Browse All : Images of Morocco and Johnson Space Center (JSC) and Atlantic Ocean

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Isla de la Palma, Canary Isl …
nasa, nasaimageofthedaygalle …
The Canary Islands, a group …
ISS017-E-06820
mediatype IMAGE
mediatype image
date ? 5/13/2008
creator NASA -- NASA Image Of The Day
identifier ISS017-E-06820
Both sides of the Atlantic O …
Title Both sides of the Atlantic Ocean are visible from Apollo 8 spacecraft
Description Both sides of the Atlantic Ocean are visible in this view from the Apollo 8 spacecraft. The large, most prominent, land mass is the bulge of west Africa. The portion of Africa near the equator is dark and cloudy, but the more northerly portions are clear, showing the prominent cape at Dakar and the Senegal River in Senegal, Cap Blanc, the Adrar Plateau in Mauritania, the wide expanse of desert in Algeria and Spanish Sahara, and at the far edge, the Atlas and Anti-Atlas Mountains in Morocco. Clouds cover the eastern coast of South America, southward from Surinam and Guyana to near the City of Salvador, Brazil. This view was taken after tranlunar insertion.
Date Taken 1968-12-22
Gibraltar, Spain, Portugal, …
Title Gibraltar, Spain, Portugal, Morocco and Atlantic Ocean as seen from Gemini 10
Description Venezuela, British Guyana, Surinam, and Trindad, as seen from the Gemini 10 spacecraft. On left is mouth of Orinoco River in Venezuela. Mouth of Essequibo River in British Guyana is in right center.
Date Taken 1966-07-18
Strait of Gibraltar
Title Strait of Gibraltar
Description The Strait of Gibraltar as seen from the south (36.0N, 5.5W). This scene shows the actual Rock of Gibraltar under cloud cover but most of the Strait of Gibraltar, at the mouth of the Mediterranaen Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, can be seen in good detail. Despite the obliquity of the scene, much of the beauty of the Spanish and Moroccan countryside can still be appreciated.
Date Taken 1982-03-30
Morocco and border of spain …
Title Morocco and border of spain as seen from STS-59
Description The Atlantic Ocean, Straits of Gibraltar, and Alboran Sea (the westernmost portion of the Mediterranean Sea) separate Spain on the left from Morocco on the right. Algeciras Harbor is the prominent notch cut out of the eastern end of the north shore of the Strait, the Rock of Gibraltar is the tiny arrowhead that separates the notch from the Alboran Sea. The Sierra Nevada, farther away down the Spanish coast, lives up to its name in this April scene. The difference in elevation between the Sierra Morena and the Guadalquivir River valley is highlighted nicely by cumulus clouds. Tangier, Morocco can be seen as a light-toned spot on the southern shore of the Strait, near the entrance to the Atlantic Ocean.
Date Taken 1994-04-14
Strait of Gibraltar seen fro …
Title Strait of Gibraltar seen from STS-66
Description Swift currents flow through the Strait of Gibraltar, producing complicated patterns in the surface waters. Some of those patterns are highlighted in the sunglint in this photograph. The Mediterranian Sea is on the upper right, the Atlantic Ocean in in the lower left. Few features can be seen on the Mediterranian side, but current shears (straight lines coming off Spain), several sets of internal waves (impinging on the Spanish continental shelf) and ship wakes can be seen on the Atlantic side, west of Cadiz. Both Tangier and Cadiz show up in the sunglint as well.
Date Taken 1994-11-14
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