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  • 11
    Jan
    2012
    8:44pm, EST

    DigitalGlobe

    A natural-color satellite image from March 28, 2011, shows the Rakaia River running through the Canterbury Plains on New Zealand's South Island.

    Satellite shot of rolling river takes the prize

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    The past year has produced stunning as well as scary pictures from space, including satellite views of the protests in Cairo, the damage done to Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear complex and New York's Ground Zero site 10 years after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. But these weren't the pictures that won top honors from the DigitalGlobe commercial satellite venture and its Facebook fans. Instead, DigitalGlobe's top image of 2011 is a shot of the Rakaia River rolling like a ribbon through New Zealand's Canterbury Plains.

    The Rakaia is one of the largest braided rivers in New Zealand, traveling almost 100 miles from the Southern Alps to enter the Pacific Ocean about 30 miles south of Christchurch. DigitalGlobe's picture clearly shows braids of blue water trickling through a wide sedimentary bed as it approaches the sea. To learn more about the Rakaia, check out DigitalGlobe's blog item announcing the winner, and graze through DigitalGlobe's Flickr gallery to see the other finalists.

    Another commercial satellite company, GeoEye, has put together its own selection of top images for its 2012 calendar gallery.

    We featured a lot of great satellite pictures from GeoEye as well as DigitalGlobe last month in our Holiday Calendar series, and the hits just keep on coming. For a daily dose of Earth imagery from space, check in with NASA's Earth Observatory and the MODIS satellite website, supplemented by the Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth and the Fragile Oasis Facebook page.


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    1 comment

    One idea I've always thought could be done fairly inexpensively, would be to put earth-facing cameras on the space station and beam down near-realtime images.

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    Explore related topics: space, new-zealand, images, featured, satellte, cosmic-log, tech-science

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Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

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