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  Image: Geographic Location Direction Photo #: ISS030-E-162344 Date: Mar. 2012
Geographic Region: RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Feature: KAMCHATKA PENINSULA, ICE FLOES, SHIPUNSKIY CAPE, SNOW

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  Ice Floes Along the Kamchatka Coastline, Russia

The International Space Station astronauts' vantage point from orbit frequently affords them the opportunity to observe processes that are impossible to see on the ground - or in this case the northeastern Pacific Ocean. The winter season blankets the Kamchatka Peninsula of Russia in snow, but significant amounts of sea ice can also form and collect along the coastline. As ice floes grind against each other, they produce smaller floes that can be moved by wind and water currents acting along the coastline.

The irregular southeastern coastline of Kamchatka helps to produce large circular eddy currents from the main southwestward-flowing Kamchatka current. Three such eddies are clearly highlighted by surface ice floe patterns at image center. The ice patterns are very difficult (and dangerous) to navigate in an ocean vessel - while the floes may look thin and delicate from the ISS vantage point, even the smaller ice chunks are likely several meters across. White clouds at image top right are distinguished from the sea ice and snow cover in the image by their high brightness and discontinuous nature.

The Kamchatka Peninsula also hosts many currently and historically active stratovolcanoes. Kliuchevskoi Volcano, the highest in Kamchatka (summit elevation 4835 meters) and one of the most active, had its most recent confirmed eruption in June of 2011, while Karymsky Volcano to the south likely produced ash plumes days before this image was taken; the snow cover near the volcano to the south and east of the summit is darkened, probably due to a cover of fresh ash, or melted away altogether (image bottom center). In contrast, Kronotsky Volcano - a "textbook" symmetrical cone-shaped stratovolcano - last erupted in 1923.
 
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Images: All Available Images Low-Resolution 265k
Mission: ISS030  
Roll - Frame: E - 162344
Geographical Name: RUSSIAN FEDERATION  
Features: KAMCHATKA PENINSULA, ICE FLOES, SHIPUNSKIY CAPE, SNOW  
Center Lat x Lon: 54.5N x 161.0E
Film Exposure:   N=Normal exposure, U=Under exposed, O=Over exposed, F=out of Focus
Percentage of Cloud Cover-CLDP: 10
 
Camera: N2
 
Camera Tilt: 45   LO=Low Oblique, HO=High Oblique, NV=Near Vertical
Camera Focal Length: 28  
 
Nadir to Photo Center Direction: N   The direction from the nadir to the center point, N=North, S=South, E=East, W=West
Stereo?:   Y=Yes there is an adjacent picture of the same area, N=No there isn't
Orbit Number:  
 
Date: 20120315   YYYYMMDD
Time: 232752   GMT HHMMSS
Nadir Lat: 51.4N  
Latitude of suborbital point of spacecraft
Nadir Lon: 162.5E  
Longitude of suborbital point of spacecraft
Sun Azimuth: 147   Clockwise angle in degrees from north to the sun measured at the nadir point
Space Craft Altitude: 204   nautical miles
Sun Elevation: 32   Angle in degrees between the horizon and the sun, measured at the nadir point
Land Views: PENINSULA, VOLCANO  
Water Views: EDDY, ICE, OCEAN, SEA, SEA ICE  
Atmosphere Views:  
Man Made Views:  
City Views:  
Photo is not associated with any sequences


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