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Data acquired January 6, 2006 337 x 379 153 KB - JPEG
Data acquired January 6, 2006 500 x 500 301 KB - JPEG
Data acquired January 6, 2006 1000 x 1000 1 MB Bytes - JPEG
Data acquired January 6, 2006 2000 x 2000 3 MB - JPEG
On October 8, 2005, a large earthquake shook the mountainous Kashmir region near the border of Pakistan and India. Tens of thousands of people died, and many more were isolated in the mountains by damage to roads and bridges as well as by landslides. Heavy winter snowfall poses an additional threat to millions of survivors made homeless by the quake. In the first week of January 2006, a new snow storm blanketed the mountains of Pakistan, including the region around the epicenter of the quake. This image from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite shows snow highlighting the ridges and ravines in the mountains northeast of the city of Islamabad on January 6. According to news reports on the BBC Website, the snow is hampering aid efforts to some areas, and avalanches triggered by earthquake aftershocks continue to threaten people in some mountainous areas.
Jesse Allen
Published January 15, 2006 Data acquired January 6, 2006