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Rio Baluarte sediment, satellite image
Description:
Rio Baluarte sediment, GeoEye-1 satellite image. Heavy sediment load and plume spilling from the mouth of the Rio Baluarte into the Gulf of California, near the town of Caimanero in the Mexican state of Sinaloa. This increased sediment load and the swollen river was likely caused by rainfall from the recent Hurricane Jimena (28 August to 4 September 2009). This image is several hundred meters across. Image data obtained on 9 September 2009. The US-operated GeoEye-1 satellite was launched in September 2008, and orbits at a height of 680 kilometers. It is the world's highest resolution commercial Earth-imaging satellite.
Credit:
GeoEye/Science Source
Unique identifier:
SS2479446
Legacy Identifier:
SP2472
Type:
Image
Size:
3000px × 3000px (~25 MB)
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Tags
2009
21st century
C007/4838
C0074838
caimanero
coast
coastal
delta
deposit
deposition
earth science
eroded
erosion
estuary
freshwater
from space
geoeye
geoeye 1
geoeye-1
geography
gulf of california
heavy rainfall
hurricane jimena
hydrological
hydrology
meteorology
mexican
mexico
north america
outflow
pacific ocean
plume
rio baluarte
river
river mouth
salt water
satellite
satellite image
sea
sediment
sinaloa
swollen
water
water flow
weather