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Earth
from Space: New Zealand’s volcanic landscape
15 September 2006 New
Zealand, shown in this Envisat image, is located in the South
Pacific Ocean and is comprised of two major islands – North
and South – and a number of smaller islands.
New
Zealand is shown in this Envisat image, acquired on 10
September 2006 by Envisat’s Medium Resolution Imaging
Spectrometer (MERIS) while working in Full Resolution Mode to
provide a spatial resolution of 300 meters. Credits: ESA
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New Zealand is located at
the south-western end of the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’,
a continuous line (40 000 km long) of volcanoes and fault lines
circling the edges of the Pacific Ocean, and straddles the
boundary of both the Pacific and Australian tectonic plates. The
collision of these plates has resulted in the edge of the Pacific
Plate being forced below the edge of the Australian Plate (a
process called ‘subduction’) to the north of New
Zealand. To the south of the country, the situation is reversed.
As almost all the volcanoes on
Earth occur near tectonic plate boundaries, it is no surprise
volcanism has greatly affected New Zealand’s landscape.
Volcanoes have also claimed more lives in New Zealand than any
other form of natural disaster, according to New Zealand’s
Civil Defence. Volcanic activity occurs in six areas of the
country – five in the North Island and one offshore to the
northeast.
Two of the volcanoes in the
North Island are visible as snow-capped circular features in the
image: Mount Ruapehu, the North Island’s tallest peak at
2797 meters, is seen at the top center, and Mount Taranaki, often
referred to as Mount Egmont, is seen at the top left. Mount
Ruapehu, an active volcano, last erupted in 1995 and 1996,
sparking excitement as it threw rocks and ash into the air. Mount
Taranaki is classed as dormant but is still considered an
eventual risk hazard.
The impressive landscape of
both mounts has attracted attention from movie directors: Mount
Ruapehu was transformed into the fiery Mount Doom in the film
‘Lord of the Rings’, and Mount Taranaki served as the
setting for the film ‘The Last Samurai’.
Satellite radar, such as that
aboard Envisat and ERS-2, allows scientists to track small
changes in the Earth’s movement that improves their ability
to predict volcanic eruptions. Synthetic Aperture Radar
Interferometry, InSAR for short, involves mathematically
combining different radar images, acquired from as near as
possible to the same point in space at different times, to create
digital elevation models and reveal otherwise undetectable
changes occurring between image acquisitions.
Satellite data are also very
useful when an eruption begins. The synoptic view taken from
optical and radar instruments can simultaneously show the ash
plume, the ash falling area, the lava streams and the volcanic
cone shrinkage or expansion. Atmospheric sensors are used to
identify the gases and aerosols released by the eruption, and
quantify their wider environmental impact.
This image was acquired on 10
September 2006 by Envisat’s Medium Resolution Imaging
Spectrometer (MERIS) while working in Full Resolution Mode to
provide a spatial resolution of 300 meters.
Source
/ Credit ESA
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