Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield is due to return to Earth on Tuesday from a five-month stint on board the International Space Station.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Chris Hadfield tells the BBC about his photos of Earth - during an interview from space

Since docking with the ISS in a Soyuz craft in December, the 53-year-old station commander has kept hundreds of thousands of followers back on Earth informed and entertained from orbit.

He has tweeted from the space station at least 1,500 times, capturing remarkable images of many corners of the world.

His first photograph came in his first tweet from the ISS: "Space Station! Floating free, buoyed up even more by my smile :)"

His first days were marked by a series of photos detailing life inside the space station.

But he soon branched out into striking orbital landscapes of the planet below.

We have collected just a few of Cmdr Hadfield's tweeted shots and captions here - more are available by browsing his Twitter feed @Cmdr_Hadfield.

The photographs of @Cmdr_Hadfield

Image caption 26 March: "A squiggly little river feeds the mighty Amazon" Image caption 21 April: "The Australian Outback is effortlessly crazily beautiful." Image caption 20 March: "Some of the things we build for ourselves are puzzlingly visible from space. Such as the islands of Dubai." Image caption 10 April: "Italy, heel and toe." Image caption 27 April: "Beijing just after sunset. I'm still trying to spot the Great Wall, but it's hard as it's narrow and dun-colored." Image caption 15 April: "A snail island in the waters around Indonesia, with transparent insides." Image caption 8 April: "To commemorate the passing of the Iron Lady [Margaret Thatcher], in the centre of these London lights is #10 Downing Street" Image caption 12 May: "Canada rocks" [Rocky Mountains] previous slide next slide

A former fighter pilot, Chris Hadfield became a trainee astronaut in 1992 after winning selection from a field of 5,330 applicants, according to Nasa.

He flew on board the space shuttle, docking with the Russian space station Mir and as part of an assembly flight to the ISS in 2001.

He eventually won his own slot on board the ISS in 2010, training for his current mission until lift-off in December 2012.

After gathering hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers during his months on board, he made one final hit as the time came for his departure from the ISS.

He posted a striking video to YouTube of him performing a version of David Bowie's renowned 1969 hit song Space Oddity.

The video quickly went viral, and even prompted a response from Bowie's own official account: "Hallo Spaceboy..."