• MODIS Pic of the Day 11 August 2022

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Thu Aug 11 12:00:08 2022
    August 11, 2022 - Southern Patagonian Ice Field

    Southern Patagonian
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    The vast Patagonian icefields ride atop South America’s Andes
    Mountains, straddling the border between Chile (west) and Argentina
    (east). Divided into two long lobes, the North and South Patagonian
    icefields, they are dramatically expansive, but have been shrinking.
    The icefields reached maximum size about 18,000 years ago and have very
    slowly shrunken to their current size. Today the Southern Patagonian
    icefield measures about 13,000 square kilometers (5,020 square miles),
    about three times the size of the Northern icefield. Altogether, the
    icy area spans about 17,333 square kilometers (6,692 square miles)—that
    is just a bit smaller than the U.S. state of New Jersey.

    On August 5, 2022, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
    (MODIS) on board NASA’s Aqua satellite acquired a false-color image of
    the Southern Patagonia icefield. Such expansive views of the icy region
    are rare, thanks to the frequent clouds that cover the southern Andes.

    This type of false-color image combines infrared and visible light
    (MODIS bands 7-2-1) to highlight snow and ice, which appear bright
    electric blue. Vegetation looks green and open Earth, or areas with
    little vegetation, are colored in tans and brown. Water may appear deep
    blue or black and cloud often appears white, although high, cold cloud
    that contains ice will be tinted in electric blue. With these colors,
    it is easy to see snow across the Andes as well on the Argentinian
    Pampas to the east. Glaciers are solid stretches of ice, often topped
    with substantial snow in the wintertime, and stand out against the
    snow. On the eastern side of the Andes, numerous glacial lakes, filled
    with water from melting glaciers, extend from the edge of the Andes
    eastward.

    Although it has taken thousands of years for the Patagonian icefields
    to shrink to their current size, like most glaciers around the world,
    the Southern Patagonian icefield has been retreating more quickly
    recently in the face of rising atmospheric and ocean temperatures.
    According to the University of Maine Climate Change Institute, the
    Southern Patagonian Icefield is particularly susceptible to a changing
    climate because of its relative proximity to the equator and because it
    is made up of low-elevation alpine and tidewater glaciers that are
    highly sensitive to changes in temperature and precipitation.

    Image Facts
    Satellite: Terra
    Date Acquired: 8/5/2022
    Resolutions: 1km (1 MB), 500m (2.8 MB), 250m (1.9 MB)
    Bands Used: 7,2,1
    Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC



    https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2022-08-11

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