• ES Picture of the Day 04 2022

    From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Tue Oct 4 12:01:12 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Quechee Gorge in East Central Vermont

    October 04, 2022

    PattiW_IMG_0088 (003)a

    PattiW_IMG_0084 (003)a

    Photographer: Patti Weeks

    Summary Author: Patti Weeks

    The Quechee Gorge is a 165-feet deep (50 m), 1-mile long (1.6 km)
    narrow chasm on the Ottauquechee River. As Vermont’s deepest gorge,
    it is nicknamed by locals as “ Vermont’s Grand Canyon.” It was
    formed following the retreat of the massive Pleistocene
    Laurentide Ice Sheet, which covered all of present-day Canada and
    much of the northern United States, between 95,000 to 20,000 years ago.

    When the ice sheet began its retreat about 18,000 years ago, the
    Ottauquechee River re-emerged and began to flow east again, but was
    redirected from the Connecticut River to the newly-formed narrow
    Glacial Lake Hitchcock, which ran nearly 200 miles (320 km) from
    what is now northern Vermont to central Connecticut. A glacial
    terminal moraine (near present day Hartford, Connecticut) called
    the Rocky Hill Dam, blocked the flow of the Connecticut River for
    approximately 4,000 years, during which the Ottauquechee River filled
    the lake with 170 feet (52 m) of sand, mud and silt. When the dam
    eventually broke, the river made a sharp turn to the south, rapidly
    cutting through the soft mud. Geologist Frederick Larsen estimated
    that this initial erosion occurred in less than a week. The river has
    been slowly carving through the hard Devonian age schist and
    quartzite bedrock, the Gile Mountain Formation, ever since —
    for the past 13,000 years.

    Now, the Quechee Gorge is a tourist attraction. The Ottauquechee River
    is also rated as a Class III+(V) whitewater river for 3.7 miles
    (6.0 km). According to a report by American Whitewater, the water
    level was low (<30 cfs) most of this past summer. Bottom photo shows
    whitewater details. Even at its best whitewater level, however, there
    is a challenging rapid area called “Well Enough.” After a thorough
    scouting, you might need to leave “well enough” alone and just portage.
    The second photo, focusing nearly straight down into the gorge from the
    bridge, shows some large rocks that could make rafting navigation
    challenging, whether the water covers them or not. Photos taken on July
    19, 2022.


    Quechee Gorge, Vermont Coordinates: 43.6374, -72.4085


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    Geography Links

    * Atlapedia Online
    * CountryReports
    * GPS Visualizer
    * Holt Rinehart Winston World Atlas
    * Mapping Our World
    * Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection
    * Types of Land
    * World Mapper

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

    --- up 31 weeks, 1 day, 21 minutes
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  • From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Sun Dec 4 11:01:04 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Cumulus Clouds with Spikes

    December 02, 2022


    IMG_0290

    IMG_3739

    Photographer: Mila Zinkova

    Summary Author: Mila Zinkova; Jim Foster

    Shown above are curious shaped, cumulus clouds that were observed
    from near my home in San Francisco, California, on April 19, 2022. The
    spike-like features have horseshoe shapes in some cases, as shown in
    the bottom photo. Perhaps these spikes and horseshoes are caused by
    convection -- intense localized heating of the most optically
    thick portion of cloud by the strong April sun. However, because the
    atmospheric environment where the clouds formed wasn't suitable
    ( stable atmosphere) for widespread building, they remained overall
    fairly “flat” in appearance. Click here to see a video of these
    clouds.

    San Francisco, California Coordinates: 37.7749, -122.4194


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    Cloud Links

    * Atmospheric Optics
    * The Cloud Appreciation Society
    * Cloud Atlas
    * Color and Light in Nature

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

    --- up 39 weeks, 6 days, 21 minutes
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  • From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Fri Nov 4 12:00:56 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Wafer Thin Moon and Pumpkin Sky

    October 31, 2022


    MatthewC_DSC_1834s2s

    THANKS FOR VISITING EPOD. THE BLOG SERVICE IS HAVING A TECHNICAL ISSUE.
    WE HOPE TO RESOLVE THIS WITH OUR SERVICE PROVIDER SOON.

    Photographer: Matthew Chin
    Summary Author: Matthew Chin; Jim Foster
    Can you spot the sliver of the crescent Moon? Because it was only about
    1.3% illuminated when this photo was snapped, at dawn on June 28, 2022,
    it isn’t exactly conspicuous against the pumpkin-colored sky. As night
    has now lost its grip, hordes of bats are returning to their caves
    (could this be the source of the dark smudge at lower right?) and other
    spooky, nocturnal creatures will soon be asleep in their lairs. Photo
    taken in Yuen Long, Hong Kong, on June 28, 2022, at 05:12 a.m. local
    time.

    Yuen Long, Hong Kong Coordinates: 22.4445, 114.0222


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    Night Sky Links

    * Space Weather Live
    * Space Weather Live Forum
    * About the Moon
    * American Meteor Society
    * Arbeitskreises Meteore e.V.
    * Global City Lights
    * Heavens Above Home Page
    * The International Meteor Organization
    * Lunar and Planetary Institute
    * MoonConnection
    * NASA Eclipse Web Page
    * Understanding The Moon Phases

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

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