|
|
Mt Kilimanjaro, 2000
|
Some scientists believe the snow cap of Mount Kilimanjaro will be gone in two decades. Researchers say the ice fields on Africa's highest mountain shrank by 80 percent in the past century. The snow cap formed some 11,000 years ago. The Landsat satellite captured these images of Kilimanjaro February 17, 1993 and February 21, 2000.
|
|
|
|
Swing in to view Mount Kilimanjaro on February 21, 2000.
Duration: 27.0 seconds
Available formats:
640x480 (60 fps)
Frames
1920x1080 (60 fps)
Frames
1280x720 (30 fps)
MPEG-2
59 MB
640x480 (30 fps)
MPEG-1
7 MB
320x240 (30 fps)
MPEG-1
1 MB
320x240
JPEG
10 KB
320x240
JPEG
10 KB
320x240
JPEG
10 KB
720x480 (29.97 fps)
DV
51 MB
How to play our movies
|
|
|
|
Mount Kilimanjaro, with a small ice cap, on February 21, 2000.
Available formats:
2560 x 1920
TIFF
14 MB
160 x 80
PNG
26 KB
320 x 240
JPEG
15 KB
80 x 40
PNG
6 KB
|
Animation Number: | 2701 |
Animators: | James W. Williams (SVS) (Lead) |
| Marte Newcombe (SVS) |
Completed: | 2003-02-04 |
Scientist: | Darrel Williams (NASA/GSFC) |
Data Collected: | February 21, 2000 |
Series: | Mt Kilimanjaro |
Video: | SVS2002-0037 * |
Goddard TV Tapes: | G2007-001HD -- NASA's HD Climate Change Resource Tape |
| G2008-041HD -- NASAs Landsat in HD 2008 Resource Tape |
Keywords:
SVS
>> HDTV
SVS
>> Melting
SVS
>> Mt. Kilimanjaro
SVS
>> Snow
|
More Information on this topic available at:
stories/kilimanjaro_20021216/index.html
|
|
Please give credit for this item to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio and USGS |
*Please note: the SVS does not fulfill requests for copies of the tapes in our library. On some of our animation pages, there is a direct link to a video distribution service from which tapes, handled by the Public Affairs Office (PAO)/Goddard TV, including some of our animations may be ordered. General information on this service can be found here. |
|
Back to Top
|
|
|
|