Credit: NASA/Michala Garrison, USGS
On Landsat 8, Oli (Operational Land Imazor) captured an image of Kachmak Bay’s Turbid, Cloud Waters on 20 September 2024. This cloud comes from glacial flour: bits of Pulseswed Rock Ground by glaciers that have stability of flour.
Many meltwater currents are rich in particles, which are sometimes called suspended sedes, in the ways the sunlight absorbs and spreads the sunlight that transforms water into a milky blue-green color.
The water that grows in the east-growing-yes-yedge flows into the bay from the complex, which changes the presence of the Gulf during summer, which raises the question of how much the sediment’s influx affects the sea life of the Gulf.
Citation: Image: Kacamam Bay Stony Waters (2025, 7 March) taken from 10 March 2025 https://pheys.org/news/news/2025-03-mage-mage- Kachemak- Kachemak- Bay- Stony.html
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