Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Data acquired August 9, 2000 540 x 672 JPEG
Data acquired August 9, 2000 4800 x 3600 3 MB - JPEG
Data acquired August 9, 2000 8401 x 7541 70 MB - GeoTIFF
Data acquired August 9, 2000 29 KB - KML/KMZ
Scraped clean and weighted down for thousands of years by Pleistocene ice sheets, Akimiski Island in James Bay provides a case study of how Earth's land surfaces evolve following glaciation. During the last ice age, this small island was buried under several thousand meters ice, but since its retreat, the island has rebounded (risen in elevation) and new beach areas have emerged, streams and lakes have formed, and trees and other vegetation have colonized the new territory.
NASA image created by Jesse Allen, using Landsat data provided by the University of Maryland’s Global Land Cover Facility. Caption by Rebecca Lindsey.
Published April 15, 2008 Data acquired August 9, 2000