Image Envision Home     Stock Images     Download Media     Cart     FAQs    
All     3d     Clipart     Illustrations     Historical     Objects     Photochromes     Photomontages     Photos  
TERMS OF USE: This free image can only be used for non-commercial, personal website use only. THIS IMAGE CANNOT BE used in galleries, downloaded to your computer, posted on sites for others to use, manipulated, downsized, or upsized. If you are confused about the terms of use or have any questions then contact us before using the image.

Free Picture: Crop Circles in Kansas


Free Picture of Crop Circles in Kansas

Image URL  
E-Mail  
Forum BB  
HTML  
MySpace  

Description
Resembling a work of modern art, variegated green crop circles cover what was once shortgrass prairie in southwestern Kansas. The most common crops in this region—Finney County—are corn, wheat, and sorghum. Each of these crops was at a different point of development when the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) captured this image on June 24, 2001, accounting for the varying shades of green and yellow. Healthy, growing crops are green. Corn would be growing into leafy stalks by late June. Sorghum, which resembles corn, grows more slowly and would be much smaller and therefore, possibly paler. Wheat is a brilliant gold as harvest occurs in June. Fields of brown have been recently harvested and plowed under or lie fallow for the year. Like crops throughout large sections of the U.S. Midwest, these crops are partly fed by water from the Ogallala Aquifer, a giant layer of underground water. One of the largest underground repositories in the world, the Ogallala Aquifer lies under about 450,000 square kilometers of the Great Plains—an area that includes parts of eight U.S. states. The water is between 30 and 100 meters below ground, and the amount of water in the aquifer varies greatly from region to region. Though the aquifer is a reliable source of water for irrigated cropland, there are some concerns that it could eventually run dry. Most of the water in the aquifer is “fossil water” from the last ice age. The rivers and streams that initially fed the aquifer have long since disappeared in the geologic development of the West after the last ice age. Water now takes a long time to trickle down through the soil to recharge the aquifer, though the rate varies from region to region. Like a bank account, if more water is taken from this underground bank than is deposited into it, it could run dry. For this reason, efforts are being made to conserve the water of the Ogallala Aquifer. One conservation measure is using water more wisely so less is drawn out of the aquifer. Farmers in this region have adopted a more efficient irrigation method, central pivot irrigation. Central pivot irrigation draws water out of a single well in the center of the field. Long pipes perched on wheels rotate around the pivot, showering the crops with water. Because the water falls directly on the crops instead of being shot into the air as occurs with traditional sprinklers, less water is lost to evaporation and more goes to nourishing the growing plants. Central pivot irrigation also creates perfectly circular fields, as seen in this image. The fields shown here are 800 and 1,600 meters (0.5 and 1 mile) in diameter.

Keywords
agricultural, agriculture, corn crop, corn crops, crop, crop circle, crop circles, crop circles in kansas, cropland, croplands, crops, finney county, kansas, kansas crop circles, ogallala aquifer, phenomenon, phenomenons, sorghum crop, sorghum crops, wheat crop, wheat crops, nasa,  free photography,  free photo,  free photos,  free picture,  free pictures,  free image,  free images

Similar Free agriculture Pictures
Cattle in Snow, Bishop Creek, Ruch, Oregon
Edward Knipling
Polymer Gel Pellets
Man Holding a Tube
Laser Light on Canola Oil
Seeds in Tubes
Debearded Sagebrush Seeds
Water Hyacinth Flowers
Canada Thistle
Chief Rose
Purple Pitcher Plant (Sarracenia purpurea)
Canadian Lily
More...

Privacy       Contact       About       Image Collections       Artist Login
Copyright © 2005-2013 Image Envision LLC   All Rights Reserved       Additional resources: Clipart, Logos