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Explore our planet through photography and imagery, including climate change and water all the way back to the 1800s when the USGS was surveying the country by horse and buggy.

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Photographs from mourning dove showing green coated milo in crop.
Photographs from a Mourning Dove found dead in Arizona
Photographs from a Mourning Dove found dead in Arizona
Photographs from a Mourning Dove found dead in Arizona

Photographs from a Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura) found dead in Arizona, US.  (A) The crop (*) is distended primarily with milo.  (B) A green coating (arrowheads) is evident on the surface of the milo.

Photographs from a Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura) found dead in Arizona, US.  (A) The crop (*) is distended primarily with milo.  (B) A green coating (arrowheads) is evident on the surface of the milo.

Scientist gets ready to deploy a net in Cook Inlet to collect plankton samples to test for harmful algal bloom toxins
Preparing to collect plankton samples
Preparing to collect plankton samples
Preparing to collect plankton samples

USGS scientist Sarah Schoen gets ready to deploy a net in Cook Inlet to collect plankton samples to test for harmful algal bloom toxins. 

USGS scientist Sarah Schoen gets ready to deploy a net in Cook Inlet to collect plankton samples to test for harmful algal bloom toxins. 

two women sit on a roof while installing a small solar panel
Streamgage Solar Panel Installation for Continuous Data Collection
Streamgage Solar Panel Installation for Continuous Data Collection
Streamgage Solar Panel Installation for Continuous Data Collection

Sierra Keller, Physical Science Technician, and Sharon Mulready, Student Trainee, both of the USGS California Water Science Center's Santa Cruz Field Office, install a solar panel on a rural streamgage station along the Arroyo Seco near Greenfield in Monterey County, California.

Sierra Keller, Physical Science Technician, and Sharon Mulready, Student Trainee, both of the USGS California Water Science Center's Santa Cruz Field Office, install a solar panel on a rural streamgage station along the Arroyo Seco near Greenfield in Monterey County, California.

Woman looks out at the ocean off the side of a boat
Surveying for seabirds off the Central California Coast
Surveying for seabirds off the Central California Coast
Surveying for seabirds off the Central California Coast

USGS Biological Science Technician Laney White surveys for Marbled Murrelet off the Central California Coast.

View from the sky of a tropical coastline and a beach with ocean water so clear the coral reef can be seen.
Tres Palmas, Rincon, Puerto Rico
Tres Palmas, Rincon, Puerto Rico
Tres Palmas, Rincon, Puerto Rico

Photograph collected from a UAS flown over the beach at Tres Palmas in Rincón, Puerto Rico.

USGS scientist laying a yellow cable in a desert landscape
Collecting Geophysical Data, Fort Irwin National Training Center
Collecting Geophysical Data, Fort Irwin National Training Center
Collecting Geophysical Data, Fort Irwin National Training Center

USGS Hydrologist, Krishangi Groover, lays wire in preparation for geophysical data collection at the U.S.

Eruption of Steamboat Geyser on July 18, 2019
Eruption of Steamboat Geyser on July 18, 2019
Eruption of Steamboat Geyser on July 18, 2019
Eruption of Steamboat Geyser on July 18, 2019

Steamboat Geyser erupts in the golden light of sunrise on July 18th, 2019. The water-dominated part of a Steamboat eruption usually lasts anywhere from 3 to 90 minutes. Afterwards, a steam-dominated phase continues for many hours.

Steamboat Geyser erupts in the golden light of sunrise on July 18th, 2019. The water-dominated part of a Steamboat eruption usually lasts anywhere from 3 to 90 minutes. Afterwards, a steam-dominated phase continues for many hours.

image related to volcanoes. See description
Halema‘uma‘u water pond on August 17
Halema‘uma‘u water pond on August 17
Halema‘uma‘u water pond on August 17

The pond within Halema‘uma‘u has notably widened and deepened since August 15, as shown in these two photos taken on August 17 (right) and August 15 (left). Note the changes in the neck between the two ends of the pond. USGS photos by D. Swanson.

The pond within Halema‘uma‘u has notably widened and deepened since August 15, as shown in these two photos taken on August 17 (right) and August 15 (left). Note the changes in the neck between the two ends of the pond. USGS photos by D. Swanson.

Kate Wilkins, Hydrologic Technician, floating the Rio Grande in July 2019 during a preliminary sampling trip.
Kate Wilkins, Hydrologic Technician, USGS - NMWSC
Kate Wilkins, Hydrologic Technician, USGS - NMWSC
Kate Wilkins, Hydrologic Technician, USGS - NMWSC

Photo of Kate Wilkins, Hydrologic Technician, floating the Rio Grande in July 2019 during a preliminary sampling trip

residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to escape
residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to esc
residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to esc
residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to esc

Although Kīlauea Volcano's 2018 lower East Rift Zone eruption is over, residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to escape from ground cracks and vents in the lower Puna area near Highway 130 as molten rock underground cools.

Although Kīlauea Volcano's 2018 lower East Rift Zone eruption is over, residual heat, steam, and small amounts of other gases continue to escape from ground cracks and vents in the lower Puna area near Highway 130 as molten rock underground cools.

large seine on a creek with trees on shoreline
Schoharie Creek during a fish community survey
Schoharie Creek during a fish community survey
Schoharie Creek during a fish community survey

A blocking seine prevents fish from moving in or out of a study reach on the Schoharie Creek during a fish community survey conducted on July 18th by Scott George, Barry Baldigo, and technicians from the New York Water Science Center. Photo by Scott George

A blocking seine prevents fish from moving in or out of a study reach on the Schoharie Creek during a fish community survey conducted on July 18th by Scott George, Barry Baldigo, and technicians from the New York Water Science Center. Photo by Scott George

a colorful sunrise over a calm ocean
Sunrise in Melbourne, FL
Sunrise in Melbourne, FL
Sunrise in Melbourne, FL

A colorful sunrise appears over the horizon of a calm ocean offshore of Melbourne, Florida. USGS Scientist RC Mickey collects data for location and elevation of sea turtle crawls and associated beach profiles this stretch of coastline.

A colorful sunrise appears over the horizon of a calm ocean offshore of Melbourne, Florida. USGS Scientist RC Mickey collects data for location and elevation of sea turtle crawls and associated beach profiles this stretch of coastline.

image related to volcanoes. See description
Area of ponded water continues to enlarge in Halema‘uma‘u
Area of ponded water continues to enlarge in Halema‘uma‘u
Area of ponded water continues to enlarge in Halema‘uma‘u

The water level continues to slowly rise in Halema‘uma‘u, drowning many of the small rocks that were exposed in the center of the pond. Ripples across the water surface were also evident today.

The water level continues to slowly rise in Halema‘uma‘u, drowning many of the small rocks that were exposed in the center of the pond. Ripples across the water surface were also evident today.

A woman prepares to cut into a dead tree with a hatchet
Beginning a 'tree autopsy' in the Sierra Nevada
Beginning a 'tree autopsy' in the Sierra Nevada
Beginning a 'tree autopsy' in the Sierra Nevada

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project. The tree she is getting read to cut into has recently died.

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project. The tree she is getting read to cut into has recently died.

Two women work together to measure the base of an enormous tree
It takes two to measure this Giant Sequoia
It takes two to measure this Giant Sequoia
It takes two to measure this Giant Sequoia

Teodora Rautu and Eva Lopez, Biological Science Technicians on the field crew for the USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project, work together to measure the diameter of a Giant Sequoia.

Teodora Rautu and Eva Lopez, Biological Science Technicians on the field crew for the USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project, work together to measure the diameter of a Giant Sequoia.

A woman wraps a measuring tape around a very large tree in the forest
Measuring a Giant sequoia in the Sierra Nevada
Measuring a Giant sequoia in the Sierra Nevada
Measuring a Giant sequoia in the Sierra Nevada

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project.  She is measuring the diameter of a Giant Sequoia.

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project.  She is measuring the diameter of a Giant Sequoia.

A woman wraps a tape measure around a tree in the forest
Measuring a red fir tree in the Sierra Nevada
Measuring a red fir tree in the Sierra Nevada
Measuring a red fir tree in the Sierra Nevada

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project.  She is measuring the diameter of a red fir and trying to navigate the tape through the branches.

This is Teodora Rautu. She is a Biological Science Technician on the field crew for USGS Western Ecological Research Center's Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics project.  She is measuring the diameter of a red fir and trying to navigate the tape through the branches.

Meteorological Weather and Real-Time Groundwater Site Inspection
Meteorological Weather and Real-Time Groundwater Site Inspection
Meteorological Weather and Real-Time Groundwater Site Inspection
Meteorological Weather and Real-Time Groundwater Site Inspection

Shown in this photo is Hydrologic Technician Sam Banas performing a routine site inspection of this meteorological weather and real-time groundwater well station.

image related to volcanoes. See description
Telephoto view of sulfur deposits at one of the several fumaroles on the north w
Telephoto view of sulfur deposits at one of the several fumaroles on the north w
Telephoto view of sulfur deposits at one of the several fumaroles on the north w

Telephoto view of sulfur deposits at one of the several fumaroles on the north wall of Halema‘uma‘u. USGS photo by D. Swanson, 08-14-2019.

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