Media Information

 
 
 
collection:
nasa new
mediatype:
image
collection:
nasa
collection:
nasanaturalhazards
title:
Floods in Sudan: Natural Hazards
description:
Though flooding occurs every year in the African country of Sudan, 2007 brought unusually extreme floods that affected at least 400,000 people as of August 29, reported the www.reliefweb.int/rw /rwb.nsf/db900sid/YS AR-76JMJK?OpenDocume nt&rc=1&emid=FL-2007 -000093-SDN United Nations. Apart from destroying buildings, crops, and land, the swollen rivers and pools of standing water increase the risk of water-borne disease such as cholera, acute watery diarrhea, and malaria, said the United Nations. This photo-like image, captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer ( modis.gsfc.nasa.gov MODIS ) on NASA's terra.nasa.gov/ Terra satellite on August 29, 2007, shows flooding around the capital city of Khartoum, the tan-gray area nestled between the converging Blue and White Nile Rivers.

To the south, sunlight reflecting off the surface of the water has turned the Blue Nile River silvery white, making it stand out from the surrounding land. Brilliant flecks of silver in the landscape between the two rivers are created by light reflecting off standing water or some other bright surface. The sunlight also highlights the intricate network of canals that run like arteries through squares of green agriculture. In the west, the White Nile River paints a wide, white-brown ribbon down the landscape. The river is several times wider than it is during the dry season, as a comparison with a rapidfire.sci.gsfc.n asa.gov/subsets/?NAf rica_2_07/2007172/NA frica_2_07.2007172.t erra cloud-free image from June 2007 reveals. (The area shown here is in the lower-left corner of the image.)

As long as human civilization has clung to the fertile banks of the Nile River, the yearly flood cycle has regulated life. Today, the river is tamed by dams in southern Egypt so that only its upper reaches and its tributaries, the White and Blue Nile Rivers, still rise and fall with the annual rainy season in the Ethiopian highlands. Most of the flood water on the Nile typically comes from the Blue Nile River, the tributary that flows out of Ethiopia, but in this image, it is the White Nile River that appears most flooded. The floods on the White Nile most often arise when high water on the Blue Nile blocks the flow of water from the White Nile into the Nile River. Unable to continue flowing freely downstream, the White Nile pools behind the convergence point, as shown here.

Another sign of flooding in the image is the addition of green to the land. Even beyond the irrigated land between the two rivers, the arid orange landscape is brushed with green where seasonal rivers have nourished new plants.

NASA image courtesy the rapidfire.sci.gsfc.n asa.gov MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC.
subject:
Where -- Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)
subject:
What -- Terra
subject:
Where -- Egypt
subject:
Where -- Ethiopia
subject:
Where -- Sudan
subject:
Where -- Khartoum
what:
Terra
where:
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)
where:
Egypt
where:
Ethiopia
where:
Sudan
where:
Khartoum
identifier:
Khartoum_TMO_2007241
uploader:
gwilliam@archive.org
addeddate:
2011-08-02 06:58:40
publicdate:
2011-08-02 06:58:40
creator:
NASA -- NASA Image Of The Day
ImageUID:
file:/home/lunaadmin /Source_download/201 108/1/Khartoum_TMO_2 007241/Khartoum_TMO_ 2007241_lrg.jpg
filename:
Khartoum_TMO_2007241 _lrg.jpg
date:
2007-08-28
rights:
Public Domain
source:
year:
2007
language:
eng

Floods in Sudan: Natural Hazards