ISS060-E-33914

Browse image
Resolutions offered for this image:
720 x 480 pixels 5568 x 3712 pixels 640 x 427 pixels
Cloud masks available for this image:
Binary Heatmap

Spacecraft nadir point: 50.5° N, 161.8° W

Photo center point: 58.3° N, 154.9° W

Photo center point by machine learning:

Nadir to Photo Center: Northeast

Spacecraft Altitude: 222 nautical miles (411km)
Click for a map
Width Height Annotated Cropped Purpose Links
720 pixels 480 pixels Yes Yes NASA's Earth Observatory web site Download Image
5568 pixels 3712 pixels No No Download Image
640 pixels 427 pixels No No Download Image
Other options available:
Download Packaged File
Download a Google Earth KML for this Image
View photo footprint information
Download a GeoTIFF for this photo
Image Caption: Beauty Carved by Nature's Violence

This photograph of the Alaskan Peninsula, shot by an astronaut from the International Space Station (ISS), offers an oblique view of Katmai National Park. Many of the mountains are active volcanoes, part of the Aleutian Range, and several are topped by glaciers.

Just northwest of the coastal mountain range lies the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, a river valley that was buried by an eruption of Novarupta volcano in 1912. It was the largest volcanic eruption of the 20th Century.

Large quantities of hot ash and pumice were ejected during the eruption. The rain of hot debris buried the snow and glacial streams, immediately flashing them into steam. Those volcanic deposits remained hot for years afterwards and often converted subsequent precipitation and surface stream flows into steam, hence the name Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes. During the same eruption, the summit of Mount Katmai collapsed, forming a deep caldera that has filled with water as a crater lake.

Katmai National Park has multiple sediment-rich rivers that deliver freshwater to the ocean. These rivers and streams provide avenues for anadromous fish species, especially salmon, to migrate and spawn upstream in the park. The abundance of fish is important for some of Katmai's other residents: bald eagles and brown bears.