| ISS014 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
| TOP PICKS |
| Click here to view the complete online collection of astronaut photography of Earth >> |
| ISS014-E-10499 |
![]() ISS014-E-10499 Click the photo number to access all resolutions available and the database record. |
| Caravelas Strandplain, Bahia Province, Brazil: This astronaut
photograph highlights an ancient shoreline, or strandplain, on the
coast of Brazil. The image is dominated by numerous fine, parallel
lines (trending diagonally from upper left to lower right), each of
which is an ancient shoreline made up of sand transported from rivers
to the north. The strandplain grew as the narrow shorelines
accumulated line by line, in their dozens or even hundreds, over
thousands of years. The shorelines group into “packets” with
different orientations (outlined in white) that indicate their
relative ages. Younger packets cut into or overlie older packets.
Based on those relationships, the packet nearest the coast (farthest
right) is the youngest, while the packet north of the city of
Caravelas is the oldest (image bottom). The Caravelas River flows into the Atlantic Ocean at the bottom of the view. Sediment from this river and the current shoreline produces the light browns and dun colors visible offshore. On the day the astronaut took this image, the river water was relatively clear; clear water (gray) flows out of the main river mouth and also off to one side to the south, over a levee. The Caravelas airport appears near the middle of the view, and is built on one of the ancient shoreline packets. Caravelas itself, a fishing town of about 20,000 residents, lies on an estuary and was once a flourishing whaling center—the prominent cape at image top right is known as Ponta da Baleia (Whale Point). |
| < Back |
|
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." . |
||||
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
|