Earth from space: Crimea’s ‘putrid sea’ creates beautiful rainbow of color but smells like rotten eggs

QUICK FACTS

Where is it? Sivash, Crimean Peninsula [46.0627481, 34.3826701]

What’s in the photo? A series of shallow, multicolor lagoons known as the “putrid sea”

Which satellite took the photo? Landsat 8

When was it taken? Sept. 5, 2014

A deconstructed rainbow of around a dozen multicolor lagoons, collectively known as the “putrid sea,” takes center stage in this stunning satellite image captured around a decade ago. The variety of colors — ranging from raspberry, peach and mustard to lime green, beige and brilliant blue — are caused by several factors, including the microorganisms that live within the lagoons.

The lagoons stretch across the Sivash region — a roughly 3,900-square-mile (10,000 square kilometers) area of marshland across the northern Crimean Peninsula between the Black Sea to the west and the Sea of Azov to the east. The latter is separated from the lagoons only by a narrow piece of land known as the Arabat Spit.

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