ISS008 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights

TOP PICKS
Click here to view the complete online collection of astronaut photography of Earth >>

ISS008-E-12564
photo ID ISS008-E-12564
ISS008-E-12564         Click the photo number to access all resolutions available and the database record.
Iceberg Melt, Near South Georgia: Astronauts on board the International Space Station took this detailed view of melt water pooled on the surface of iceberg A-39D, an iceberg measuring 2 km wide by 11 km long and currently drifting near South Georgia Island. The different intensities of blue are interpreted as different water depths. From the orientation of the iceberg, the deepest water (darkest blue) lies at the westernmost end of the iceberg. The water pools have formed from snowmelt—late January is the peak of summer in the Southern Hemisphere.

This iceberg was part of the original A-38 iceberg that calved from the Ronne Ice Shelf in October 1998. Originally the ice was between 200 and 350 meters thick. This piece of that iceberg is now probably about 150 meters thick, with around 15 m sticking up above the surface of the water.

This oblique photograph was taken by astronauts looking south over the south Atlantic Ocean from the International Space Station on January 22, 2004. An accompanying view can be found at ISS008-E-12555.

< Back