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Gotland and van Gogh [Landsat Week]

Today we have reached the final picture of Landsat week.
I am starting to ask myself if someone at NASA is trying to follow in van Gogh's footsteps. We have featured a video on ocean currents visualized in a van Gogh'esque fashion. (http://amplt.de/le) This picture seems very much like the masterpiece „The Starry Night“.
Van Gogh - A Starry Night
Van Gogh - A Starry Night

This picture was recorded above the Baltic sea and shows the Swedish island Gotland. The flora and fauna on this island are very diverse. Especially, birds and orchids are one of the traits of Gotland. However, the geology is in no way inferior showing a beautiful sequence from the Silurian age. That's about 443.7 to 416 million years ago. It's a succession of limestone and shale of 200 to 500m thickness. Back when they started building, corals formed the first reefs offshore the continent in a depth of 4m to 50m. Whereas, the shales were deposited in a deep water environment. Common for limestone plateaus, the structure has been karstified. In the south you can find some sandstones that were deposited as the most recent sediments.1

Now what about these swirly structures around Gotland?
Those are phytoplankton blooms. Phytoplankton are the microscopic “grass of the sea”, serving as a main food source to many marine animals. Just like plants on land, plankton blooms when the temperature is right and nutrients can support the bloom. Phytoplankton can only survive in the very upper part of the water column, where light can still enter. During a bloom the plankton releases chlorophyl, the green pigment that also makes our tree's leaves green. The chlorophyl becomes an indicator for local water currents.

Let's all thank the guys NASA for giving us another wonderful piece where art and science connect. Now enjoy the picture, that placed 1st in the big “Earth as Art” vote: http://amplt.de/l8

We hope you enjoyed the Landsat week!
-JSD

Van Gogh at Gotland
Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/USGS



via The Earth Story's Facebook Wall

Ocean currents in the style of van Gogh

Ever wondered how the currents propagate in the ocean, then this video is just right for you!
(Actually if you like van Gogh this video is just right for you as well...)
It's a visualization of the currents and eddies in the Earth's oceans.

Keep in mind, the topography of Earth is exaggerated by 20x and the bathymatry by 40x, so you can really distiguish everything, but the currents are all from NASA/JPL. The simulation of actually uses flows at any depth but this visualization only uses the surface currents.
-JSD

via The Earth Story's Facebook Wall

What do we know about the ocean? [Infographics]

Do you like the ocean?
Do you like huge infographics?

Well this one is just right for you! This infographic gives some idea of how little we know about our ocean and how much there is to learn. Enjoy!

Infographics about the Ocean
Click for full view



via The Earth Story's Facebook Wall

Source: http://bit.ly/MToLr8
-JSD
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