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  Image: Geographic Location Direction Photo #: ISS048-E-72253 Date: Sep. 2016
Geographic Region: SWITZERLAND
Feature: ALETSCH, FIESCHER & FINSTERAAR GL.

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  Grosser Aletschgletscher

An astronaut aboard the International Space Station took this photograph of the highest mountain in the Swiss Alps and the center of western Eurasia's largest glaciated area. This is the Jungfrau-Aletsch protected area. These peaks feature huge glaciers, with bright snowy slopes that contrast with dark shadows on other steep slopes.

The photo shows the Great Aletsch Glacier, known widely by its German name Grosser Aletschgletscher. This is the largest glacier in Europe at 23 kilometers (14 miles) long; the upper 10 kilometers (6 miles) cross the left side of the image. Its neighbors are the Fiescher and Finsteraar glaciers. In this late summer view, the rocky contents of each glacier show up as gray sections, where more ice has melted. The dark lines in the glaciers are classic moraines - concentrations of dark rocks trapped in ice after being scraped from the mountains and valley walls. The moraines give a strong visual sense of flow lines transporting rock down-valley (which is the bottom of the image).

Some of the highest and most visited peaks in Europe are found in this region, including the Eiger (on the top edge of the image). The highest summit in the area is Finsteraarhorn, standing 4274 meters (14,022 feet) above sea level. Thousands of visitors from towns to the north can ascend by rail to a point at the head of the Aletschgletscher by passing through in a tunnel dug inside the Jungfrau.

The peak known as Agassizhorn was named to commemorate Louis Agassiz, a Swiss-American geologist who is the father of the modern science of glaciology. In the mid-1800s, Agassiz convinced the scientific world that glaciers were very much thicker and longer during an Ice Age thousands of years ago. Agassiz was so interested in glaciers and ice movement that he lived in a hut built on the Finsteraar glacier.

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Images: All Available Images Low-Resolution 212k
Mission: ISS048  
Roll - Frame: E - 72253
Geographical Name: SWITZERLAND  
Features: ALETSCH, FIESCHER & FINSTERAAR GL.  
Center Lat x Lon: 46.5N x 8.1E
Film Exposure:   N=Normal exposure, U=Under exposed, O=Over exposed, F=out of Focus
Percentage of Cloud Cover-CLDP: 0
 
Camera: N6
 
Camera Tilt: 16   LO=Low Oblique, HO=High Oblique, NV=Near Vertical
Camera Focal Length: 800  
 
Nadir to Photo Center Direction: NW   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: 20160903   YYYYMMDD
Time: 104436   GMT HHMMSS
Nadir Lat: 46.0N  
Latitude of suborbital point of spacecraft
Nadir Lon: 9.0E  
Longitude of suborbital point of spacecraft
Sun Azimuth: 165   Clockwise angle in degrees from north to the sun measured at the nadir point
Space Craft Altitude: 216   nautical miles
Sun Elevation: 51   Angle in degrees between the horizon and the sun, measured at the nadir point
Land Views: GLACIERS, ALPS  
Water Views:  
Atmosphere Views:  
Man Made Views:  
City Views:  
Photo is not associated with any sequences


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