Berkas:VolgaDelta AMO 2005jun11.jpg

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Deskripsi

Satellite image of the w:Volga Delta at the w:Caspian Sea. This time of year, the river is running high, flushed with melting snow and springtime rain. The flood water has swept dark brown mud into the Caspian Sea. The mud fades to a soupy green as it becomes diluted in the water. While most of the green seen in the Caspian Sea in this image appears to be diluted mud, some may be phytoplankton or w:algal blooms, particularly in the lower right corner of the image. Satellite image of the w:Volga Delta at the w:Caspian Sea. The deep green braids of the Volga River fan into a broad delta on the northwest shore of the Caspian Sea. More than 500 channels flow from the river into the sea, creating a web of wetlands that supports hundreds of species of birds, fish, and plants. The Volga River delta is one of the most productive regions of the world for fish, particularly caviar-producing sturgeon, 25 percent of which live in the Volga River. The delta also contains oil deposits where millennia of carbon-rich mud have piled until pressure and heat converted the organic material in the lowest layers into petroleum. This photo-like image of the delta was taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite on June 11, 2005. This time of year, the river is running high, flushed with melting snow and springtime rain. The flood water has swept dark brown mud into the Caspian Sea. The mud fades to a soupy green as it becomes diluted in the water. Mud is not the only thing pouring into the sea with the river water. The Volga River is Europe’s longest river, flowing some 3,700 kilometers (2,300 miles) from its source in the Valday hills of northwest Russia to the Caspian Sea. As it winds its way through Russia, it passes through several large cities, and it is lined with agriculture. In its travels, the river picks up agricultural and industrial run-off, and these chemicals are deposited into the Caspian at the Volga River delta.

The added fertilizers nourish the algal blooms that grow on the surface of the sea, allowing them to grow larger. When they die, the plants begin to sink and are consumed by bacteria. A thick layer of decaying plants can suck all of the oxygen out of the water, leaving pockets of oxygen-poor water where fish cannot survive. For this reason, large algal blooms can result in fish kills. While most of the green seen in the Caspian Sea in this image appears to be diluted mud, some may be phytoplankton or algal blooms, particularly in the lower right corner of the image.
Tanggal
Sumber https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/5650/volga-river-delta
Pembuat Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC

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Public domain Berkas ini berada dalam domain publik di Amerika Serikat karena semata-mata diciptakan oleh NASA. Kebijakan hak cipta NASA menyatakan bahwa "materi NASA tidak dilindungi oleh hak cipta kecuali dicatat". (Lihat Template:PD-USGov, Halaman kebijakan hak cipta NASA atau JPL Image Use Policy.)
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11 Juni 2005

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Tanggal/WaktuMiniaturDimensiPenggunaKomentar
terkini12 Agustus 2019 10.58Miniatur versi sejak 12 Agustus 2019 10.581.115 × 1.061 (276 KB)AriadacapoCrop back to original ratio (75 % horizontally, 81 % vertically using CropTool with lossless mode)
12 Agustus 2019 10.55Miniatur versi sejak 12 Agustus 2019 10.554.400 × 5.600 (5,32 MB)AriadacapoOriginal from source
8 Mei 2006 23.46Miniatur versi sejak 8 Mei 2006 23.46540 × 540 (62 KB)Holly Cheng{{Information | Description=Satellite image of the w:Volga Delta at the w:Caspian Sea. This time of year, the river is running high, flushed with melting snow and springtime rain. The flood water has swept dark brown mud into the Caspian Sea. The

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