We have NASA’s Landsat program to thank for this rare view of the Atlantic Ocean in the Bahamas, as captured by satellite. The patterns you see are sand and seaweed beds that have been sculpted by ocean currents. That dark spot? It’s called the Tongue of the Ocean. The tongue is a deep, dark trench that separates the islands of Andros and New Providence in the Bahamas and connects to a larger geological feature known as the Great Bahama Canyon.
Satellite image of sand and seaweed in the Bahamas
Today in History
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Blooming sunflowers
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It’s Napping Day
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Halemaumau Crater, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
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Yungang Grottoes, Shanxi, China
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Celebrating the Acadians
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Road to Hana, Maui, Hawaii
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Schönbrunn Palace Park, Vienna, Austria
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Let us introduce you…
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International Day for Biological Diversity
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European Day of Parks
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Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary
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Rocks on the move
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International Womens Day
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Gone ‘lightseeing’ in Berlin
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Let the Highland games begin
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An avian predator built for the snow
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Salzburg, Austria
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The Bazaruto Archipelago of Mozambique
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The Cordillera de la Sal in the Cordillera Domeyko Range of Chile
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A visit to Limerick on Limerick Day
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World Reef Awareness Day
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Merry Christmas!
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Merry Christmas!
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Jane’s Carousel delights
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Flocking together in the Antarctic
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Indigenous Peoples Day
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Saguaro cacti, Ironwood Forest National Monument, Arizona
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A day for the oceans
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Paper lanterns on the longest night
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Celebrating Pi Day
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