes - JPEG

Dust and ash plumes off California

October’s massive wildfires in Southern California stripped the ground of the vegetation that holds dirt in place. The freshly exposed soil and the overlying ashes are vulnerable to winds, as this false color Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) image shows. Here, a red plume of dust and ash is blowing over the Pacific Ocean and San Clemente Island. In this image, newly burned areas appear red while vegetation is green, water is black, and clouds are light blue. The dust is clearly coming from the burn scar left by the Cedar fire near San Diego. The Terra satellite captured this image on November 27, 2003.


Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC

Published November 28, 2003
Data acquired November 27 - 27, 2003

Source:
Terra > MODIS
Topics:
Agriculture > Forest Science > Forest Fire Science
Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Fire Characteristics
Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Fire Occurrence
Biosphere > Vegetation > Reclamation/Revegetation/Restoration
Biosphere > Vegetation > Vegetation Cover
Human Dimensions > Natural Hazards > Fires