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by Nasa
$17.00
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Our ceramic coffee mugs are available in two sizes: 11 oz. and 15 oz. Each mug is dishwasher and microwave safe.
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In eastern Siberia, a perfect circle of rock contrasts with the surrounding topography. The 6-kilometer- (3.7-mile-) wide ring looks like an impact... more
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11 oz.
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5 - 7 business days
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In eastern Siberia, a perfect circle of rock contrasts with the surrounding topography. The 6-kilometer- (3.7-mile-) wide ring looks like an impact crater, or the caldera of an extinct volcano, but it is neither. Kondyor Massif was formed by the intrusion of igneous, or volcanic, rock that pushed up through overlying layers of sedimentary rock, some of them laid down more than a billion years ago. On June 10, 2006, the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA's Terra satellite observed Kondyor Massif. This three-dimensional view was made by draping ASTER image data over a ASTER-derived topography data (a digital elevation model, or DEM) to give a sense of the feature's proportions. The circular ring of rock is bare, but vegetation otherwise prevails, both inside and outside the circle. In this image, even sparse vegetation appears bright green. Water collecting in the middle of the massif has formed a river that flows out of the massif, on the nort...
$17.00
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