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Saturday, 7 April 2012

BEST EARTH IMAGES OF THE WEEK V


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Best Earth Images of the Week - Apr. 6, 2012
By
Our Amazing Planet, 6 April 2012.

1. Spring's Contradictions, Devastating and Beautiful

SpringCredit: NPS, Michael Quinn

Spring's arrival, both beautiful and terrifying, begin our choices this week.

Pictured here, the first flowers are beginning to appear along the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. Two of the first flowers are Fendler's pennycress or wild candytuft (Noccaea montana) and dwarf lousewort or wood-betony (Pedicularis centranthera), seen in the image above at left and right, respectively.


2. Terrifying Twisters

Terrifying TwistersCredit: NOAA.

Tornadoes tore through northeast Texas yesterday (April 3), in an outbreak of severe weather that was captured by a fleet of satellites designed to monitor the situation from space.

At least six tornadoes were reported in the Dallas-Fort Worth area from mid-afternoon to early evening on April 3, according to officials at the National Weather Service.


3. A Magnificent Display

A Magnificent DisplayCredit: Boris Behncke.

Sicily's Mount Etna unleashed the latest in a year-long series of fiery shows this last weekend. It was the Italian peak's 23rd such display since January 2011, according to a scientist who faithfully documents the peak's regular paroxysms.

The volcano's latest episode, which reached its peak in the wee hours Sunday (April 1), lit up the night, spouting molten rock many hundreds of feet into the air for about an hour and a half.


4. Ancient Interior Exposed

Ancient Interior ExposedCredit: NASA Earth Observatory image created by Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon.

The rugged mountains of northeastern Oman, on the eastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, are bone dry, yet these peaks once lay beneath the bottom of the sea.

The rocks exposed in the Oman Mountains used to lie in Earth’s interior, at the boundary between crust and the mantle, but when an ancient ocean narrowed and closed, the colossal geological forces at work also thrust the ancient seafloor skyward, according to a NASA statement.


5. Bongo Calves Welcomed

Bongo Calves WelcomedCredit: Belfast Zoo

In recent weeks, the Belfast Zoo has welcomed two new baby Eastern bongos, a critically endangered antelope species.

Eastern bongos are native to the mountain forests of Kenya, and are endangered by hunting and increasing rates of deforestation. The Bongo Surveillance Programme estimates that there could be as few as 75 to140 individuals left in the wild.


6. This Storm is No Joke

This Storm is No JokeCredit: NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Response Team

It may have formed on April Fool's Day, but this storm is no joke.

Low pressure System 95P became Tropical Storm Daphne in the southwestern Pacific Ocean on April 1, after it had already caused severe flooding in areas of Fiji, according to a NASA statement.


7. A Match Made ... at Edinburgh

A Match Made ... at EdinburghCredit: Edinburgh Zoo.

Love (might) be in the air for a pair of giant pandas at the Edinburgh Zoo.

Keepers allowed the zoo's young female panda and young male panda to meet for the first time today (April 3), on five separate occasions.


8. Seafloor Scene

Seafloor SceneCredit: Photo by Mark Thiessen/National Geographic.

James Cameron's deep-diving team has been keeping busy.

Just days after the filmmaker plunged more than 35,756 feet (10,890 meters) into the Pacific Ocean to the Mariana Trench, the deepest place on Earth, his team piloted Cameron's innovative submersible to yet another deep-sea spot.

This time, members of the expedition took Cameron's lime-green Deepsea Challenger to a depth of 3,600 feet (1,100 meters) off the coast of the tiny island of Ulithi, part of Micronesia.



[Source: Our Amazing Planet. Edited. Top image added.]


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