![](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081004060335im_/http://veimages.gsfc.nasa.gov//19369/alaska_TOMS_2004182_tn.jpg)
Images & Animations
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Credit
NASA images courtesy Dr. Jay Herman and David Larko, TOMS Science Team at Goddard Space Flight Center
In Alaska, the landscape is already changing over to its fall wardrobe, with summer’s green being traded for brown and gold. Fires, some of which have been burning since before the beginning of summer, were still smoldering on September 7, 2004.
The smoke from dozens of forest fires raging across eastern Alaska and western Canada continued to spread on June 30, 2004. The areas of highest aerosol optical thickness—indicating the greatest amounts of particles and the least amount of light able to penetrate the atmosphere—are spread over a wide area of southern Alaska, and are colored red in this image from the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS). Decreasing smoke thickness appears in orange, yellow, and green. The thick haze stretches across the Bering Strait (upper left) and over to Siberia; it also stretches southward well out over the Gulf of Alaska. The smoke is causing visibility problems not just for travelers in the region, but also for firefighters trying to combat the fires and monitor their spread from the ground and from the air.
Metadata
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Sensor
TOMS/TOMS -
Start Date
2004-06-30 -
Event Start Date
2004-06-15 -
NH Image ID
12217 -
NH Event ID
10408 -
NH Posting Date
2004-07-01