The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

Har Nuur, Mongolia

In western Mongolia, braided streams of sand dunes stretch east-west across the arid landscape. One ribbon of sand, spanning roughly 200 kilometers, extends from an area south of Khyargas Lake in the west to a smaller lake, Telmen Nuur, in the east. In between, sand dunes march past Har Nuur, or "Black Lake."

Har Nuur sits in the Valley of Lakes of western Mongolia. Bordered by multiple mountain ranges, the Valley of Lakes hosts remnant basins of larger ancient lakes, dune fields, and salt marshes. Har Nuur, like other lakes in the region, is a closed-basin lake fed by precipitation.

Filed under  //   Earth   places  

American Heritage Center : University of Wyoming : Photograph of the Month

A ranch hand on the Pitchfork Ranch near Meeteetse, Wyoming takes a dip from a can of peanut butter, circa 1920.

Filed under  //   Historical   photography   places  

The Starry Night of Alamut

Image Credit & Copyright : Babak Tafreshi

Filed under  //   Astronomy   Earth   places  

A Wyoming Traffic Jam

Sent by Lynn...Thanks !

Filed under  //   humor   photography   places  

Islands of Four Mountains

Islands of the Four Mountains in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska

Filed under  //   Earth   places   Volcanoes  

Shuttle launch as seen by skydivers...

 

Filed under  //   miscellaneous   places  

Gulf Oil Leak: Day 62

Satellite image of the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico, as seen on June 19, 2010.
Credit: MODIS Rapid Response Team.

Filed under  //   Natural Disasters   Natural Resources   places  

Girl at entrance to Newgrange , Co. Meath

between 1904-1910

Copyright National Library of Ireland

Filed under  //   Historical   photography   places  

Pingualuit Crater

This is Pingualuit Crater in northern Quebec, on Earth. It was first seen by a crew from a United States Army Air Force plane in 1943, and was one of the first craters in this region to be identified as an impact crater. This image was taken by NASA's Landsat 7 satellite on August 17, 2002. In this image, water appears blue, and land appears in varying shades of beige. The high latitude of the area limits vegetation, so thick, lush forests do not flourish in this region. In fact, the crater's name derives from an Inuktitut term for cold-weather-induced skin blemishes.

 

Filed under  //   Craters   Earth   places  

Beautiful Places On Earth

(download)
Morning Birdsong

 

Filed under  //   Earth   photography   places