Sulfur plume off Namibia - related image preview

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Sulfur plume off Namibia

In late June 2003, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the Terra and Aqua satellites captured a series of images that tracked the development of a sulfur upwelling event in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Namibia in South Africa. The yellowish clouds of sulfur come from hydrogen sulfide gas produced by anaerobic bacteria (bacteria that can live without oxygen) at the ocean floor. As the gas wells up to the surface, it reacts with oxygen in the upper layers of the ocean and produces pure sulfur. The yellowish sulfur and the blue water combine to make green swirls in the waters off the Namib Desert coast. Streamers of dust hang over the ocean in several of the images. In the final image of the series, on July 13, dust plumes drift southwestward from the arid terrain north of the Namib Desert (light orange terrain at bottom center of image. The swirls seen in the ocean water may be phytoplankton blooms, rather than sulfur eruptions.


Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC

Published July 2, 2003
Data acquired June 26 - 26, 2003

Source:
Aqua > MODIS
Topics:
Biosphere > Microbiota > Phytoplankton
Biosphere > Terrestrial Ecosystems > Deserts
Biosphere > Terrestrial Habitat > Desert
Biosphere > Vegetation > Biomass
Biosphere > Vegetation > Phytoplankton
Collections:
MODIS Rapid Response
Visible Earth