LENA DELTA RESERVE, RUSSIA
This is what Russia looks like from above. Well, part of it. Specifically, the Lena Delta Nature Reserve on the northern edge of Siberia. And while it may look like an artwork created by marbling, it’s actually an image, captured by NASA’s Landsat 7 satellite, which was retired in June.
Landsat 7’s mission was to monitor Earth’s land, surface waters and coastlines to track changes and supply data to climate scientists. Praised as the most accurately calibrated Earth-observing satellite when it launched in April 1999, it spent the next 26 years capturing images of Earth, like this one, using a multispectral scanning radiometer, known as the Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) instrument.
During the approximately 9,000 days it spent circling our planet, Landsat 7 took over…