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Deadly Tornado Rips Across I
| Title |
Deadly Tornado Rips Across Indiana and Kentucky |
| Description |
A large tornado cut a 66-kilometer (41-mile) swath of destruction across southern Indiana and northwestern Kentucky in the early morning hours of November 6, 2005. The tornado killed 23 and left at least 200 injured. Ranked a strong F2 or weak F3 on the Fujita Tornado Damage Scale [ http://www.spc.noaa.gov/faq/tornado/f-scale.html ], the storm destroyed more than 100 buildings and homes as it tore across the two states with winds estimated at 320 kilometers per hour (200 miles per hour) at about 2 a.m. Central Standard Time. Four days later, on November 10, 2005, the Landsat 5 satellite captured this image of the storm-hit section of Indiana and Kentucky. A pale, interrupted stripe across the image—like someone dragged an eraser across the scene—shows the track the tornado made as it moved from southwest to northeast along the outskirts of Evansville, Indiana. The tornado's track begins on the northern banks of the Ohio River on the lower left side of the image. It sliced across Ellis Park, the oval-shaped Churchill Downs horse-racing track, killing at least three horses stabled in the track's barns, the Associated Press reported. The tornado then moved northeast across open fields into the neighborhoods southeast of downtown Evansville. Populated areas are cement white, black, and brown. Here, the contrast between the still-standing structures and the white swath of destruction becomes greater, making the tornado track easier to follow. Every year, some 1,000 tornadoes strike the United States, though their toll has decreased as weather forecasts and warning systems have improved. The November 6 tornado was the deadliest to date in 2005. To learn more about tornado safety, please visit the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service [ http://www.crh.noaa.gov/pah/1925/gi_body.php#TORNADO%20SAFETY%20INFORMATION ] web site. The National Weather Service's Weather Forecast Office [ http://www.crh.noaa.gov/pah/?n=evansvilletornado-nov.6,2005 ] also provides an analysis of the November 6 tornado, including photos. Image courtesy the NASA Landsat Project Science Office and USGS EROS |
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Hurricane Katrina Erodes the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Erodes the U.S. Gulf Coast |
| Description |
The graceful curve of the Chandeleur Islands resembles a multi-boned spine connecting the Mississippi Gulf coast to the delta of the Mississippi River in Louisiana. Like all barrier islands, the Chandeleur Islands form a thin protective wall between the open sea and the mainland, in this case Louisiana's St. Bernard Parish. The islands absorb the strongest waves, sheltering the mainland during large storms. It is no surprise, then, that barrier islands along the U.S. Gulf Coast changed dramatically in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and no change is as dramatic as that seen in the Chandeleur Islands. Hurricane Katrina's strong winds, storm surge, and battering waves scoured the islands, leaving them reduced or gone altogether. These images of the islands were taken by the Landsat 5 satellite. The top image, taken on September 16, 2005, shows the Mississippi and Alabama coast line, including the line of islands that bore the brunt of Katrina's fury. The lower images show the northern section of the Chandeleur Islands at full resolution. In the 11 months that passed between October 15, 2004, when the right image was taken, and September 16, 2005, when the left image was taken, the islands have wasted away. Barrier islands like the Chandeleur Islands are constantly building, eroding, and shifting under the normal actions of wind and waves. A powerful storm like Katrina can produce changes that otherwise may have taken many years, and most of the change seen here is probably a result of Katrina. Hurricane Dennis also gave the islands a glancing blow on July 10, 2005, and may be responsible for some of the change. The other barrier islands shown in the top image were also scoured by Katrina. The large images show that the Ship Islands [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13130 ] are now significantly smaller than they were in 2004, and Dauphin Island [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13132 ] has been cut in two. To read more about Katrina's impact on the Gulf Coast, please visit the United States Geological Survey's Hurricane Katrina Impact Studies [ http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/hurricanes/katrina/ ] page. To learn how NASA technology is contributing to our understanding of coastal erosion, see "LIDAR: In the Wake of the Storm" [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Lidar/index.html ] on the Earth Observatory. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, NASA Landsat Project Science Office |
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Hurricane Katrina Erodes the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Erodes the U.S. Gulf Coast |
| Description |
The graceful curve of the Chandeleur Islands resembles a multi-boned spine connecting the Mississippi Gulf coast to the delta of the Mississippi River in Louisiana. Like all barrier islands, the Chandeleur Islands form a thin protective wall between the open sea and the mainland, in this case Louisiana's St. Bernard Parish. The islands absorb the strongest waves, sheltering the mainland during large storms. It is no surprise, then, that barrier islands along the U.S. Gulf Coast changed dramatically in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and no change is as dramatic as that seen in the Chandeleur Islands. Hurricane Katrina's strong winds, storm surge, and battering waves scoured the islands, leaving them reduced or gone altogether. These images of the islands were taken by the Landsat 5 satellite. The top image, taken on September 16, 2005, shows the Mississippi and Alabama coast line, including the line of islands that bore the brunt of Katrina's fury. The lower images show the northern section of the Chandeleur Islands at full resolution. In the 11 months that passed between October 15, 2004, when the right image was taken, and September 16, 2005, when the left image was taken, the islands have wasted away. Barrier islands like the Chandeleur Islands are constantly building, eroding, and shifting under the normal actions of wind and waves. A powerful storm like Katrina can produce changes that otherwise may have taken many years, and most of the change seen here is probably a result of Katrina. Hurricane Dennis also gave the islands a glancing blow on July 10, 2005, and may be responsible for some of the change. The other barrier islands shown in the top image were also scoured by Katrina. The large images show that the Ship Islands [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13130 ] are now significantly smaller than they were in 2004, and Dauphin Island [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13132 ] has been cut in two. To read more about Katrina's impact on the Gulf Coast, please visit the United States Geological Survey's Hurricane Katrina Impact Studies [ http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/hurricanes/katrina/ ] page. To learn how NASA technology is contributing to our understanding of coastal erosion, see "LIDAR: In the Wake of the Storm" [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Lidar/index.html ] on the Earth Observatory. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, NASA Landsat Project Science Office |
|
Hurricane Katrina Erodes the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Erodes the U.S. Gulf Coast |
| Description |
The graceful curve of the Chandeleur Islands resembles a multi-boned spine connecting the Mississippi Gulf coast to the delta of the Mississippi River in Louisiana. Like all barrier islands, the Chandeleur Islands form a thin protective wall between the open sea and the mainland, in this case Louisiana's St. Bernard Parish. The islands absorb the strongest waves, sheltering the mainland during large storms. It is no surprise, then, that barrier islands along the U.S. Gulf Coast changed dramatically in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and no change is as dramatic as that seen in the Chandeleur Islands. Hurricane Katrina's strong winds, storm surge, and battering waves scoured the islands, leaving them reduced or gone altogether. These images of the islands were taken by the Landsat 5 satellite. The top image, taken on September 16, 2005, shows the Mississippi and Alabama coast line, including the line of islands that bore the brunt of Katrina's fury. The lower images show the northern section of the Chandeleur Islands at full resolution. In the 11 months that passed between October 15, 2004, when the right image was taken, and September 16, 2005, when the left image was taken, the islands have wasted away. Barrier islands like the Chandeleur Islands are constantly building, eroding, and shifting under the normal actions of wind and waves. A powerful storm like Katrina can produce changes that otherwise may have taken many years, and most of the change seen here is probably a result of Katrina. Hurricane Dennis also gave the islands a glancing blow on July 10, 2005, and may be responsible for some of the change. The other barrier islands shown in the top image were also scoured by Katrina. The large images show that the Ship Islands [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13130 ] are now significantly smaller than they were in 2004, and Dauphin Island [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13132 ] has been cut in two. To read more about Katrina's impact on the Gulf Coast, please visit the United States Geological Survey's Hurricane Katrina Impact Studies [ http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/hurricanes/katrina/ ] page. To learn how NASA technology is contributing to our understanding of coastal erosion, see "LIDAR: In the Wake of the Storm" [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Lidar/index.html ] on the Earth Observatory. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, NASA Landsat Project Science Office |
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Hurricane Katrina Floods the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Floods the Southeastern United States |
| Description |
The floods that buried up to 80 percent of New Orleans had noticeably subsided by September 15, 2005, when the top image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite. In the two and a half weeks that had passed since Hurricane Katrina flooded the city, pumps had been working nonstop to return the water to Lake Pontchartrain. As portable pumps were brought in to supplement the permanent pumps already hard at work, as much as 380 cubic meters (380,975 liters or 11,300 cubic inches) of water were being pumped out of New Orleans every second, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [ http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/cepa/katrina/pumps/pumps.html ]. The progress in draining the city is evident when the September 15 image is compared with an image taken one week earlier. In the lower image, taken by the Landsat 5 satellite on September 7, black flood water covers much of the city. By September 15, the dark flood water had all but disappeared, lingering only in a few sections of the city. The September 7 image does not show the full extent of the flooding. Taken more than a week after the hurricane struck New Orleans, the image shows a flooded city that had already started to drain. In a similar (but cloudy) image taken on August 30 [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13094 ], the flood water in St. Bernard Parish, image right, extends almost to the Mississippi River. Images provided courtesy of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Center for Earth Resources Observation & Science (CEROS). |
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Hurricane Katrina Floods the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Floods the Southeastern United States |
| Description |
The floods that buried up to 80 percent of New Orleans had noticeably subsided by September 15, 2005, when the top image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite. In the two and a half weeks that had passed since Hurricane Katrina flooded the city, pumps had been working nonstop to return the water to Lake Pontchartrain. As portable pumps were brought in to supplement the permanent pumps already hard at work, as much as 380 cubic meters (380,975 liters or 11,300 cubic inches) of water were being pumped out of New Orleans every second, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [ http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/cepa/katrina/pumps/pumps.html ]. The progress in draining the city is evident when the September 15 image is compared with an image taken one week earlier. In the lower image, taken by the Landsat 5 satellite on September 7, black flood water covers much of the city. By September 15, the dark flood water had all but disappeared, lingering only in a few sections of the city. The September 7 image does not show the full extent of the flooding. Taken more than a week after the hurricane struck New Orleans, the image shows a flooded city that had already started to drain. In a similar (but cloudy) image taken on August 30 [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13094 ], the flood water in St. Bernard Parish, image right, extends almost to the Mississippi River. Images provided courtesy of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Center for Earth Resources Observation & Science (CEROS). |
|
Hurricane Katrina Floods the
| Title |
Hurricane Katrina Floods the Southeastern United States |
| Description |
The floods that buried up to 80 percent of New Orleans had noticeably subsided by September 15, 2005, when the top image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite. In the two and a half weeks that had passed since Hurricane Katrina flooded the city, pumps had been working nonstop to return the water to Lake Pontchartrain. As portable pumps were brought in to supplement the permanent pumps already hard at work, as much as 380 cubic meters (380,975 liters or 11,300 cubic inches) of water were being pumped out of New Orleans every second, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers [ http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/cepa/katrina/pumps/pumps.html ]. The progress in draining the city is evident when the September 15 image is compared with an image taken one week earlier. In the lower image, taken by the Landsat 5 satellite on September 7, black flood water covers much of the city. By September 15, the dark flood water had all but disappeared, lingering only in a few sections of the city. The September 7 image does not show the full extent of the flooding. Taken more than a week after the hurricane struck New Orleans, the image shows a flooded city that had already started to drain. In a similar (but cloudy) image taken on August 30 [ http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=13094 ], the flood water in St. Bernard Parish, image right, extends almost to the Mississippi River. Images provided courtesy of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Center for Earth Resources Observation & Science (CEROS). |
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Fires in Quebec
| Title |
Fires in Quebec |
| Description |
More than 80 fires were triggered by lightning in late May in Quebec. The flaming fronts of wildfires burning in Quebec, Canada, on June 2, 2005, are bright pink in this infrared-enhanced (not ?natural? color) Landsat satellite image. Three fires are visible in the image, emitting bluish smoke plumes that blow eastward. Vegetation is in shades of green, sparsely vegetated or naturally bare soil is pinkish, and burned areas are deep reddish-brown. Water is dark blue to nearly black. The direction of the smoke as well as the fact that fires appear to be burning most actively on their eastern perimeter indicates the wind is blowing from the west. The area shown is in west-central Quebec, to the east of James Bay. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided by the NASA Landsat Project Science Office and the National Center for Earth Resources Observation & Science (NCEROS). |
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Katrina's Deluge
Two weeks after Hurricane Ka
| Description |
Two weeks after Hurricane Katrina made landfall in 2005, Landsat 5 captured this image of flooded New Orleans. In this false-color image, vegetation appears red and man-made structures appear whitish blue. |
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Hurricane Katrina Floods New
nasa, nasanaturalhazards
* eoimages.gsfc.nasa.gov/ima
neworleans_l7_15sep05
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-15 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA Image Of The Day |
| identifier |
neworleans_l7_15sep05 |
|
Chandeleur Islands: Image of
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
* eoimages.gsfc.nasa.gov/ima
Chandeleur_L5_2005259
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-16 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, NASA Landsat Project Science Office |
| identifier |
Chandeleur_L5_2005259 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Melting Ice Reveals New Isla
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
Off the coast of Greenland l
ge_07738
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-09-04 |
| creator |
NASA -- NASA images created by Jesse Allen, using data provided courtesy of Laura Rocchio, Landsat Project Science Office. |
| identifier |
ge_07738 |
|
Tornado Track Across Indiana
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle
A large tornado cut a 66-kil
Indiana_L5_2005314
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
2005-11-06 |
| creator |
NASA -- Image courtesy the NASA Landsat Project Science Office and USGS EROS |
| identifier |
Indiana_L5_2005314 |
|
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