Author Topic: What the Nile, Dubai, aurora borealis, sandstorms, and more look like from Space  (Read 709 times)

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This is what the Nile, Dubai, aurora borealis, sandstorms, and more look like from space
Vox
Updated by Max Fisher on September 1, 2014, 1:00 p.m. ET @Max_Fisher max@vox.com


Photos of the Earth taken by astronauts and posted to social media have become a mainstay of online media, even a cliché. Still, no matter how many you see, they can still be surprisingly powerful, both for their simple, stark beauty and for their ability to show you a familiar thing in a novel way.

Here, then, are some of the photos and vines posted by American astronaut Reid Wiseman, who arrived at the International Space Station in May for a six-month mission. Photos from the ISS can be especially stunning, as the proximity to the Earth makes the atmosphere and the curvature unusually visible. The sharp angles can cast well-known landmarks like Baja or the Greek isles in steep angles.


The Nile meets the Mediterranean

Reid Wiseman

To start, here is my favorite from Wiseman's photos. The Nile River flows north up Egypt to the Mediterranean Sea at the top of the image, with the Red Sea and Sinai Peninsula on the right. You can just make out the Suez Canal, the man-made, 120-mile waterway that connects the Red and Mediterranean Seas. I love this photo for how clearly it shows the Nile's grandeur — the river has for thousands of years been the heart of Egyptian civilization — as well as the scale of Suez, which took 10 years to build.


Two volcanoes erupt in southern Italy

Reid Wiseman


Europe on the left, Africa on the right

Reid Wiseman

That's the strait of Gibraltar, the entrance from the Atlantic Ocean (bottom) to the Mediterranean Sea (top). Spain is on the left and Morocco on the right; this little strait has been a crucial point of economic and strategic focus for centuries.


The Hoover Dam

Reid Wiseman

For all its size, the dam looks like a toy from space.


The British Isles

Reid Wiseman

That's Britain at the bottom and, beyond it, Ireland, viewed from the east. Unsurprisingly, both are covered in clouds.


Dice float over the Earth

Reid Wiseman

"A simple toy from my childhood makes for a cool picture in space," Wiseman tweeted this just a few days after arriving at the ISS. It's easy to see why he loves the photo so much.


Turkey, Greece, and the islands in between

Reid Wiseman

One of the world's most storied centers of civilization, and a place with so much history. We think of Greece and Turkey as very distinct places today but this photo helps to show why that was not always the case.


Dubai at night

Reid Wiseman

You can even see the ridiculous, artificial island resorts jutting out into the sea.


An aurora viewed from above

Reid Wiseman

Auroras are lights that occur in the atmosphere caused by solar winds and the geomagnetism of the Earth. This is what they look like from above.


A volcano blown by wind over time

Reid Wiseman


The border between California and Mexico

Reid Wiseman

That's San Diego on the left and Tijuana on the right. The bright yellow line is the border.


Sandstorms obscure the land, somewhere over Africa

Reid Wiseman


The Australian coast

Reid Wiseman


A sunset visibly turns the clouds orange

Reid Wiseman


The moon rises over the Earth

Reid Wiseman


http://www.vox.com/2014/9/1/6065783/space-photo-reid-wiseman

 

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