Crop circles surround Iraq’s multicolored ‘Sea of Salt’ after years of drought — Earth from space

by oqtey
An astronaut photo of a lake in the desert that is half red and half green surrounded by lots of dark circular dots

QUICK FACTS

Where is it? Razazah Lake, Iraq [32.66166243, 43.6737757]

What’s in the photo? A multicolored artificial lake surrounded by agricultural crop circles

Who took the photo? An unnamed astronaut on the International Space Station (ISS)

When was it taken? Sept. 23, 2024

This intriguing astronaut photo shows the striking duality of an artificial lake in Iraq, which has slowly transformed into a salty, multicolored puddle after years of drought. It is also the site of hundreds of eerie human-made “crop circles.”

Lake Razazah, also known as Baḩr al-Milḩ or Lake Milh, is an artificial lake located to the west of the city of Karbala (visible in the photo). The body of water was created in the 1970s by diverting the overflow of the nearby Lake Habbaniyah through a canal and into a natural depression. In the decades since, the lake has become increasingly salty as minerals from the lake’s bed dissolved into the water. (Baḩr al-Milḩ means “Sea of Salt” in Arabic.)

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