PICTURE SHOWS: Computer-generated artist's rendering of the International Space Station
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STORY COPY: A stunning photograph released today (23 April) shows a rare clear view of the Scottish Highlands.
Looking out from a window on the International Space Station, an astronaut captured the image on 25 February, 2018. Cloud-covered skies are common for the region and typically prevent landscape photography from space, especially during the winter months when this image was taken.
NASA explains: "The topography of the Scottish Highlands is the result of geological processes spanning billions of years. The snow-capped mountains north of Glen Mor include some of the oldest rocks in Europe, and they were subsequently rearranged by tectonic forces hundreds of millions of years ago. The rocky landscape also shows signs of reshaping by flowing glaciers during the most recent Ice Ages. Also known as the “Great Valley” or “Great Glen,” Glen Mor is a fault zone marked by numerous elongated lakes (or lochs), one of which is the famous Loch Ness. In the early 2000s, locals built a pathway through the area—the Great Glen Way—for walkers and cyclists."
When: 11 Sep 2013
Credit: NASA/Cover Images
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