The image was taken by a member of the Expedition 64 crew. Given the ongoing activity on Kamchatka Peninsula and the continued presence of humans in low-Earth orbit, the chances of photographing another volcanic eruption may just be an orbit away.Īstronaut photograph ISS064-E-319 was acquired on October 23, 2020, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a 1200 millimeter lens and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, Johnson Space Center. More recently, astronauts on the ISS took a similar oblique shot of a long plume extending from the volcano in 2013. In 1994, astronauts on the STS-068 mission on Space Shuttle Endeavour captured a large eruption at Klyuchevskoy using a Hasselblad film camera. Photographing an ongoing volcanic eruption anywhere on Earth is a matter of luck for most astronauts, but Klyuchevskoy is so active that it has actually been captured spewing ash several times. The plume drifted northwest and deposited ash in the valley between Bezymianny and Ushkovshy volcanoes. Days before this photo was taken, Bezymianny had a significant ash eruption that was recorded by the Kamchatka Volcanic Eruption Response Team. The astronauts were able to see evidence of ash deposits from recent eruptions. In this snow-covered landscape, the peaks of Klyuchevskoy and Bezymianny volcanoes are notably darker. The photo was taken at a highly oblique angle with a long camera lens, giving a strongly three-dimensional perspective of the towering peaks. This photo, taken by an astronaut onboard the International Space Station, captures a few of the region’s active volcanoes-with some showing signs of recent eruptions. The Kamchatka Peninsula of far eastern Russia has more than 300 volcanoes, 29 of which are active.
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