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5/11/2003: Shenandoah topography
http://cellar.org/2003/shenandoah.jpg
The Earth Sci pic of the day yields this nice one of Virginia's Shenandoah national park by Shuttle Radar Topography Mission data. Now here's the odd part: no camera was used to create this image. They recorded the various elevations in detail, via radar on the shuttle. Then they created this image from that data: one pass to create the shading (which areas are light and which dark) and one to create the color (different heights of the land get different colors). |
I can see how they can assign colors to elevations but I don't understand the shading part.
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I think they go North to South, and when there is drop in elevation they add darkness (with more darkness for a larger drop) so you get a shadowing effect. Or something.
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I'd love to see images like this next to a topographic map of the same area ... I'm guessing that between that pink ridgy thing and the pink hilly thing is a river ... and those squiggles up toward the top also look like a watercourse. (of course it could be a highway of extreme width and constant declination from the landsurface, but ...
NEAT stuff UT! |
About 20% of the way down the mountain ridge on the right it cleaves. I think that's the junction of the Skyline Drive and Blueridge Parkway. I remember one summer night at a scenic pulloff near there, on the hood of a black Thunderbird, with a full moon.....
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one sentance story?
with a full moon to guide him Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson once again repulsed the Yankee invader.
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