Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Taking a Measure of Sea Level Rise: Land Motion
720 x 480 PNG
Published November 5, 2020
Earth’s surface may seem motionless most of the time, but an array of measurements show that natural and human-caused processes cause coastal land to rise and fall.
Related images:
720 x 423 PNG
720 x 480 JPEG
720 x 640 PNG
PNG
California’s Rising and Sinking Coast
720 x 715 JPEG
Published October 23, 2020
Millions of people in the state live in low-lying coastal areas where land subsidence is exacerbating the risks of sea level rise.
720 x 915 JPEG
2958 x 3492 3 MB - JPEG
2525 x 2480 4 MB - JPEG
JPEG
Scientists Map Beirut Blast Damage
Published August 11, 2020
Radar imagery of ground surface changes could help with efforts at disaster relief and recovery after the explosion.
2048 x 1920 546 KB - JPEG
Torrential Rains Flood Indonesia
Published January 7, 2020
In January 2020, Jakarta experienced its worst rainfall in more than a decade.
4680 x 3120 5 MB - JPEG
Drought then Deluge Turned a Stable Landslide into Disaster
720 x 543 GIF
Published February 7, 2019
“Stable landslide” sounds like a contradiction in terms, but there are indeed places on Earth where land has been creeping downhill slowly and harmlessly for as long as a century.
1500 x 992 501 KB - JPEG
720 x 543 JPEG
GIF
Florence Inundates the Carolinas
Published September 18, 2018
As the Carolinas flood from Hurricane Florence, NASA is providing valuable information for rescue and recovery efforts.
720 x 545 PNG
3110 x 1622 3 MB - PNG
6802 x 4459 7 MB - JPEG
A Crack of Light in the Polar Dark
Published June 29, 2017
Even in the dark, there are satellite instruments that allow scientists to “see” the rift growing across Antarctica’s Larsen C ice shelf.
720 x 857 JPEG
4800 x 6400 4 MB - JPEG
720 x 597 JPEG
5934 x 3956 11 MB - JPEG
San Joaquin Valley is Still Sinking
Published March 5, 2017
Groundwater pumping in California has been causing land subsidence.
1113 x 971 2 MB - PNG
New Studies Get to the Bottom of Antarctic Melting
720 x 536 PNG
Published October 30, 2016
Researchers from NASA and the University of California, Irvine (UCI) have gained an unprecedented view of ice melting on the floating undersides of glaciers. In the process, they detected the fastest ongoing rates of glacier retreat ever observed in West Antarctica.
1377 x 963 1 MB - PNG
720 x 603 PNG
720 x 405 JPEG
A Second Massive Ice Avalanche in Tibet
Published October 21, 2016
In a rare event, two glaciers just a few kilometers apart in the Aru Range have collapsed in spectacular fashion.
2682 x 2682 5 MB - JPEG
2682 x 2682 6 MB - JPEG
2682 x 2682 4 MB - JPEG
3600 x 3600 5 MB - JPEG
3600 x 3600 23 MB - GeoTIFF
Mapping Earth Motion from the Illapel Earthquake
720 x 542 PNG
Published October 1, 2015
Scientists have projected the size and location of changes in Earth’s surface following the September 2015 earthquake and tsunami off Chile.
1409 x 939 386 KB - PNG
1300 x 867 999 KB - PNG
Sensing How Much the Earth Moved in Nepal
Published May 14, 2015
Using satellite radar sensors, scientists have been able to detect the rising and falling of the landscape in the Himalayas caused by the Gorkha earthquake.
2268 x 1512 2 MB - JPEG
Thwaites Glacier from Sentinel-1A
Published April 22, 2014
Icebergs surround the edge of Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier in one of the first images to come from the European Space Agency’s new Sentinel-1A satellite.
4961 x 3982 5 MB - JPEG