Acquired March 13, 2010, this true-color image shows pale-hued surface waters along the coat of Namibia, ranging in color from peacock green to off-white. Inland, the image captures the rippling sand dunes of the Namib Desert.
Published Mar 15, 2010Acquired November 21, 2010, this natural-color image shows brightly colored water off the coast of northern Namibia.
Published Nov 22, 2010Acquired June 17, 2010, this natural-color image shows peacock-green plumes from hydrogen sulfide emissions in the water, and linear dust plumes in the atmosphere along the Namibian coast.
Published Jun 18, 2010People living along Namibia’s desert coast have long been familiar with the rotten-egg smell that periodically emanates from the Atlantic Ocean. With an economy that is largely based on fishing, the locals are also used to seeing millions of fish die whenever the unpleasant scent fills the air. The smell and the fish die-off are caused by hydrogen sulfide erupting from decaying plants on the sea floor. On May 12, 2004, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image of a hydrogen sulfide eruption in progress.
Published May 13, 2004Bacteria near the seafloor consume organic matter and produce prodigious amounts of gas that rises to the surface.
Published Feb 20, 2015