Above and Beyond: Tin Bider Crater
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Visually captivating NASA satellite imagery showcases and describes the Tin Bider impact crater in the Algerian desert.
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Title
Time
Insight Into: Deserts
01:16
Above and Beyond: The Painted Desert
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Above and Beyond: The Namib Desert
00:44
Myth vs Reality: Desert Life
00:40
Myth vs Reality: Desert Climates
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Myth vs Reality: Sandy Deserts
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Above and Beyond: Tin Bider Crater
00:47
Above and Beyond: Death Valley
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Produced by the Space Telescope Science Institute’s Office of Public Outreach in collaboration with the NASA Earth Observatory.
All images, illustrations, and videos courtesy of NASA except:
· Image of Antarctic snow dunes courtesy of Mark Fahnestock, University of Maryland, College Park
· Sea creature illustration copyright The National Library of Israel, Shapell Family Digitization Project _and The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Department of Geography – Historic Cities Research Project
· Image of clouds off Namibian coast courtesy of Chelys
· Image of dunes in the Namib Desert courtesy of the USGS EROS Data Center Satellite Systems Branch
· Namibian dune photo courtesy of Wikimedia user Alcazarfr
· Photo of the Mandara Oasis in Libya courtesy of Rudolph Baumann
· Photo of Astrophytum ornatum cactus courtesy of Wikimedia user Stan Shebs
· Photos of desert plants courtesy of Wikimedia user Halfalah and Dr. Eric Christian (NASA)
· Photo of fishhook barrel cactus courtesy of Susan Lynn Peterson
· Photo of Ubari Oasis in Libya courtesy of Wikimedia user Sfivat
· Image of alluvial fan in Takla Makan Desert courtesy of the USGS EROS Data Center Satellite Systems Branch
· Photos of salt-covered croplands courtesy of the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Music courtesy of Associated Production Music
Written by Andrea Gianopoulos
Designed by Marc Lussier
(SPEECH)
[PIANO AND FLUTE MUSIC]
(DESCRIPTION)
Text, Tin Bider, Algeria
In the high desert of Algeria, at the southern end of a range of hills, is a 4-mile-wide impact crater called Tin Bider.
Tin Bider is a complex impact crater with several concentric rings that formed terraces as rock collapsed after the impact.
A lack of rainfall in this high desert environment has helped preserve the intricate terraces of this 70-million-year-old crater.