This Is What the Hottest Place on Earth Looks Like


You're looking at a satellite image of the Dasht-e Lut salt desert in southeast Iran. If you think it looks a bit weird, that' because it is: it's widely regarded as the hottest place on Earth.

The highest land surface temperature ever recorded—from space, by satellites—was in the Lut Desert back in 2005. It reached a staggering 70.7ºC. That's 160 Fahrenheit. That is off the wall.

So, what can you see in the picture? The European Space Agency explains:

The light area in the centre of the image are the long, parallel wind-carved ridges and furrows. The darker area to the east is an extent of massive sand dunes, some reaching up to 300 m tall. In the upper-right section we can see a light green, shallow body of water that straddles Iran’s border with Afghanistan... In the lower-left we can see the white, snow-capped Jebal Barez mountains.

The image was captured by Envisat’s MERIS instrument. And is a welcome reminder that we shouldn't grumble about the weather. [ESA]


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