Images of Asia from Space

 

 

Caspian Sea, Elburz Mountains, Iran (NASA, May 1996).

The Caspian Sea, the world’s largest inland body of water, is discernible in this panoramic, west-looking, high-oblique photograph. A salt lake, the Caspian Sea sits in a huge depression that has many entering rivers and streams, including the Volga, but no outlet. The sea, situated 92 feet below sea level, has in recent years experienced drops in water level. Along the southern shore are the rugged, snow-capped Elburz Mountains, with the lowland that separates them from the sea (just left of center) no wider than 25 miles at any one point. The Elburz Mountains, with many peaks exceeding 10 000 feet, have as their highest peak, Mount Damavand, an extinct volcano reaching 18 934 feet. Discernible is Dasht-e-Kavir (from near left center to near bottom center), a great salt desert and huge basin of interior drainage named after kavirs (salt marshes) that cover large areas within the basin. Apparent are clouds above the Kopet Mountains (bottom right center) and the Bay of Krasnovodsk in Turkmenistan (right center).

 

Turkey

 

Caucasus

 

Globe Images

 

Caspian Sea

 

View of the Himalayas, looking south from the Tibetan Plateau in the foreground into the Ganges Basin of India in the background. In this view, we've draped imagery from the vertical camera over the surface topography (NASA). Himalayas and the Everest

 

Himalayas Asia

 

Western Asia

 

Asia Image

 

Globe - Oceania Pacific Islands

 

Western Asia

 

Turkey

 

Caucasus

 

 

Travel to Asia

 

Globe - Africa Countries

 

Asia Maps

Copyright © Geographic Guide - Images of Asia

 

Korea

 

Asia Map

 

 

 

 

Arctic Region