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
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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World Architecture Day
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Where is this gorgeous peak?
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Up in the Highlands
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Travel Sunday: Sintra, Portugal
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National Moon Day
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Singing praises of the oceans
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A spectacle unlike any other
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75 years of the United Nations
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Ambassadors of the airwaves
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Have fun storming the castle
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Autumn in the Prosecco Hills
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Sounds of Bach come to Bath
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Nazaré Lighthouse
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Big sky at Big Bend
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American Eagle Day
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International Kissing Day
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Keep calm and drive on (slowly)
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The smoke before the bonfire
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Black grouses lekking
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FOR FOREST by Klaus Littmann
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Seitan Limania Beach, Crete
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Darwin s Arch
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Go by Kehinde Wiley
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Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
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Step into the dark
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The Kelpies statues in Falkirk, Scotland
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Love on ice
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Loud waters
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Bridge over the River Tara
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Travel Sunday: San Francisco