Channeling Earth: Rivers Seen From Space

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Rivers connect Earth’s mountains and lakes to its oceans, creating lifelines that provide water, food, transportation and recreation along the way. Some rivers, like the Nile, bring life to barren landscapes that would otherwise be uninhabitable. Others, like the Mississippi, defy our best efforts to tame them.

Rivers carve their way across the continents, some becoming ever more entrenched while others meander freely across the surface. The myriad paths they carve make patterns that are best seen from above.

In this gallery, we’ve collected images from satellites and astronauts of some of the longest, twistiest, most beautiful and interesting rivers in the world.

Click on any image in this gallery for a high-resolution version.

Rio Negro, Argentina

The Rio Negro in Argentina is a beautiful example of how mobile some rivers are. This is one of the most meandering rivers in South America. In the image above, taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station on January 4, the river has left scars all across the floodplain as it moved and carved new channels. Some of the old river channels still have water in them and are known as oxbow lakes.

Image: NASA

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Mississippi River

Over the past 10,000 years, the Mississippi River has wandered along 200 miles of coastline, switching to a new outlet into the Gulf of Mexico every thousand years or so. Left alone, it would continue to move. Holding it in place is one of the Army Corps of Engineers’ most impressive feats. The Mississippi is the biggest river in the United States, stretching 2,320 miles.

The image above, taken by the Landsat 7 satellite in 2001, shows the Birdfoot Delta, which the river has inhabited for around 600 years and measures more than 31 miles across. The image below, taken by GeoEye’s Ikonos satellite, shows the river after it broke at least two levees in June 2008, flooding the city of Gulfport, Illinois.

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Images: 1) USGS/NASA. 2) GeoEye.

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Ganges River, India

The false color image of the Ganges River Delta was taken in 2000 by the Landsat 7 satellite. Bare, sandy soil appears white in the image, and the swamp forests of the region, home to the Royal Bengal Tiger, show up as green. The 1,560-mile-long river originates in the Himalayas and flows across the Uttarakhand state of India to the Bay of Bengal.

Image: USGS/NASA

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San Juan River, Colorado

The San Juan River runs 400 miles from Colorado through New Mexico and into Utah where it flows into the Colorado River. This image is of Utah’s Gooseneck State Park, named for the crazy switchbacks the river takes here. In certain places, it has packed 5 miles of river into a 1 mile stretch of land. This part of the San Juan is a popular river rafting destination. Another stretch in New Mexico is famous among fly fishers.

Image: GeoEye

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Nile River, Egypt

The Nile River carves a fertile scar through this arid part of Egypt, providing a lifeline in an otherwise barren region. The agriculture that lines the river fills the floodplain on the floor of the river valley, which averages about 6 miles across in the image above. The boundary between the green and beige marks the valley walls.

Below, the Nile River delta on the Mediterranean Sea can be seen in a 2003 image from NASA’s Terra satellite and below that, close up in a photo from GeoEye.

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Images: 1) USGS/NASA. 2) NASA. 3) GeoEye.

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Lena River, Siberia

The Lena River is the world’s 10th longest, stretching 2,800 miles and draining almost a million square miles of Siberia. The Lena’s delta, shown here in a false-color image taken by the Landsat 7 satellite in 2000, covers more than 11,000 square miles on the Laptev Sea. The delta is frozen tundra for around seven months of the year. For a few months it is wetlands and is protected as a wildlife reserve.

Image: USGS/NASA

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Colorado and Green Rivers, Utah

The Green River (on the left) meets the Colorado River in the middle of Canyonlands National Park, Utah, in this image from GeoEye. Cataract Canyon begins just below the confluence, and contains a very popular stretch of water for river rafters, dotted with rapids.

The circular structure in the upper left corner of the image is Upheaval Dome, named because geologists suspected it was formed when layers of earth were pushed up by a buoyant pocket of salt, known as a salt diapir. Since then, however, geologists have determined it was caused by an asteroid impact. Upheaval Dome can be seen close up in the image below taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station in 2007.

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Images: 1) GeoEye. 2) NASA.

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Alluvial Fan, Tibet

Lake Morari on the Tibetan Plateau is fed by a glacial river that has formed a dramatic apron of sediment, known as an alluvial fan, over the years. The fan grew big enough to dam the river and form the lake. The water must go back around and through the fan sediments to drain through the lake’s outlet on the left side of this image, taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station in 2006.

Image: NASA

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Mackenzie River, Canada

The Mackenzie is Canada’s longest river, and the second longest in North America, running 2,635 miles from Great Slave Lake to the Beaufort Sea. The delta, pictured here in a false-color image captured by the ASTER instrument aboard NASA’s Terra satellite in August 2005, is a giant marsh riddled with lakes. Near the top of this image, a bend in the river has almost separated from the main channel to become an oxbow lake.

Image: NASA/ASTER

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Niagara Falls

Though a satellite’s view of a vertical feature on Earth may not be the most flattering angle, this image of Niagara Falls is impressive. The Niagara River drops nearly 170 feet to form one of the world’s largest waterfall, shown above in an image taken by GeoEye’s Ikonos satellite in August 2004. More than 1.7 million gallons of water runs over the edge every second, constantly eating away at the rock below and pushing it back as much as 20 feet in a year.

A close-up of the falls from the same image is below, reoriented for a better perspective. Below that is a view of the entire Niagara River between Lake Ontario in the north and Lake Erie in the south, taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station in 2007.

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Images: 1) GeoEye. 2) GeoEye. 3) NASA.

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Saskatchewan River, Canada

The bird’s foot delta of the Saskatchewan River in Manitoba is formed as silt carried by the river is deposited and builds up, eventually forcing the flow to find new paths. The delta measures around 8 miles across, while the most famous bird’s foot, of the Mississippi River, is more than 30 miles across.

The Saskatchewan River’s delta mud contains a lot of fossilized amber from around 80 million years ago that was carried there by the river and preserved in the sediments. This image of the Saskatchewan River was taken in 2007 by astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Image: NASA

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Kochechum River, Siberia

The Kochechum River runs the frozen tundra on the northern Central Siberian Plateau into the coniferous forests of the taiga. In 2007, NASA scientists joined Russian scientists to travel down the river by boat for three weeks to study the transition and how these types of ecosystems may be affected by climate change. You can read more about the journey on NASA scientist Jon Ranson’s blog from the time.

This image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite in July 2001.

Image: NASA/USGS

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Irrawaddy River, Myanmar

The Irrawaddy River splinters into several outlets in its delta on the Bay of Bengal, creating the ideal environment for mangroves. However, a lot of the mangroves have been cleared for rice cultivation, leaving the coastline without the natural protection of these partially submerged forests. Since this image was captured by the Landsat 7 satellite in 2000, even more mangroves have disappeared and in 2008, Cyclone Nargis brought a 12-foot storm surge that devastated the area, threatening the country’s food supply.

Image: NASA/USGS

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