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  • Spell Your Name with NASAโ€™s Earthly Alphabet of Aerial Images Kate Mothes
    From rivers and oxbow lakes to crop-field patchworks and mineral sediments, Landsat has seen it all. A program of NASA and USGS, the satellite initiative has documented the Earthโ€™s surface since 1972, making it the longest continuous record of our planetโ€™s ever-evolving landscapes. And to mark Earth Day 2026, the organizations launched a playful way to interact with some of their findings collected over the past five-and-a-half decadesโ€”a name generator. Using the tool is simple: type in yo
     

Spell Your Name with NASAโ€™s Earthly Alphabet of Aerial Images

29 April 2026 at 12:44
Spell Your Name with NASAโ€™s Earthly Alphabet of Aerial Images

From rivers and oxbow lakes to crop-field patchworks and mineral sediments, Landsat has seen it all. A program of NASA and USGS, the satellite initiative has documented the Earthโ€™s surface since 1972, making it the longest continuous record of our planetโ€™s ever-evolving landscapes. And to mark Earth Day 2026, the organizations launched a playful way to interact with some of their findings collected over the past five-and-a-half decadesโ€”a name generator.

Using the tool is simple: type in your name, or any word, and Landsat returns it in the form of vertical snapshots of a wide range of terrain. Just like we see with composites of Mars, for instance, scientists have digitally enhanced some images to highlight specific features. Those used for โ€œYour Name in Landsatโ€ sport a wide array of hues, textures, and patterns that glimpse the diversity of our planetโ€™s surface.

Eight vertical frames of the earth's surface captured from NASA's Landsat program with landforms that loosely resemble letters of the alphabet, arranged to spell "COLOSSAL"
โ€œColossalโ€

Landsat is an incredible resource that features time-lapses of changing land use over several decades. Even this playful name generator allows you to hover over individual images and learn the exact locationsโ€”down to the coordinatesโ€”and all of the programโ€™s data is publicly accessible. For example, the โ€œCโ€ in โ€œColossalโ€ above is a vertical view of a cloud-speckled Deception Island in Antarctica, and the โ€œAโ€ is the uniquely shaped Lake Mjรธsa in Norway.

You might also enjoy Overview, a book that chronicles how the landscape has changed over time. Learn more about Landsat from NASA. (via PetaPixel)

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Spell Your Name with NASAโ€™s Earthly Alphabet of Aerial Images appeared first on Colossal.

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