Sand Dunes In the southern Arabian Peninsula, the world's largest
expanse of sand stretches for 250,000 square miles. The Ar Rub' al-Khali,
or Empty Quarter, is the king of all Middle Eastern deserts. The rare
unbroken sweep of pure sand was formed over eons as water and wind eroded
volcanic highlands and dry seabeds down to pebbles and grains, which
were blown into huge dunes-some nearly 1,000 feet high. In this image,
the yellow areas are sand dunes, and the blue areas are dry inter-dune
lake beds. This image was acquired by the Landsat ETM satellite in September 2001, and is centered at 22.09.48 degrees north latitude, 54.15.28 degrees west longitude. The print comes mounted on quality stretcher bars using a gallery style wrap (image wraps around the side) so that framing is optional. 26 x 26 inches = $140.00 38 x 38 inches = $300.00
contact TFI for different print size options and costs Actual print resolution is better than these graphics, see a full resolution sample |