| ISS016 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
| TOP PICKS |
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| ISS016-E-19239 |
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| Dendi Caldera, Ethiopia: The Dendi Caldera is located on the
Ethiopian Plateau, approximately 86 kilometers southwest of Addis
Ababa. A caldera is a geological feature formed by the
near-total eruption of magma from beneath a volcano. Following the
eruption, the volcanic structure collapses into the empty magma
chamber. This collapse typically leaves a crater or depression where
the volcano stood, and later volcanic activity can fill the caldera
with younger lavas, ash, sediments, and pyroclastic rocks (rocks made
from fragments of shattered volcanic rock). Much of the volcanic rock
in the area is basalt erupted as part of the opening of the East
African Rift, but more silica-rich rock types, characterized by
minerals such as quartz and feldspar, are also present. The approximately 4-kilometer-wide Dendi Caldera includes some of this silica-rich volcanic rock: the rim of the caldera, visible in this astronaut photograph, is mostly made of poorly consolidated ash erupted during the Tertiary Period (approximately 65–2 million years ago). Two shallow lakes have formed within the central depression (image center). This image also highlights a radial drainage pattern surrounding the remnants of the Dendi volcanic cone. Radial drainage patterns commonly form around volcanoes, as rainfall can flow down slope on all sides of the cone and incise channels. There are no historical records of volcanic eruptions at Dendi, but the Wonchi Caldera, 13 kilometers to the southwest (not shown), may have been active as recently as AD 550. |
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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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