An eruption from one of the most active volcanoes on the Kamchatka Peninsula deposited a long trail of ash across the landscape.
Image of the Day Volcanoes Remote Sensing
Acquired a little less than two hours apart, these images show a volcano before and after it spewed an ash plume on October 6, 2012.
Image of the Day Atmosphere Land Volcanoes
The mountainous landscape around the volcano is covered in a patchwork of snow, ash, and volcanic debris.
Volcanoes
Image of the Day Atmosphere Land
Shiveluch and Klyuchevskaya Volcanoes send ash plumes above Kamchatka.
Atmosphere Land Volcanoes
In mid-February 2019, the Kamchatkan volcano lofted ash plumes nearly 6 kilometers into the sky.
Volcanoes Remote Sensing
Batu Tara erupted ash over 2,000 meters high on March 15, 2010.
The Advanced Land Imager (ALI) on NASA’s EO-1 satellite acquired this image of Shiveluch Volcano venting gas and ash on September 7, 2010.
Image of the Day Land Volcanoes
Satellite images captured the ongoing, low-level eruption of one of the Alaskan Peninsula’s largest volcanoes.
Image of the Day Land Volcanoes Snow and Ice
Ash from Grímsvötn spread over the North Sea on May 24, 2011, canceling several hundred flights in Scotland and Scandinavia.
Atmosphere Volcanoes
Volcanic ash from earlier eruptions has settled onto the snowy landscape, leaving dark gray swaths. The ash stains are confined to the south of the Karymsky’s summit, one large stain fanning out toward the southwest, and another toward the east.
Image of the Day Land
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