A satellite peers down on a hellish landscape in south-central Algeria

Fear Factory: The sun-parched Tanezrouft Basin in Algeria is known as the “Land of Terror.” This photo shows some 1,500 square miles of the area.  Photograph Courtesy ESA
In the Tanezrouft Basin of south-central Algeria, vegetation is sparse and sand is plentiful. Images like this one, taken by Japan’s Advanced Land Observing Satellite, provide researchers with an easy look at hard-to-reach areas to survey natural resources, monitor disasters, and track vegetation coverage.

Such imagery allows scientists to determine which areas warrant an expensive and difficult visit. The concentric shapes on the left are sandstone hills, rising above white salt flats. White rivers snake through the rocks—the salt remains after being leached from the soil by the rare rainstorms that pass through the Sahara Desert. Prevailing wind usually shapes sand dunes into curves or lines, but the yellow cluster of dunes, known as Erg Mehedjibat, grows upward instead of horizontally, suggesting that this region may lack consistent directional winds. And that thin line in the upper right, squiggling above the Erg? That’s the only road for miles.

Comments



June 2013: American Energy Independence

Five amazing, clean technologies that will set us free, in this month's energy-focused issue. Also: how to build a better bomb detector, the robotic toys that are raising your children, a human catapult, the world's smallest arcade, and much more.


Online Content Director: Suzanne LaBarre | Email
Senior Editor: Paul Adams | Email
Associate Editor: Dan Nosowitz | Email
Assistant Editor: Colin Lecher | Email
Assistant Editor: Rose Pastore | Email

Contributing Writers:

Kelsey D. Atherton | Email
Francie Diep | Email
Shaunacy Ferro | Email

circ-top-header.gif
circ-cover.gif
bmxmag-ps