| ISS020 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
| TOP PICKS |
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| ISS020-E-26195 |
![]() ISS020-E-26195 Click the photo number to access all resolutions available and the database record. |
| Aorounga Impact Crater, Chad: Aorounga Impact Crater is
located in the Sahara Desert, in north-central Chad, and is one of
the best preserved impact structures in the world. The crater is
thought to be middle or upper Devonian to lower Mississippian
(approximately 345–370 million years old) based on the age of the
sedimentary rocks deformed by the impact. Spaceborne Imaging Radar
(SIR) data collected in 1994 suggests that Aorounga is one of a set
of three craters formed by the same impact event. The other two
suggested impact structures are buried by sand deposits. The concentric ring structure of the Aorounga crater—renamed Aorounga South in the multiple-crater interpretation of SIR data—is clearly visible in this detailed astronaut photograph. The central highland, or peak, of the crater is surrounded by a small sand-filled trough; this in turn is surrounded by a larger circular trough. Linear rock ridges alternating with light orange sand deposits cross the image from upper left to lower right; these are called yardangs by geomorphologists. Yardangs form by wind erosion of exposed rock layers in a unidirectional wind field. The wind blows from the northeast at Aorounga, and sand dunes formed between the yardangs are actively migrating to the southwest. |
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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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