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Réf : V01585

Thème : Terre vue de l'espace - Iles - Récifs  (286 images)

Titre : Reunion Island Volcano Erupts

Description : (La description de cette image n'existe qu'en anglais)

On January 16, 2002, lava that had begun flowing on January 5 from the Piton de la Fournaise volcano on the French island of Reunion Island abruptly decreased, marking the end of the volcano most recent eruption. These false color images of Reunion Island, located off the southeastern coast of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, were captured on the last day of the eruption (January 16) and two days later (January 18). The volcano itself is located on the southeast side of the island and is dark brown compared to the surrounding green vegetation. Beneath clouds (light blue) and smoke, the satellite detected the hot lava pouring down the volcano's flanks into the Indian Ocean. The heat, detected, has been colored red in the January 16 image, and is absent from the lower image, taken two days later on January 18, suggesting the lava had cooled considerably even in that short time. Earthquake activity on the northeast flank continued even after the eruption had stopped, but by January 21 had dropped to a sufficiently low enough level that the 24-hour surveillance by the local observatory was suspended. Reunion is essentially all volcano, with the northwest portion of the island built on the remains of an extinct volcano, and the southeast half built on the basaltic shield of 8,630-foot Piton de la Fournaise. A basaltic shield volcano is one with a broad, gentle slope built by the eruption of fluid basalt lava. Basalt lava flows easily across the ground remaining hot and fluid for long distances, and so they often result in enormous, low-angle cones. The Piton de la Fournaise is one of Earth most active volcanoes, erupting over 150 times in the last few hundred years, and it has been the subject of NASA research because of its likeness to the volcanoes of Mars.