| ISS012 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
| TOP PICKS |
| Click here to view the complete online collection of astronaut photography of Earth >> |
| ISS012-E-11654 |
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| Lake Nasser and the New Valley: Cycles of flood and drought in
the African Sahel are legendary, and they have provided the impetus
for major waterworks on Africa’s great rivers. The construction of
the Aswan High Dam on the Nile River, creating Lake Nasser in the
1960s, is the biggest and most visible project. Heavy rains in the
source regions of the Nile in the 1990s resulted in record water
levels in Lake Nasser. The abundance of water facilitated the
Egyptian government’s promotion of another massive water distribution
system called the New Valley. In 1997, Lake Nasser began flooding
westward down a spillway into the Toshka depression in southern
Egypt, creating four new lakes over the next few years. Following the initial flooding, a pumping station and canal were constructed in 2000 to maintain water flow into the region, allowing for industrial and agricultural development in the desert. This view shows the completed Mubarek Pumping Station on Lake Nasser, the spillway that originally flooded the Toshka depression, the southern end of the first of the Toshka Lakes, part of the 50-kilometer-long main canal (the Sheikh Zayed Canal), side canals, and several new fields in the Egyptian desert northwest of Lake Nasser. Astronauts, cosmonauts, and space-based sensors have been monitoring these developments in Egypt since their inception in the late 1990s. The New Valley’s Toshka Lakes, and the new developments surrounding them, represent one of the most visible and rapid man-made changes on the Earth’s surface. |
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This service is provided by the International Space Station program and the JSC Astromaterials Research & Exploration Science Directorate. Recommended Citation: Image Science and Analysis Laboratory, NASA-Johnson Space Center. "The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth." . |
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