Images related to Mars Rover Curiosity on a Familiar Landscape

Lake Badwater, Death Valley
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Lake Badwater, Death Valley

This pair of images from NASA’s Landsat 5 satellite documents the short history of Death Valley’s Lake Badwater: formed in February 2005 and long gone by February 2007.

Published Mar 17, 2009

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Iturralde Crater, Bolivia
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Iturralde Crater, Bolivia

Published Sep 10, 2002

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Kebira Crater
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Kebira Crater

Published Mar 8, 2006

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Wolfe Creek Crater
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Wolfe Creek Crater

Wolfe Creek Crater is the second largest crater in the world from which meteorite fragments have been collected. Because of its excellent preservation, the crater clearly shows the classic features that result from a large meteorite striking the Earth.

Published Feb 24, 2008

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Pingualuit Crater, Canada
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Pingualuit Crater, Canada

Pingualuit Crater holds a lake about 267 meters (876 feet) deep. Because this lake has no connection to any other water body, inflows from other lakes cannot contaminate Pingualuit’s sediments.

Published Feb 10, 2008

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Death Valley
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Death Valley

Published Mar 16, 2005

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Tenoumer Crater, Mauritania
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Tenoumer Crater, Mauritania

Deep in the Sahara Desert lies a crater. Nearly a perfect circle, it is 1.9 kilometers (1.2 miles) wide, and sports a rim 100 meters (330 feet) high. Modern geologists long debated what caused this crater, some of them favoring a volcano. But closer examination of the structure revealed that the crater’s hardened “lava” was actually rock that had melted from a meteorite impact.

Published Feb 17, 2008

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Death Valley National Park
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Death Valley National Park

At 86 meters (282 feet) below sea level, Death Valley, California, is one of the hottest, driest places on the planet.

Published Apr 16, 2006

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Ries Crater, Germany
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Ries Crater, Germany

Germany’s Ries Crater (or Nördlinger Ries) is not easily discerned in space-based images. The crater’s existence was probably just as subtle to the medieval Europeans who established a settlement inside it and unknowingly matched their 1-kilometer- (0.6-mile-) wide city to the likely diameter of the meteorite that formed the crater.

Published Mar 9, 2008

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