Planetary News: Earth (2007)
Earth from Space: North Atlantic Bloom
July 5, 2007
Reminiscent of the distinctive swirls in a Van Gogh painting, millions of
microscopic plants color the waters of the North Atlantic with strokes of
blue, turquoise, green, and brown.
Colorful Phytoplankton in the North Atlantic
NASA's Aqua satellite observes brightly-colored photoplankton in
the North Atlantic. Credit: Norman Kuring, Ocean Color Group at NASA Goddard
Space Flight Center
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Fed by nutrients that have built up during the winter and the long, sunlit
days of late spring and early summer, the cool waters of the North Atlantic
come alive every year with a vivid display of color. The microscopic plants,
called phytoplankton, that give the water this color are the base of the marine
food chain.
Some species of phytoplankton are coated with scales of calcium (chalk),
which turn the water electric blue. Chlorophyll and other light-capturing
pigments in others give the water a deep green hue. The proliferation of many
different species in various stages of growth and decay provides many nuances
of color in this concentrated bloom.
The bloom stretches across hundreds of kilometers, well beyond the edges
of this photo-like image, captured on June 23, 2007, by the Moderate Resolution
Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) flying aboard NASA’s Aqua satellite.
The upper left edge of the image is bounded by Greenland. Iceland is in the
upper right. Plumes of dust are blowing off the island, probably adding nutrients
to the surface waters to its south.
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