Image Envision Home  Stock Images  Cart  FAQs 
  Photos   Clipart   Illustrations   All Graphics  

#2766 Malaspina Glacier, Alaska

Similar Royalty-Free Geography Photos

#3304 Global City Lights by JVPD
#2684 Picture of Continents of the Earth by JVPD
#3614 Colorado River From Space by JVPD
#3623 Munich, Germany by JVPD
#2613 Olduvai Gorge by JVPD
#3617 Mt. Rainer, Washington by JVPD
#2716 Hawaiian Islands by JVPD
#3619 Cape Cod From Space by JVPD
#16342 Stock Photo of American city Lights from Space by Cathy McKinty
#2736 Flooding in New Orleans by JVPD
#3407 Salalah, Oman by JVPD
#2687 London, England by JVPD
more...
Geography Photos


#2766 Malaspina Glacier, Alaska by JVPD
By JVPD


Stock Photo Description:

This anaglyph view of Malaspina Glacier in southeastern Alaska was created from a Landsat satellite image and an elevation model generated by the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). Malaspina Glacier is considered the classic example of a piedmont glacier. Piedmont glaciers occur where valley glaciers exit a mountain range onto broad lowlands, are no longer laterally confined, and spread to become wide lobes. Malaspina Glacier is actually a compound glacier, formed by the merger of several valley glaciers, the most prominent of which seen here are Agassiz Glacier (left) and Seward Glacier (right). In total, Malaspina Glacier is up to 65 kilometers (40 miles) wide and extends up to 45 kilometers (28 miles) from the mountain front nearly to the sea. Glaciers erode rocks, carry them down slope, and deposit them at the edge of the melting ice, typically in elongated piles called moraines. The moraine patterns at Malaspina Glacier are quite spectacular in that they have huge contortions that result from the glacier crinkling as it gets pushed from behind by the faster-moving valley glaciers. Numerous other features of the glaciers and the adjacent terrain are clearly seen when viewing this image at full resolution. The series of tonal arcs on Agassiz Glacier's extension onto the piedmont are called "ogives." These arcs are believed to be seasonal features created by deformation of the glacier as it passes over bedrock irregularities at differing speeds through the year. Assuming one light-and-dark ogive pair per year, the rate of motion of the glacial ice can be estimated (in this case, about 200 meters per year where the ogives are most prominent). Just to the west, moraine deposits abut the eroded bedrock terrain, forming a natural dam that has created a lake. Near the northwest corner of the scene, a recent landslide has deposited rock debris atop a small glacier. Sinkholes are common in many areas of the moraine deposits.

Photo Credit: NASA/JPL/NIMA

Topics:

royalty-free, stock photography, stock photos, pictures, images, graphics, posters, fine art prints, 3d, agassiz glacier, ak, alaska, anaglyph, earth science, geography, glacier, glaciers, jpl, malaspina glacier, nasa, ogives, piedmont glaciers, seward glacier


Model Released: No
Property Released: No
License type: Editorial Royalty-free


Image File Pricing
Small JPG File
815 x 790 px
22" x 21" @ 72 dpi

$50.00 USD

Medium JPG File
1631 x 1581 px
5" x 5" @ 300 dpi
$100.00 USD

Large JPG File
3262 x 3162 px
10" x 10" @ 300 dpi
$150.00 USD
 


Poster & Art Print Pricing
Details
7 x 5 in
$31.00 USD
10 x 8 in $48.00 USD
14 x 11 in   $77.00 USD
19 x 13 in   $98.00 USD

Shipping details: print prices include standard 5-7 day shipping in the U.S. only. For orders outside the U.S., please contact customer service to get a shipping quote.   1.541.245.8566


Royalty-Free (RF)       Stock Photos       Clip Art       Illustrations       Vector Graphics       3D Designs       Cartoons       Posters & Art Prints
Copyright © Image Envision   All Rights Reserved       Privacy - Contact - About - Artist Login - License Agreement - Download Your Images