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Gargantuan Saharan Dust Plume Blowing Across the Atlantic is Visible from Nearly a Million Miles Away in Space

Dust plumes like this tend to suppress Atlantic hurricane activity — and they also make for beautiful sunsets.

A dust plume stretching from the Sahara all the way across the Atlantic Ocean is seen in this image acquired by the GOES-16 environmental satellite on June 6, 2022. The plume was so prominent that it was also spotted by a satellite stationed nearly a million miles away from Earth. For that image, see below.Credit: RAMMB/CIRA

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Hot, dry winds blowing across the Sahara Desert have driven an enormous plume of dust more than 3,500 miles across the Atlantic Ocean.

As of June 6, 2022, the plume stretched from Africa to South America and even reached Puerto Rico. All told, it covered more than 2.2 million square miles of the tropical Atlantic Ocean. It's expected to blow into the Gulf of Mexico by the weekend — and cause dramatic sunsets in Florida and other locations.

The plume was so large and distinct that it was seen by the DSCOVR spacecraft stationed 984,628 miles from Earth:

NASA's DSCOVR spacecraft acquired this image of the Saharan dust plume stretching across the Atlantic Ocean on June 6, 2022. (Credit: NASA)

NASA

On average, the trade winds sweep an estimated 180 million metric tons of Saharan dust across the Atlantic Ocean to different parts of the Americas and the Caribbean Basin ...

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