Dust storm over the Yellow Sea - related image preview

600 x 800
97 KB - JPEG

Dust storm over the Yellow Sea - related image preview

1200 x 1600
353 KB - JPEG

Dust storm over the Yellow Sea - related image preview

2400 x 3200
946 KB - JPEG

Dust storm over the Yellow Sea

Dust obscures the emerald and gold waters of the Yellow Sea (Huang Hai) in this image of Eastern China. The Yellow Sea takes its name from the Yellow River, or Huang He, which in turn is named for the yellow silt that colors it. This silt is carried by the river from the Loess Plateau, a 640 square kilometer (247 square mile) basin in Northern China, into the Pacific Ocean. The Yellow River is the second largest river in China and is prone to severe flooding. In some places, the channel of the river is higher than the surrounding land—held in check by dikes and levees—and frequently overruns its banks. The net result is one of the highest rates of sedimentation in the world. This region is also influenced by sand from the Gobi Desert. The heating of the Earth´s surface by sunlight forms air currents (winds) that sometimes pick up dust and carry it higher into the atmosphere, creating large storms such as the one seen here. These storms can be severe, carrying dust as far as Denver, Colorado.


Jeff Schmaltz

Published January 5, 2005
Data acquired November 6, 2005

Source:
Aqua > MODIS
Collection:
MODIS Image of the Day