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<em>image from [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=40806&src=eoa-iotd NASA Earth Observatory]</em><br /> | <em>image from [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=40806&src=eoa-iotd NASA Earth Observatory]</em><br /> | ||
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Revision as of 22:50, 2 January 2015
Not the Moon
image from NASA Earth Observatory
Back in the late 1990s I directed VolcanoWorld, a NASA-funded website about volcanoes on Earth, and a little about those on other planets and moons. Within three years VW was pulling in 4 million visitors/yr and was one of the largest science sites on the web (by comparison LPOD attracts about 1/10 that number, but has no funding nor staff). When I saw this image last night I knew it was too glorious to not use for LPOD. Marion Island is about 19 km wide and 1200 m above sea level, but the volcano rises 5 km above its base on the Southern Indian Ocean sea floor. The entire mountain is a basaltic shield volcano - like those of the Hawaiian Islands - and explosions creating the ruddy-hued cinder cones may have been powered by the interaction of rising magma with seawater. The Moon has a number of shield volcanoes - the domes - but they typically have lower slopes than terrestrial shields. The Moon typically doesn't have cinder cones (volcanic dark halo craters like those in Alphonsus and Atlas are gravity-modified equivalents), but the Marius Hills have three times as many cones as Marion Island. If you check the full res version of the image you see a few lava channels, what we call sinuous rilles on the Moon.
Chuck Wood
Technical Details
May 5, 2009. EO-1 satellite, Advanced Land Imager (ALI).
Related Links
Check this wide angle view showing amazing cloud free zones as the topographic highs of Marion Island and Prince Edward Island block the clouds.