| ISS023 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
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| ISS023-E-50542 |
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| Vistula River Flooding, Southeastern Poland: This image, taken
by astronauts onboard the International Space Station, shows
widespread flooding along the Vistula River in southeastern Poland. A
major river in Poland, the Vistula originates on the western slopes
of the mountain Barania Góra in the Carpathian Mountains in southern
Poland. The river winds its way northward for 1,047 kilometers (651
miles), through major cities such as Krakow and Warsaw, to Gdansk Bay
on the Baltic Sea. Several towns have been completely or partially
inundated including Gorzyce, Sokolniki, and Trzes'n' in addition to
large numbers of agricultural fields (normally green as visible at
image top and bottom right). While the flooding illustrated here is
extensive, it represents but a small “snapshot” of conditions that
have developed in Eastern Europe over the past one to two
weeks. Spring flooding of rivers is not an uncommon occurrence in Poland but this event has been described as the most serious flood in several decades. Severe floods were recorded in 1570, 1584, 1719, 1891, and 1997, with the first records of local embankments for flood control dating from the thirteenth century. By 1985, 370 rivers in Poland (including the Vistula) had been completely or partly embanked along a total length of 9,028 kilometers (5,610 miles) for some degree of flood mitigation. In the spring of 2010, heavy rains caused high waters in the Vistula River, first in southern Poland. Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated as the river level rose and broke through waterlogged dikes and embankments. The flood surge then moved northward through Warsaw, continuing towards the Baltic Sea. |
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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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