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These images show Mt. St. Helens almost a decade before the May 18, 1980,
eruption, approximately three years after the eruption, then a pair of images over the following
decade, as the landscape recovered. Notice in particular the area northwest of
the mountain, past the Toutle River, where forest coverage has recovered
somewhat in the past ten years.
North is up in all these images. The 1973 Landsat 1 image used MSS bands 7,
5, and 4 (called MSS 4, 2, and 1 on the later Landsat satellites) displayed as
red, green, and blue respectively. The other images mapped TM bands 4, 3,
and 2 to red, green, and blue. This color combination is often referred to as
false color infrared since it has a similar appearance and tone to color
infrared photography. Reds represent vegetation (which is a strong reflector of
near infrared light), greys are exposed land, and light blues show snow on the
peaks of Mt. St. Helens and neighboring Mt. Adams. The Columbia River
snakes into view in the lower left corner, just north of Portland, Oregon.
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Please give credit to NASA GSFC Scientific Visualization Studio.
DLESE Catalog ID:
NASA-SVS-000959
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This resource has a thumbnail image at
'Mt. St. Helens, 1973 (pre-eruption)'
Resource contact / Creator / Publisher:
Author:
Jesse Allen NASA GSFC Scientific Visualization Studio
Principal Investigator:
Darrel Williams NASA/GSFC |