homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Thirty years in seconds: Google timelapses show how cities sprung to life in Asia or how ice retreats from Arctic

You can't fool satellites.

Tibi Puiu
December 6, 2016 @ 6:23 pm

share Share

Five million satellite images taken by five different satellites over the last 30 years were stitched together by Google engineers in a timelapse fashion. In mere seconds you can see how deserts in Dubai or Saudi Arabia turn into sparkling metropolises, but also the startling effects of climate change which often people don’t notice at life’s pace. For instance, you can see how the Dead Sea has shrunk or the collapse of the Columbia Glacier.

“The majority of the images come from Landsat, a joint USGS/NASA Earth observation program that has observed the Earth since the 1970s. For 2015 and 2016, we combined Landsat 8 imagery with imagery from Sentinel-2A, part of the European Commission and European Space Agency’s Copernicus Earth observation program,” reads Google’s statement.

Google’s aim is to show off the power of its Earth Engine cloud-computing model. Previously, Earth Engine was used to survey over a decade of global tree cover extent, loss, and gain. This analysis would have taken 15 years to complete on a normal computer but the numbers were crunched in only a couple of days as computations were performed in parallel across thousands of machines. Elsewhere, the Map of Life team used the Earth Engine to map an interactive map used to determine habitat ranges and to assess the security of individual species.

It’s always disappointing, however, to see such clear evidence of planetary altering at the hand of humans yet so many people think ‘we’re too small’ to alter the climate. The 30 trillion tonnes of man-made stuff that cover the planet’s surface doesn’t sound ‘small’ at all. The truth is often uncomfortable and all too many of us prefer to distort reality than face it. The eyes of a satellite don’t lie.

Watch all of Google’s timelapses

share Share

Pluto's Moons and Everything You Didn't Know You Want to Know About Them

Let's get acquainted with the lesser known but still very interesting moons of Pluto.

Japan Is Starting to Use Robots in 7-Eleven Shops to Compensate for the Massive Shortage of Workers

These robots are taking over repetitive jobs and reducing workload as Japan combats a worker crisis.

This Bizarre Martian Rock Formation Is Our Strongest Evidence Yet for Ancient Life on Mars

We can't confirm it yet, but it's as close as it gets.

A small, portable test could revolutionize how we diagnose Alzheimer's

A passive EEG scan could spot memory loss before symptoms begin to show.

Forget the wild-haired savages. Here's what Vikings really looked like

Hollywood has gravely distorted our image.

Is a Plant-Based Diet Really Healthy for Your Dog? This Study Has Surprising Findings

You may need to revisit your dog's diet.

Who Invented Russian Roulette? How a 1937 Short Story Sparked the Deadliest "Game" in Pop Culture

Russian Roulette is deadly game that likely spawned from a work of fiction.

What Do Ancient Egyptian Mummies Smell Like? "Woody", "Spicy" and Even "Sweet"

Scientists used an 'electronic nose' (and good old biological sniffers) to reveal the scents of ancient mummies.

A Massive Seaweed Belt Stretching from Africa to the Caribbean is Changing The Ocean

The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt hit a record 37.5 million tons this May

Stone Age Atlantis: 8,500-Year-Old Settlements Discovered Beneath Danish Seas

Archaeologists took a deep dive into the Bay of Aarhus to trace how Stone Age people adapted to rising waters.