Long Lost Satellite images

foxidrive

Retired Admin
"Once stashed in warehouses in Maryland and North Carolina, images and video captured from orbit by some of NASA's first environmental satellites in the mid-1960s are now yielding a trove of scientific data. The Nimbus satellites, originally intended to monitor Earth's clouds in visible and infrared wavelengths, also would have captured images of sea ice, researchers at the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center realized when they heard about the long-lost film canisters in 2009. After acquiring the film—and then tracking down the proper equipment to read and digitize its 16-shades-of-gray images, which had been taken once every 90 seconds or so—the team set about scanning and then stitching the images together using sophisticated software. So far, more than 250,000 images have been made public, including the first image taken by Nimbus-1 ( on 31 August 1964, of an area near the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. Besides yielding a wealth of sea ice data, the data recovery project, which will end early next year, could also be used to extend satellite records of deforestation and sea surface temperatures."

I will be on one of them as a young kid. :wink2:
 

aye-aye-Chris

Famous Word Swap Guru
Staff member
I will be on one of them as a young kid. :wink2:
As a young cub... a young (baby) fox is a cub. :poke

baby-fox-in-a-cup-funny-cute-things.jpg


Found myself on one of the photos! :happy
Searching the other 249K of them...

Ponce_de_Leon_Griffin.jpg
 
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