@powerbinchenNatürlich kann man, und man hat sie auch:
Original anzeigen (1,4 MB) Amundsen-Scott Station
High Incidence Image
In this very high resolution image of Earth's South Pole, bright areas in the image corrrespond to man-made structure that are part of the Amundsen-Scott station operated by the U.S National Science Foundation. This site has been occupied since 1956 and used for scientific research ranging from glaciology to astrophysics. The present facility is occupied since 1974. Evident in the radar image is a long line extending from the station to the upper right. This is a highway from the station to an abandoned antenna site. The dome and archways are located within the bright cluster of radar signals near the bottom end of the highway. Just below the cluster is a 14 000 feet skiway which appears as a bright band. The geographic South Pole is located between the skiway and the station. Nearly parallel to the skiway is a similar, dimmer band - this is likely the old skiway used to support the earlier station. There are good reasons to believe that many of the bright targets between the two bands are reflections from the old stations now buried under 10 metres of snow.
Original anzeigen (0,6 MB)Hatherton-Gletscher
Nur was du willst, geht nicht: Erdkugel
und jeden Pinguin gemeinsam.
Quellen:http://ceos.cnes.fr:8100/cdrom-97/ceos1/satellit/radarsat/southpr1.jpghttp://www.rosssea.info/pix/big/Hatherton_Glacier.jpg (Archiv-Version vom 04.01.2007)