Portal:Geography/Featured picture archive/2010
Archive of pictures[edit]
2010
Week 1[edit]
Topographical map of Burma. Photo credit: Captain Blood |
Week 2[edit]
Topographical map of Burundi. Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 3[edit]
Map of the Tonle Sap Lake and its floodplain in Cambodia. Photo credit: Matti Kummu |
Week 4[edit]
Volcanic plugs dot the landscape near Rhumsiki, Far North Region in Cameroon. Photo credit: Amcaja |
Week 5[edit]
Geological map of Canada. The Canadian Shield, stretching North from the Great Lakes to the Arctic Ocean and covering over half of Canada, is a broad region of Precambrian rock (pictured in shades of red) that encircles Hudson Bay. Photo credit: USGS |
Week 6[edit]
Topographic map of Cape Verde. Photo credit: Mysid |
Week 7[edit]
Ubangi River, a major tributary of the Congo River, at the outskirts of Bangui, capital of Central African Republic. Photo credit: Pete Chirico, USGS |
Week 8[edit]
A composite of images showing the diminishing Lake Chad from 1973 to 2001. Photo credit: NASA |
Week 9[edit]
Satellite image of the Atacama Desert, located in northern Chile it covers a 600-mile (1,000 km) strip of land on the Pacific coast of South America, west of the Andes mountains. The Atacama desert is the driest desert in the world. Photo credit: NASA |
Week 10[edit]
Longsheng Rice Terrace in Longsheng county, Guilin, China. Photo credit: Anna Frodesiak |
Week 11[edit]
Topographic map of Colombia. Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 12[edit]
Street in the Grande Comore Island, Comoros. Photo credit: Souef el marwane |
Week 13[edit]
Satellite picture of Brazzaville, Kinshasa and the Malebo Pool of the Congo River. The Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Republic of the Congo, both countries lying along the river's banks, are named after it. Photo credit: NASA |
Week 14[edit]
Arenal Volcano erupting in November 2006. Arenal is an active andesitic stratovolcano in north-western Costa Rica around 90 km northwest of San José. Photo credit: Matthew Landry |
Week 15[edit]
Topographic map of Côte d'Ivoire. In the center of the country on the Bandama River lies Lake Kossou, an artificial lake, created in 1973. Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 16[edit]
Photo credit: Captain Blood |
Week 17[edit]
La Boca fisherman's village near Trinidad, Cuba with Escambray Mountains at the back. Photo credit: Wilder Mendez |
Week 18[edit]
Troodos Mountains with its highest peak Mount Olympus (1,952 metres) in Cyprus. Photo credit: Paul167 |
Week 19[edit]
Šance Dam in the Moravian-Silesian Beskids mountain range, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic. Photo credit: Martin Kovář |
Week 20[edit]
Karlebo, Sjælland, Denmark. 60% of the land in Denmark is arable. Photo credit: J. M. Rice |
Week 21[edit]
Topographic map of Djibouti. There is no arable land, irrigation, permanent crops, and negligible forest cover. Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 22[edit]
Pano-wide image of Roseau, the capital of Dominica. Photo credit: Ted Rufus Ross |
Week 23[edit]
Beach on Saona Island, located a short distance from the mainland on the south-east tip of the Dominican Republic, near La Altagracia Province. Photo credit: Tamas Iklodi |
Week 24[edit]
Map of East Timor indicating cities and principal roads. Photo credit: Mats Halldin & CIA |
Week 25[edit]
Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 26[edit]
The Nile River and delta. The delta formed in Northern Egypt where the Nile River spreads out and drains into the Mediterranean Sea. Photo credit: NASA |
Week 27[edit]
Two earthquakes hit El Salvador within exactly one month of each other, on January 13 and February 13, 2001. A landslide caused by the El Salvador quake. Photo credit: United States Geological Survey |
Week 28[edit]
Map of Equatorial Guinea. The island of Annobón is not shown. Photo credit: Demis.nl, Tonym88 |
Week 29[edit]
Photo credit: Sadalmelik |
Week 30[edit]
The largest of nine craters at Kaali, found on the island of Saaremaa, Estonia. Photo credit: Siim Ainsaar |
Week 31[edit]
Dendi Caldera, Ethiopia is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 16 crew member on the International Space Station. The Dendi Caldera is located on the Ethiopian Plateau, approximately 86 kilometers to the southwest of Addis Ababa. A caldera is a geological feature formed by the near-total eruption of magma from beneath a volcano, leading to collapse of the volcanic structure into the now-empty magma chamber. Photo credit: NASA |
Week 32[edit]
Topography of Viti Levu island, Fiji. Fiji's largest island, Viti Levu, is home to 70% of the population (about 600,000). Photo credit: NASA |
Week 33[edit]
Repovesi National Park in southeastern Finland. Photo credit: M. Passinen |
Week 34[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 34
Week 35[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 35
Week 36[edit]
Map of Metropolitan French cities (agglomerations > 100,000 inhabitants on 1999 census). Photo credit: David.Monniaux |
Week 37[edit]
Topographic map of Gabon. Photo credit: Mysid |
Week 38[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 38
Week 39[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 39
Week 40[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 40
Week 41[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 41
Week 42[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 42
Week 43[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 43
Week 44[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 44
Week 45[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 45
Week 46[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 46
Week 47[edit]
Portal:Geography/Featured picture/2010, week 47
Week 48[edit]
Peyto Lake in Banff National Park. Photo credit: Tobias Alt |
Week 49[edit]
Alter Strom, a canal in Warnemünde, Germany Photo credit: Alabama |
Week 50[edit]
Skyline of downtown Houston. Photo credit: Jujutacular |
Week 51[edit]
Danau Sentarum National Park in Borneo. Photo credit: Natureandpoverty.net |
Week 52[edit]
Tessellated pavement at Eaglehawk Neck, Tasmania . Photo credit: Noodle snacks |