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        {
            "id": 31224,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/31224/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
            "release_date": "2023-04-07T00:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Dark Nights in Antakya",
            "description": "An animation showing the amount of light emitted by Antakya’s city center and surrounding communities before and after the earthquake. || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_print.jpg (1024x576) [301.1 KB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_searchweb.png (320x180) [101.7 KB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_thm.png (80x40) [15.6 KB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_1080p30.mp4 (1920x1080) [3.2 MB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_1080p30.webm (1920x1080) [1.4 MB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble.tif (2880x1620) [6.9 MB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_1620p30.mp4 (2880x1620) [6.3 MB] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_1080p30.hwshow [135 bytes] || turkey_earthquake_feb_2023_black_marble_1620p30.hwshow [135 bytes] || ",
            "hits": 54
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        {
            "id": 31099,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/31099/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
            "release_date": "2020-02-05T00:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "A Changing Earth at Night (Regions)",
            "description": "NASA’s Black Marble products are also being used by scientists and decision-makers to monitor gradual changes driven by urbanization, out-migration, economic changes, and electrification. These images show the rapid electrification of India’s rural settlements in recent years. Huge swaths of northern India, relatively dark in 2012 night shots, are lit up in NASA’s Black Marble imagery from 2016. || NightLights.010_print.jpg (1024x576) [175.5 KB] || NightLights.010.png (5760x3240) [20.0 MB] || NightLights.010_searchweb.png (320x180) [101.2 KB] || NightLights.010_thm.png (80x40) [6.8 KB] || ",
            "hits": 302
        },
        {
            "id": 40348,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/esddatafor-societal-benefits/",
            "result_type": "Gallery",
            "release_date": "2018-04-24T00:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "ESD data for Societal Benefit",
            "description": "No description available.",
            "hits": 176
        },
        {
            "id": 30919,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30919/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
            "release_date": "2017-12-06T00:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "A Changing Earth at Night",
            "description": "Changes in lights from 2012 to 2016 || BlackMarble20162012diff500m_cb_print.jpg (1024x574) [96.1 KB] || BlackMarble20162012diff500m_cb_searchweb.png (180x320) [32.4 KB] || BlackMarble20162012diff500m_cb_thm.png (80x40) [4.4 KB] || BlackMarble20162012diff500m_cb.tif (4104x2304) [3.6 MB] || BlackMarble20162012diff500m.tif (4104x2052) [3.5 MB] || BlackMarble20162012diff500m_huge.tif (86400x43200) [868.6 MB] || a-changing-earth-at-night.hwshow [223 bytes] || ",
            "hits": 132
        },
        {
            "id": 12076,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12076/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2015-12-15T13:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "Seeing Trends In Air Pollution",
            "description": "New NASA satellite maps show the human impact on global air quality. || C-1920.jpg (1920x1080) [389.1 KB] || C-1280.jpg (1280x720) [232.7 KB] || C-1024.jpg (1024x576) [165.1 KB] || C-1024_print.jpg (1024x576) [167.0 KB] || C-1024_searchweb.png (320x180) [71.8 KB] || C-1024_web.png (320x180) [71.8 KB] || C-1024_thm.png (80x40) [22.4 KB] || ",
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        },
        {
            "id": 30192,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30192/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
            "release_date": "2013-10-17T12:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Using MISR to View Dust",
            "description": "On October 18, 2002, a large dust plume extended across countries bordering the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Information on the horizontal and vertical extent of the dust are provided by these views from the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR). The left-hand panel portrays the scene as viewed by the instrument's vertical-viewing (nadir) camera. Here only some of the dust over eastern Syria and southeastern Turkey can be discerned. The dust is much more obvious in the center panel, which is a view from MISR's most steeply forward-looking camera. The right-hand panel is an elevation field derived from automated MISR stereoscopic processing, in which the heights of clouds and certain parts of the dust plume are retrieved. Clouds within the image area are situated between about 2 and 5.5 kilometers above sea level, and the dust is located below most of the cloud, at heights of about 1.5 kilometers or less. || ",
            "hits": 37
        },
        {
            "id": 30193,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30193/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
            "release_date": "2013-10-17T12:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Dust Storm in the Middle East",
            "description": "Dust from Syria and Iraq blows toward the northwest across Turkey and the easternmost Black Sea on July 30, 2011, when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite acquired this natural-color image. Dust forms a giant arc extending from northern Iraq across Turkey and the easternmost Black Sea. The northeastern tip of the dust plume appears to push into western Georgia. || ",
            "hits": 55
        },
        {
            "id": 4076,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/4076/",
            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "2013-05-15T00:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Landsat-8 Long Swath",
            "description": "Landsat-8 launched February 11th, 2013. This visualization shows one of the first full swaths of data taken on April 19th, 2013, only one week after Landsat-8 ascended to its final altitude of 438 miles (705 km). || ",
            "hits": 83
        },
        {
            "id": 11189,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11189/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2013-02-19T00:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "Depleting The Fertile Crescent",
            "description": "When water stops falling from the sky, humans will often search for it below ground. That has been the case over a broad stretch of the Middle East where observations by NASA's twin GRACE (Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment) satellites show a sharp decline in underground freshwater reserves over the last decade. Following a drought in 2007, hundreds of new wells were drilled in the Tigris and Euphrates river basin to obtain water for drinking and agriculture. The basin occupies 339,688 square miles of the Middle East, covering parts of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey. By late 2009, the region lost 73 million acre-feet of water—equal to 60 percent of the volume of the Dead Sea—due to pumping from underground reservoirs. NASA scientists say this extraction is happening at a much faster rate than rainfall is restoring the groundwater. The visualization shows GRACE measurements of water gains and losses in the Tigris and Euphrates river basin from January 2003 to December 2009. || ",
            "hits": 72
        },
        {
            "id": 2210,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/2210/",
            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "2001-08-02T12:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Landsat Witnesses the Destruction of Mesopotamian Ecosystem",
            "description": "In one of the greatest ecological disasters of our time, the ancient marshlands of Mesopotamia are systematically being converted to dry salt flats as a result of human mismanagement of the region's water resources.Landsat satellite imagery reveals that in the last 10 years, wetlands that once covered as much as 20,000 square km in parts of Iraq and Iran have been reduced to a small fraction of their original size. The authors of a new report released by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) at the 11th Stockholm Water Symposium on August 13, 2001, warn that the marshlands could completely disappear within the next 3-5 years unless dramatic steps are taken immediately to reverse the damage being done.The UNEP Executive Director described the wetlands' condition as 'a major environmental catastrophe that will be remembered as one of humanity's worst engineered disasters.' He noted that 'the tragic loss of this rare wetland has occurred in approximately the same period since world leaders pledged to safeguard the environment at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (the Earth Summit) held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992.' Regarded by historians as one of the cradles of civilization, the Mesopotamian Fertile Crescent has supported Marsh Arab society for millennia. But through the damming and siphoning off of waters from the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, the countries of Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria have decimated the ecosystem and, with it, a culture rooted in the dawn of human history (dating back to ancient Sumeria about 5,000 years ago). || ",
            "hits": 67
        }
    ]
}