Image of the Day:
The Islands of the Four Mountains in Alaska’s
Aleutian chain are seen in this photograph taken from the International Space
Station (ISS). The islands are the upper slopes of volcanoes that rise from the
sea floor. (Source: NASA Earth Observatory)
It was
the lovely morning light that first drew me to this image of four volcanic
islands in the Aleutian chain, photographed in November by an astronaut aboard
the International Space Station.
The
magic hour light was, in fact, what NASA’s Earth Observatory emphasized when it
published the photo
yesterday. But then I noticed what was going on in the cloud deck — and for me,
at least, that elevated the image from the extraordinary to the sublime.
The
most obvious feature is something that looks like the eye of hurricane. It’s to
the lower right of snow-capped Cleveland volcano in the center of the
image. This is not a hurricane, of course. Instead, it’s an atmospheric vortex
downwind of the island. Two smaller ones are also visible.
Vortices
like these are not uncommon when wind blows across an island, forming spiral
eddies in the atmosphere that can be reflected in cloud patterns. They’re known
as von Karman vortices, named
after the NASA scientist, Theodore von Karman, who first described them in the
atmosphere. (I’ve written about them before. See this post, for
example.)
Cleveland
volcano rises 5,675 feet (1,730 meters) above the sea. To its lower left in the
image at the top of this post is Herbert, distinguished by its
volcanic caldera. Tana is to the right, and Carlisle to the upper left.
This
image also caught my eye because I’ve actually seen Aleutian Island volcanoes
from the air. On my way from the United States to Tokyo last May I shot this
photograph of two of them:
Closest
to the wing is Shishaldin Volcano, which towers 9,373 feet above the sea on
Unimak Island. This is the highest peak in the Aleutian Islands. Click on it
for a larger version and then look closely at the summit. You should be able to
make out a stream of steam. (To its right is the more jagged Isanotski.)
Next up
is a closeup of Shishaldin’s summit, photographed in 2008 by Cyrus Read of the
U.S. Geological Survey.
The
Aleutians consist of an arc of volcanic islands that stretches 1,550 miles
(2,500 kilometers) from western Alaska to the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia.
They’ve formed as the Pacific tectonic plate has plunged into the mantle under
the North American plate. The heat at depth causes these crustal rocks to melt.
Some of this material rises and melts its way through the crust, forming
volcanoes at the surface.
If
you’re interested, you can find diagrams, maps and a more detailed description
of the geology here.
The original link with
more images can be found at:
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/imageo/2013/12/17/edifying-view-volcanoes-cloud-patterns-space/
The link for more
"geology here" can be found at: http://unimak.us/seismicity.shtml
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